I'm mad, they say. I am temperamental and dizzy and disagreeable. Well, let them talk. I can take it. Only one person can hurt me. Her name is Ida Lupino.
I am a temperance Republican down to my toes.
Sometimes when I consider what tremendous consequences come from little things, I am tempted to think there are no little things.
You can win ten times, and then you are not able to win five times. I have to discover the reason why, and I am going to find that.
Perhaps the only thing in my favor is that I am very tenacious. I don't take 'no' very well.
If I had to find one characteristic that is most symbolic of me, I think I am tenacious.
I am very tenacious.
I want everybody to succeed. It's just part of who I am. I probably do that with my kids tenfold. I'm as insecure as the next person, but it doesn't ever take me over.
I like shoes that, no matter where I am, if I see a basketball or tennis court, I can tie them up and play.
I'm more in that Rafa Nadal high-energy high-octane mold out there. I wear that emotion on the court. That's how I play my best tennis. People either like that or not. And I can't change that: that's who I am on a tennis court.
I am happy with being a tennis player and the choice I took when I was 12. But clearly, if I wouldn't have been a tennis player, I would have loved to be a soccer player. But again, I am happy with the choice I made.
Sometime in the future, I am a hundred percent certain scientists will sit down at a computer terminal, design what they want the organism to do, and build it.
I am an Air Force brat - that's the terminology they use for military kids who are traveling constantly.
I am pretty fearless, and you know why? Because I don't handle fear very well; I'm not a good terrified person.
I am a big scaredy-cat; horror films terrify me.
I am very comfortable travelling and going into other territories.
If you ask me what am I, I might say 'I am a Californian,' and if George Bush were here, he would say 'I am a Texan.'
I am a writer of the textbooks of scientology.
I may not be where I want to be, but thank God I am not where I used to be.
The Japanese don't have a specific religion, but a spirituality. A cap, shoes, and a table have a spirituality. When you eat an apple, you don't say you eat it: you say, 'I am receiving it.' Kind of like you are thanking the food.