“[On daughter Liza Minnelli] I think she decided to go into show business when she was an embryo, she kicked so much.” ThinkingShowsMotherDaughterDecidedShow BusinessEmbryos Author:Judy Garland
“I think you can write very good comedy without a partner, but what I love about it, working with a partner, is that you get to places you'd never get on your own. It's like when God was designing the world and decided we couldn't have children without a partner; it was a way of mixing up the genes so you'd get a more interesting product.” ThinkingWorldWayWritingChildrenInterestingComedyDesignProductsDecidedVery GoodPartnersGenesMixing Author:John Cleese
“I actually started to think a lot about the difference between a creative gesture and a noncreative gesture. I decided that all gestures were creative. Because you always have to make a decision at some point.” ThinkingFunDifferencesDecisionCreativeDecidedGestures Author:Andrea Zittel
“I've decided to do it, for the pure and simple reason that I just think it's the right thing to do.” ThinkingReasonActionSimpleMoralPsychologyPureEthicsDecidedThings To DoRight Thing Author:Charlie Crist
“Each person decides in early childhood how he will live and how he will die... His trivial behavior may be decided by reason, but his important decisions have already been made: what kind of person he will marry, how many children he will have, what kind of bed he will die in... It is incredible to think, at first, that man's fate, all his nobility and all his degradation, is decided by a child no more than six years old, and usually three... (but) it is very easy to believe by looking at what is happening in the world today, and what happened yesterday, and seeing what will happen tomorrow.” ThinkingMenWorldYearsFirstsBelieveKindMayChildrenPersonsMadeImportantReasonHappensTodayDiesThreeEasyDecisionFateSeeingHappenedChildhoodEvolutionTomorrowBedBehaviorSixHappeningsDecidedIncrediblesYesterdayNobilityWorld TodayDegradationEarly ChildhoodSix Year OldsImportant Decisions Author:Eric Berne
“My second husband and I were going through a bitter divorce, and I didn't have the money for a fancy-pants attorney. I didn't know how to fight, so I'd lie awake at night and think of ways to kill him. But I knew I'd get caught, so I decided to put it in a book and get paid for it! I always think it's odd that a whole career came out of that homicidal impulse.” ThinkingKnowsWayWritingBookWholeLyingNightFightingCareersKnow HowHusbandDecidedPaidCaughtDivorceBitterImpulseOddAwakeFancySongwritingPantsAttorneyAwake At NightHomicidal Author:Sue Grafton