I look at my time on this earth as social anthropology, at home and in work life.
I learned early on how to make best use of my time. You know, quality is more important than quantity when it comes to practice time. And unfortunately, I still need to practice a lot.
Intelligence is playing a more important role in policymaker decisions than I think I’ve ever seen in my time in Congress or before.
I split my time between a small town in New Jersey and New York City.
I wish I could write about shows outside New York. I often feel like the last person to know anything, because I almost never get to leave town, and when I do, I tend to go for three days max. Seeing between 30 and 40 shows a week in 100 or so galleries and museums takes up nearly all my time.
It sounds pretentious to say I ‘divide’ my time, but when I am home, that usually means my house in Atlanta or my cabin in the North Georgia Mountains. The latter is where I do the majority of my writing.
I am not looking for a relationship right now. I have no interest in putting my time or effort into another person, nor do I need another person to put energy into me, OK? Because that’s what granola bars are for.
In our personal lives, we have a lot of businesses going on. I have a profession, I’m a father, a spouse, a good member of my community. How much of my time and energy can I allocate to each of those things? What I allocate becomes the strategy I have for my family, and everything else.
No, I do not want to sacrifice four days for two games. My time is too valuable to do that.
I’m gonna wait for Mr. Right to come along and take my time. I’m just enjoying just having a little me time, you know? But it’s not that I’m not taking applications.
It is glorious to become a learner again at my time of life.
My time is always divided when I prepare for a wire walk. First I dream, technically and artistically, and then I go to work, and I am the master rigger, climbing trees and ladders and constructing. Only then I change my cap and become the performer.
I’m still trying to decide. It’s a really difficult one because I really enjoy my time in the Air Force. And I’d love to continue it. But the pressures of my other life are building. And fighting them off or balancing the two of them has proven quite difficult.
An excessive amount of my time is taken with political involvement. It’s unavoidable; that’s my temperament.
I’ve had mixtapes that have been better than albums I’ve heard from other artists. I take my time; I put my heart into it.
It takes me about two hours to run into Target. People always want a picture. They hem and haw, and they can’t spit the words out, so they waste about five minutes of my time just standing there getting ready for a picture. Just do it!
I wouldn’t like to say that I spend most of my time on holiday, but I have done a lot of traveling and have been to a lot of places.
Every stage of filmmaking’s important while you’re doing it, so I spend most of my time figuring out how to tell the story. I have all these stories and ideas, but it’s how to tell the story.
I savored my time on top of the podium by watching the American flag rise up out of the crowd as the anthem played, thinking about how every single second of training I’ve done was for this minute and how many people played a role in my achievement.
My time in war zones have been fleeting and infrequent. I’ve been to Iraq. I’ve been to Afghanistan. I’ve been to other places where I’ve collected hazardous duty pay.
Being ‘back in my body’ means being able to do the things I love, but do them in the way I love, and in my way, and in my time, giving myself the opportunity to just be me.
I just look back at my time in college and think about how much my community activism and my work in neighborhoods really informed my actual academic career and beyond… It can provide a way better learning than the traditional classroom setting.
I am obligated and I will pay hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes to the American government. I already paid and I will keep paying whatever taxes I owe based on my time as a U.S. citizen.
During my time, there might have been one pitcher or two that were top pitchers on a team. Teams that won maybe had three, but today they have a lot of depth. They have a lot of long relievers, short relievers, and the strategy is different.
It’s fantastic to put your hands in the earth. I enjoy spending my time in heaven here. I don’t care what you say, this is my heaven.
I don’t remember a time when I wasn’t acting. I have taken time off to figure out if it’s what I really want to do, and it is. The only other job I’d want is to be a psychologist, as I spend most of my time analyzing people and emotions.
I’ve often felt I’ve been born out of my time, and when I started Fairground Attraction in the 1980s, I wanted to be a 1940s jazz singer.
I spent my time trying to understand grand jury procedure – a topic about which I never before had the slightest interest.
What I will remember most from my time in NATO is meeting children in the countries where I’ve gone to, to Moscow and to Kiev, I’ve met school children.
My time at Yahoo, from its founding to the present, has encompassed some of the most exciting and rewarding experiences of my life.
The one thing I regret was that my work required an enormous amount of my time, and a lot of travel.
Growing up in Silicon Valley, during my time at Morgan Stanley and as a member of Stanford’s Board, I’ve had the opportunity to experience firsthand how tech companies can help people in their daily lives.
I took my job for Nickelodeon very seriously, and back then, it wasn’t certainly as big of a network as it is now, culturally, and people my age didn’t know much about it. But I loved my time there. I really put everything I had into doing ‘Guts,’ and it actually taught me a lot about how to work really hard.
Don’t watch a lot of television, don’t listen to a lot of music. God. What have I been doing with all my time? I’m a bore.
Anytime I prepare a meal for my family, I am putting all of my time, effort, energy, and love into it.
With my time in the limelight, I regret that I didn’t use it more to push vegetarianism. I support vegetarian options in the school lunch program.
I do not exactly remember at what period I started my museum which absorbed so much of my time.
I’m at a point where I’m going where the journey leads me. I’ve set goals but I don’t get really hung up if I don’t achieve those goals right away or in my time, you know what I mean?
My time is focused on family and work. I need to find a way to spend more time with my friends – and cycling.
If I go into a restaurant there’s a very good chance that I’m going to spend my time being the mayor. If I want to have a good time, I’m happier having dinner here.
For some years I have spent my time on exactly these questions – both in thinking about ways to prevent war, and in thinking about how to fight, survive, and terminate a war, should it occur.
I used to always be the young one playing without pressure, but I am just happy to be where I am and enjoying my time.
The protocol things, the officialdom, are part of my work. But it doesn’t take more than 20 percent of my time. The majority of my time I spend on issues that I care about.
I drive an old Camaro that I got when I was 16. And I’ve been known to do stupid things with my time, like Friendster.
1985 – That was my time in New York, and I have such poetic, fond memories.
Before running for office, I was an A-10 squadron commander with 325 combat hours. During my time in uniform and since coming to the House and taking up the fight to keep the plane, I have heard countless stories from American soldiers about how the A-10 saved their lives.
I’m not a super-actorly actor, my-body-is-an-instrument type of person, but I do want to do fun, exciting, interesting things. I have a 2001 PT Cruiser. I saved my money so I can take my time and choose something that I think is great, and that’s what I’m waiting for.
My time on television began, and I started playing victims. I did about 10 or 12 years of them, which gets boring, right?
Everyone is always telling me that I must be exhausted, but I’ve learned how to use my time well, and that includes holidays to recharge. I always try to give myself big chunks of time to think about what the next project is going to be.
My only reason why I am not doing films is my children. My children need my attention, and it’s my duty to give them my time. I have not given birth to them to just dump them and go off to work. I am not that kind of a person.
I try not to regret too much. I find that feeling guilty takes up so much of my time already.
I absolutely loved my time at ‘Brothers & Sisters,’ what I learned and everything that went with it. It was an incredibly formative time for me.
The bracelet says ‘Fear Nothing.’ It was given to me by my friends, and it was made for me and my friends during the period of time that I was going through chemotherapy. And I still wear it, because it’s a great reminder of friendship and how my buddies and others came together in my time of need.
I think of all my time as existing in 15-minute blocks. Most people think in terms of 30-minute chunks, but I’ve found that when I free up more time, I waste it.