I don't feel the need to prove myself to others, but to prove myself to myself
I don't intend to be a performing flea any more. I was the dreamweaver, but although I'll be around I don't intend to be running at 20,000 miles an hour trying to prove myself. I don't want to die at 40.
I am not in competition with anyone but myself. My goal is to improve myself continuously.
I am ready to fight according to the rules, and I ask for the opportunity to prove myself.
When you've got something to prove, there's nothing greater than a challenge.
I had to prove myself to a lot of different people.
I guess I have to prove myself all over again, even if it's to the world. I don't have a problem doing that.
What's the difference between people who feel successful and people who feel they've failed? The answer is mindset: If you learn and grow from failure, suddenly it becomes a personal asset. People who are successful don't want instant gratification. They don't think about hitting a point of success and never working again. Instead they ask, How do I improve myself and continue to do that consistently over time?
My time is far too valuable for me to spend any of it trying to improve myself.
Everyday that goes by I try to improve myself and searching for something that may even be impossible; perfection.
I always feel like I have to prove myself as an actor, otherwise you get lazy if you're not slightly terrified that you're going to fail all the time.
If you don't feel you have something to prove every day, you'll never improve
I loved fighting... It gave me the opportunity to prove myself, to stand up and say, 'I'm the best. I matter. I am.'
I'm the type of person who feels I have to prove myself first.
I am really focused on how I can improve myself and the world around me.
The more conscious of God's presence the more I feel like being myself, the less conscious of His presence, the more I feel I need to prove myself.
I love to be pushed so I can prove myself, because once again, I will.
I have to prove myself in a lot of ways - as an actor, as a person, as someone who can handle pressure.
I'm constantly proving myself. I have to always prove myself. There are roles where I feel like, "That should have been a straight offer. Why am I having to call my people and fight for it?"
I love being physical, but I don't have any desire to prove myself.
If your motivation for acquiring money or success comes from a non-supportive root such as fear, anger or the need to 'prove' yourself, your money will never bring you happiness.
Setbacks, on the other hand, just make us feel weak and stupid: I should have conquered this by now. I happened on a question not long ago that oerfectly expresses this mentality: How many times must I prove myself an idiot?
I eat not because I want to, not because I have to overcome anything, not to prove myself to anyone, but because it's there. I eat because that's what people do. And somehow when the food is put in front of you by an institution, when there's a large gray force behind it and you don't have to thank anyone for it, you have the animal instinct to make it disappear.
I never felt I had to prove myself with anything.
There's a lot of great Olympians, but for me, I try to prove myself as one of the best - and that's the key thing.
Follow AzQuotes on Facebook, Twitter and Google+. Every day we present the best quotes! Improve yourself, find your inspiration, share with friends
or simply: