Sometimes it feels weird being an actor surrounded by all these real fighters and you gotta keep your confidence high and do your best to learn it as quickly as possible.
I'm not quite at the point where I feel the need to wear disguises in public.
No shepherd and one herd! Everybody wants the same, everybody is the same: whoever feels different goes voluntarily into a madhouse.
The side that feels the lesser urge for peace will naturally get the better bargain.
We live in a pretty bleak time. I feel that in the air. Everything is uncertain. Everything feels like its on the precipice of some major transformation, whether we like it or not.
I feel like my place in this industry is still progressing.
Poetry, I feel, is a tyrannical discipline. You've got to go so far, so fast, in such a small space, that you've got to burn away all the peripherals.
Is it possible that we never feel grown-up because, as our capabilities increased with age, so increased our responsibilities?
No doubt, in complete abstraction one has a feeling of a great shock, if not an explosion, and in approaching the real, one feels health and truth restored.
In the moment of acting you don't feel like anything, you feel like the person, as much as you can.
I really feel like a regular dude who happens to be incredibly lucky.
We think we believe what we know, but we only truly believe what we feel.
Nothing is more arrogant than the weakness which feels itself supported by power.
I was telling the truth. I feel like we got that point across.
I was working through a lot of challenges at every angle of my life, and a lot of self-doubt, a lot of pity-partying. And I think every woman in her twenties has been there - where it feels like no matter what you are doing to fight through the thing that is holding you back, nothing can fill that void.
When I'm my own editor, there's very little difference between the first draft and the final. I write what feels right to begin with. I rarely make any major changes.
It's saying, just stop, and be together. Don't talk now, just breathe and feel each other's presence.
But Roarke doesn't feel weird about it. He's full of it, the love, I mean. And when he loves me, things that never worked in me did - do. It was easier when they didn't work, but it's better when they do. You know?
Always put yourself in others' shoes. If you feel that it hurts you, it probably hurts the other person, too.
What distinguishes Cambridge from Oxford, broadly speaking, is that nobody who has been to Cambridge feels impelled to write about it.