My line is probably a little more conservative than some of my compatriots in the business. But again, I think it's all - like, it just - it comes down to me knowing who I am and knowing how I want to be seen in the world, how I want to discuss things.
I don't care if people know who I am or if I make a ton of money, I just love my work so much.
I was fortunate enough to have an upbringing that made me more accepting of who I am.
Coming up with lectures is a huge amount of work. I was willing to do one lecture for Gresham because I was honored to have been invited, but to create lectures for a class would probably require that I shut down everything else and concentrate on lectures for a couple of years. Then there would be many, many other skills that I'd have to learn, such as how to sit through a faculty meeting, how to deal with students, etc. It is really not in the cards for me. It's not who I am or what I do. I'm a novelist.
I am the history of the rejection of who I am
I find singing some of Foreigner's older songs are a little reckless and not exactly who I am now.
I don’t think it’s important who I am. I really like playing music, but I don’t really want to be anything in particular.
I always get self-conscious about what I look like in a film, but less so if I'm a character very far removed from who I am. Then I just worry about the performance, and that's equally an odd experience.
You can't blame me for who I am.
But, yeah, as far as Asian Americans go, I hope they know they can look at me and see that they can do music on their own, within a band or just on their own, and not feel like there's any barriers. I've never felt any particular barriers myself, being who I am.
Women do well in their thirties. They put their bags down and say, 'This is who I am - like it or lump it. ' There is a more relaxed quality, which I like.
My fullest concentration of energy is available to me only when I integrate all the parts of who I am, openly, allowing power from particular sources of my living to flow back and forth freely through all my different selves, without the restriction of externally imposed definition.
I could be a jerk and get a lot more publicity, but that's not who I am.
Joe Calzaghe was using the excuse, no one knows who I am in America. Now everyone knows who I am in America.
I just wanna be myself, and I want you to love me for who I am
You are an adult, and you can dress up whenever you want to. You don't need permission anymore! If you wake up next tuesday, and you feel like being Batman, go for it! And then you go to work, and your boss will look up and go "who are you," and you can say: "I am Batman. That's who I am, who are you?"
I wanted to go on the red carpet with a baseball cap, t-shirt, and jeans. And I still do. Because that's really who I am.
I try not to be protected. Because I feel like you can become a little bit of a robot. That's not who I am. And I don't want to be monotone. It's important to be yourself, whatever the cost.
Being a teacher is not what I do, it's who I am.
I don't look like who I am.