“The point is the 'me' that you see before you is not the 'me' in my private little space, shape-shifting into the writing role, nor is it the 'me' that works with the actors. Here, at the end of the film doing interviews, I feel like I'm in disguise.” FeelsWritingLittlesEndsFilmActorsSpaceRolesShapesInterviewsDisguiseShifting Author:Julia Leigh
“I like that my body is in shape and toned, and isn't too muscular. I feel I still have a woman's physique.” FeelsStillsBodyShapesPhysique Author:Alicia Sacramone
“As teenagers, we all see ourselves as outsiders... and it's very easy to look at other people who are more popular, who have more pocket money, and it makes you feel even more like an outsider, and it does shape who you become as a person.” PeopleFeelsLooksPersonsDoeEasyShapesTeenagerPocketsOutsiders Author:Maggie Stiefvater
“I am always plagued with 'I'm not skinny enough, I'm not in shape.' I am not naturally this super-svelte kind of girl. I'm okay with that in my personal life. But it is kind of hard at times. I feel inadequate, I suppose?” FeelsKindHardEnoughGirlShapesOkayPersonal LifeSkinnyInadequateKind Of Girl Author:Olivia Thirlby
“I don't particularly like the idea that there's an arc to the story and that therefore in this scene you have to convey this bit of information or emotion. I like more the feeling that, of course, there is a shape to the story, but that each scene should feel right, should be true at that moment, and that gradually you accumulate these moments of truth until you get enough of them together that it becomes a story that's interesting.” FeelsShouldIdeasEnoughMomentsStoriesFeelingsTogetherCoursesBitsInterestingEmotionInformationSceneShapesBeing TrueThat MomentArcsFeels RightMoment Of Truth Author:Michael Winterbottom
“I like doing clay work. It's different from drawing on a page because you have something to mold into different shapes. It's quite visual, it's a thing you can hold and feel, and that makes it different from drawing.” FeelsDifferentShapesPagesDrawingVisualsWorking ItClayMold Author:Bonnie Wright
“We are to regard the mind, not as a piece of iron to be laid upon the anvil and hammered into any shape, nor as a block of marble in which we are to find the statue by removing the rubbish, nor as a receptacle into which knowledge may be poured; but as a flame that is to be fed, as an active being that must be strengthened to think and to feel -- and to dare, to do, and to suffer.” ThinkingFeelsMindMaySufferingPiecesShapesRegardDareActiveBlockFlamesIronFedsStatuesMarbleRubbishHammeredAnvils Book:Miscellaneous Essays and Discourses Source: Miscellaneous Essays and Discourses