I believed I was invincible.
‐‐ Lance Loud
I believed in fictional characters as if they were a part of real life. Poetry was important, too. My parents had memorized poems from their days attending school in New York City and loved reciting them. We all enjoyed listening to these poems and to music as well.
‐‐ Alice McDermott
I believed in God my whole life.
‐‐ Andy Dick
I believed in God my whole life, and then strayed away from it in my teen-age years, until recently.
‐‐ Andy Dick
I believed in myself, and I've always worked very, very hard as an artist, and I am an artist in every sense of the word.
‐‐ Erykah Badu
I believed in myself. I never imagined myself as just an ordinary player.
‐‐ Imran Khan
I believed in Obama for social issues. I believe he brought our nation together and healed our racial divide. Martin Luther King's dream came true when he was elected. That's huge.
‐‐ Melissa Etheridge
I believed in raising my children as I had been raised.
‐‐ Boris Becker
I believed in realism, as summarized by John McCarthy's comment to the effect that if we worked really hard, we'd have an intelligent system in from four to four hundred years.
‐‐ Marvin Minsky
I believed in Santa Claus until I was 12!
‐‐ Danielle de Niese
I believed in the Catholic position, the Catholic view of ethics and aesthetics, for a long time. But I wanted something not intellectual, some conviction not mental - in fact I wanted faith.
‐‐ Joyce Kilmer
I believed in the concept of over-performing. I believe anyone can achieve their goals in life if they over-perform, and that means you have to work ten times harder than anybody you see.
‐‐ Stephen J. Cannell
I believed my story would be helpful to young women my daughter's age, who are still in the process of forming themselves as women, and in need of encouragement to remain true to themselves.
‐‐ Joyce Maynard
I believed or thought I was disoriented and the victim of a bizarre dream and I believe I paced in and out of the room and possibly into one of the other rooms. I may have re-examined her, finally believing that this was true.
‐‐ Sam Sheppard
I believed that English-speaking people had a divine mission to civilize the world by making it western, democratic and Christian.
‐‐ Luke Ford
I believed that I could go to the Super Bowl and win multiple Super Bowls and do all of those things. I believe in that every day.
‐‐ Russell Wilson
I believed that I was being forced to sacrifice my family and my career in defense of the Communist Party, from which I had long been separated and which I had grown to dislike and distrust.
‐‐ Edward Dmytryk
I believed that, in a situation where the community that I came from were being treated like second- and third-class citizens, that I had a responsibility to fight back against it. And I don't apologise to anybody for having done that. I think it was the right thing to do.
‐‐ Martin McGuinness
I believed that old people never laughed. I thought they sighed a lot and groaned. They walked with sticks, and they didn't like children on bicycles or roller skates... or with big dogs.
‐‐ Maeve Binchy
I believed that our own public would keep this in mind even in this serious crisis, and stand firm if only we at the front continued to stand firm too.
‐‐ Paul von Hindenburg
I believed the only thing that could turn around this government spending and mounting debt would be if the people rose up.
‐‐ Jim DeMint
I believed then - in a deep, easy way that is impossible for me as an adult - that there was more to this world than meets the eye. Trees had spirits; the wind spoke. If you followed a toad or a raven deep into the heart of the forest, they were sure to lead you to something magical.
‐‐ Jennifer McMahon
I believed totally in the possibilities implied in the series. I never thought of it as fantasy. Far from it.
‐‐ Patrick Troughton
I believed, up to last week, that Adam was somehow coming back. But I wouldn't trade that optimism for anything, because the other option is no fun.
‐‐ Michael Diamond
I believed what my father taught me about the separation of church and state, so when I was President I never invited Billy Graham to have services in the White House because I didn't think that was appropriate. He was injured a little bit, until I explained it to him.
‐‐ Jimmy Carter
I belong in America more than South Africa. I can't remember the feeling of living there anymore. It's like it was in another life. That's sad in a way. It is my country. It's where I grew up. You don't know what it's like to have these negative feelings about your homeland. There are roots you can't escape.
‐‐ Trevor Rabin
I belong on the stage. I love how the day's events, whatever you read in the newspapers or watch on the TV, are reflected in the performance and how it's received.
‐‐ Mandy Patinkin
I belong to a family where I think we're all fairly treated, boys or girls. Although I have to work doubly hard just to be able to be recognised. That meant long hours, but the hard work paid off.
‐‐ Teresita Sy-Coson
I belong to a generation that has seen the explosion of freedom, the celebration of freedom.
‐‐ Miguel Angel Silvestre
I belong to a gospel choir. They know I am an atheist but they are very tolerant.
‐‐ Brian Eno
I belong to a nation which over the past centuries has experienced many hardships and reverses. The world reacted with silence or with mere sympathy when Polish frontiers were crossed by invading armies and the sovereign state had to succumb to brutal force.
‐‐ Lech Walesa
I belong to a specific category of writers, those who speak and write in a language different from that of their parents.
‐‐ Tahar Ben Jelloun
I belong to an improv group, I play cello, I have these phases - fencing, tae kwon do, baseball, ice hockey, boogie boarding in the summer, snowboarding in the winter.
‐‐ Ty Simpkins
I belong to everybody, and I belong to nobody.
‐‐ Muhammadu Buhari
I belong to quite a lot of learned societies. We collect firearms and discuss them at dinners and clubs and things.
‐‐ Michael Gambon
I belong to the Boston Biographers Group - and get my monthly 'fix' from them. Where else can I sit down for two hours with people who understand the challenge I face, daily, as a life-chronicler?
‐‐ Nigel Hamilton
I belong to the Congress. My party has always supported prohibition, though it may not have been successful in implementing prohibition in many states.
‐‐ Palaniappan Chidambaram
I belong to the Democratic Party.
‐‐ Darrell Hammond
I belong to the generation of workers who, born in the villages and hamlets of rural Poland, had the opportunity to acquire education and find employment in industry, becoming in the course conscious of their rights and importance in society.
‐‐ Lech Walesa
I belong to the middle class that grew up very influenced by the Catholic church. The people of the novel are from a more pagan and practical world in which the Christianity is just a veneer.
‐‐ John McGahern
I belong to the political party that generally fits my philosophical beliefs, but I reserve the right to vote my conscience after careful deliberation. My voting record reflects this.
‐‐ Jeff Fortenberry
I belong to the Richmond Concert Society, who put on very good concerts.
‐‐ Claire Tomalin
I belonged to another club, and liked the camaraderie.
‐‐ Chuck Zito
I belonged to Stratford Children's Theater when I was a boy growing up in Manchester. Even then, I was always doing character parts.
‐‐ John Mahoney
I belonged to the generation that grew up under National Socialism, and was blinded and led astray - and allowed itself to be led astray.
‐‐ Gunter Grass
I bemoan the fact that all my famous friends have places in St. Bart's and I have to go to Montauk.
‐‐ Rufus Wainwright
I bend and do not break.
‐‐ Jean de La Fontaine
I benefit from the Mr. Potato Head syndrome. Put a wig and a nose and glasses on me, and I disappear.
‐‐ Phil Hartman
I bent my head over a stove in my early 20s and picked it up in my 30s.
‐‐ Alexandra Guarnaschelli
I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken.
‐‐ Oliver Cromwell