One must never lose perspective. You don't get lost in your success, and you don't get depressed about failure, and you keep it all in an even keel.
Well, unless you've suffered from panic attacks and social anxiety disorders, which is what I was diagnosed as having, it's hard to explain it. But you go on stage knowing you're actually physically going to die. You will keel over and die.
I prefer highs and lows to an even keel. Moderation is never something I've been good at.
Melancholy and remorse form the deep leaden keel which enables us to sail into the wind of reality; we run aground sooner than the flat-bottomed pleasure-lovers but we venture out in weather that would sink them and we choose our direction.
I try to keep an even keel.
Two things help me be a winner. One is I try to stay on an even keel. I don't get too high or too low. Two is I do a lot of visualization. I never see a bad pitch. I always see a good one.
I hope I can always be counted on to get a hit or get a guy in-to be an even keel in the lineup.
It is a ship with a great deal of sail but a very shallow keel.
I try never to get too high when things are going well. I try never to get too low when things are going poorly. I try to keep an even keel.
I try to keep myself on an even keel by trying to be as critical of myself as I am of other people. I try to separate my performance from myself.
Obama's even keel sometimes comes across as aloof or even cold.
I've always had that knack for staying pretty even keel and the more the situation gets tense the more I see things clearly and I think that's just a knack that I've always had.
I want to keel over on stage playing King Lear at age 99 or something like that.
I guess I'll just slip into the studio after the next time with the Muses, and then just keel over and die.
Before every performance, I think I am about to keel over.
I'm on a health kick! I'm drawn to cheeseburgers, so I've got to just try and keep it on an even keel.
I surf because it keeps my life at an even keel, without it I would tip into the oblivion.
If one makes a mistake, then an apology is usually sufficient to get things back on an even keel. However-and this is a big ‘however’- most people do not ever know why their apology did not seem to have any effect. It is simply that they did not make a mistake; they made a choice…and never understood the difference between the two.
I work very hard to keep on an even keel as far as alcohol is concerned.
The majority of people who keel over dead at concerts are killed by a long trumpet passage.