Words matter. These are the best My Journey Quotes from famous people such as Kiana Madeira, Steve Lukather, Martha McSally, Tobias Lutke, Mohit Chauhan, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
One of the biggest lessons I have learned along my journey thus far is to embrace myself.
When I was starting my journey as a young guitar player, I was listening to The Beatles, the Stones, and all the British invasion bands, Top 40, Motown, and all the great music of the ’60s. Then the alien ship landed, and life changed again forever… Jimi Hendrix.
My journey in the military solidified my tireless commitment to making sure girls and women are given the opportunity to meet their full potential, and nobody tells them they can’t do something because they’re a girl.
I got my first computer at the age of 6. To me, it was magic. By the time I was 12, I wanted to know the secrets behind the wizardry, and that started my journey toward computer programming. This was the early 1990s, when computers weren’t built for the mass market.
‘Fitoor,’ in a way, signifies my journey through the years. It’s a collection of 10 songs that I have written. It’s basically about what I have been experiencing.
My journey was a very organic journey.
My journey began when I found out about YouTube on how do you make music, and from that, people started explaining me how I had to do it.
It has been magical. I can’t think of a better word to describe my journey than magical.
My journey was never hard; it just happened. From the second I held a knife, from the second I was in culinary school, it’s all felt too good to be true. ‘This cannot be my job, my life. Somebody has to be kidding with me!’
My journey has been beautiful, more than what I could ask for. Of course there have been ups and downs but I’ve been fortunate and grateful for this journey. It has taught me a lot, I’ve grown, become a better actor and a human being.
My journey from the blog to my books to the show has been fueled by a love of food and sharing it with others, and being able to pursue my passions as a career is a dream come true.
Throughout my journey in basketball, I always have someone to talk to in my father. I know how hard he had to work as an athlete.
I keep talking to my followers about relationships. These people have been a part of my journey; they have seen me mature.
I’m extremely grateful for the way my career has panned out. My journey thus far has been satisfying and especially as the Style Editor for The Label Life, curating The Power Dressing Edit, knowing we are catering to the modern Indian women.
That was essential to my journey: the ability to love children while simultaneously having your heart broken.
I never really look back. My journey has been unorthodox in many ways. All I do is count my blessings and try to be as present as I can, and I’m thankful for every step of this journey.
I’ve just been so blessed in my journey. Fat kid from Oklahoma, buddy – Southern accent and Bell’s palsy, becoming a broadcaster and hanging around a fickle business for 40 years. You wonder how in the hell that happened. It was somebody’s plan.
I’m super proud of myself, not because I can throw punches inside a ring but just because of my journey and who I proved that I am.
My journey has been up and down a little bit. Everything that has to do with success for me has sort of become a shock to me. You work so hard, you work so hard, and it happens; you’re like, ‘What? Wait, it’s happening to me?’
I think there’s a lot of honesty in that track. ‘Smalltown Boy’ was about leaving Glasgow but it was also about the people I had come to meet on my journey, especially when I was squatting in London.
The thing that I realized in my journey as a whistleblower… is that the reaction that I got from a lot of law enforcement and regulatory agencies was confusion and bafflement.
When I look back at my journey, it gives me a sense of confidence. I have been through an odd journey from Delhi to Mumbai, struggling, not having a job, shifting houses… Today, I am giving interviews. So it does give me gratitude and confidence. The fear is gone.
I agreed to film after my rookie year in Golden State. I was more used to cameras and felt that my journey to the NBA was a story worth sharing. Little did we know how much bigger the platform and documentary would become after Linsanity.
I started writing ‘Southern Baptist Sissies’ right after I had written the screenplay for ‘Sordid Lives’, so that’s when I started on a darker path in telling the truth about my journey in the church, but there was still a lot of funny.
I want to thank the audience of both the Telugu speaking states for standing by me throughout my journey.
‘Wild at Heart’ simply came out of my journey as a man and then my work with men.
I want people to understand my journey and to be inspired by that. You can be an immigrant, and if you work really hard, you can have your own restaurant.
Marrying Martin and the movement perfected my journey of discovery, soothed my yearning to pour out the values and vision within my soul.
I don’t think Bollywood is my ultimate destination; I believe it’s a part of my journey.
Coming back to Delhi is always special. This is the place I’d started my journey from and became independent. Be it my career or my education, I learnt everything about life from this city, and it has made me who I am today.
I feel, as an artist, it’s important for me to write, and that’s a big part of what my journey is – being able to write my stories and talk about stuff.
I will never forget where I come from, and my journey to becoming an NBA Champion has been hard to believe.
My journey with grief, with learning how to grow through it, rather than get over it, will be a lifelong one.
I tremendously enjoyed my journey in professional wrestling, and I wouldn’t want to trade a time or a place, even the low times, because it was those things that kind of tempered me and forged me and pushed me ahead to be here now.
Whether you say I’m too black, I’m not black enough, this is me. I hope people realize that my journey to love doesn’t have to be any different just because my skin is.
I never take for granted how lucky I am to be an American and what a privilege it is to spend each day at a nonprofit dedicated to helping the next generation of girls achieve their dreams. My journey, as the daughter of refugees, shows what refugees and the children of refugees can create for all Americans.
My journey has been a long one and has still got a long way to go. I think we are so used to defining ourselves. That’s the way society works within these binaries and it’s taken me a long time to realize that I exist somewhere in between and I’m still not sure where that is yet.
I liked the character very much and even in general roles like this entice me. I started my journey in Punjabi film industry with negative roles, and then gradually comic roles and situational comedy fell into my kitty.
My journey as a player is complete.
I’ve never forgot my roots and where I came from, and I’d not change a thing about my journey.
My journey with Zoom began with a desire for the independence to build something that would make users happy, a true video-first unified communications platform.
My journey in Bollywood has been quite filmy, as it includes sleeping on railway platforms to teaching dance for a living. The journey has taught me a lot, and I am very grateful that all that happened with me. It helped me in becoming a more stronger man.
My journey has always been the balance between chaos and order.
Television is as much a part of my journey as film.
When I began my journey, my aim was to do indie music. While growing up, there was an abundance of it but by the time I decided to do it, there was nothing. So, I became a playback singer, which got me fans and taught me about the versatility of my voice.
I talk only about my journey because that’s all I know. That’s what the audience always pulls me back to. There’s a hunger out there for the spoken journey, just to share the experience, the strength, the hope.
In 2009, at the Vancouver Peace Summit, I met a supporter of Free the Slaves, an NGO dedicated to eradicating modern-day slavery; weeks later, I flew down to Los Angeles and met with the director of Free the Slaves; thus began my journey into exploring modern-day slavery.
There are so many people who have helped me along my journey, too many to name really, but most important were my family.
I’m different than most people. When I cross the finish line of a big race, I see that people are ecstatic, but I’m thinking about what I’m going to do tomorrow. It’s as if my journey is everlasting, and there is no finish line.
My life choices are not supposed to be the gateway to somebody else’s. That’s my journey.
In my journey, I got amazing characters to play which were as interesting as a lead role. In ‘Commando,’ my role was so good. I feel no actor have rejected that kind of a role.
I always figure from the cradle to the grave, we all have our individual journeys, and maybe my journey was a positive one and I accomplished certain things without stepping on too many toes.
I’m a black woman and I’m so happy to represent myself in that respect, but I don’t want it to be something that defines me and my journey for love. I definitely don’t mind talking about it and addressing it.