The very first lesson that I learnt from the Qur'an was the message of unity and peace.
He who follows his lessons tastes a profound peace and looks upon everybody as a bunch of manure.
My childhood should have taught me lessons for my own fatherhood but it didn't because parenting can only be learned by people who have no children.
I learned a lesson which I didn't heed: Don't put yourself in your movies. It's too much.
My aunt had a season ticket for the Friday afternoon concerts and I would go down for lessons. My lessons were Saturday morning.
There is a basic lesson on financial crises that governments tend to wait too long underestimate the risks want to do too little. And it ultimately gets away from them and they end up spending more money causing much more damage to the economy.
When I was six years old my friend was auditioning for 'Annie ' and I decided I wanted to audition with her. My mom was worried I would fall flat on my face because I'd never opened my mouth to sing so she sent me to vocal lessons. I did the audition and fell in love with the entire process of a show.
I was serious about ballet for a long time but my mom got me into tap and jazz and modern and hip-hop and I was one of those over-lessoned children.
I took piano for many years. I kicked and screamed through all of my lessons but my mom really insisted.
In third grade I was taking tap-dance lessons and about six weeks before the recital I wanted to quit. My mom said 'No you're going to stay with it.' Well I did it and I was bad too! But my parents never let their kids walk away from something because it was too hard.
My mother stopped working when she had my brother. She was a full time mom until I started getting heavily into ice skating lessons and it got to the point where they really needed my mom to earn an income.
My mom would give me a piece to play but I wouldn't do any theory because when it came time to do it I would sneak back upstairs and watch TV. So I had these kind of nonchalant lessons for years then it just started soaking in.
I gave guitar lessons. I tried to join bands. My mom always said it was obvious that nothing was going to stop me.
I grew up painting and playing piano so when I was a little kid I thought I was going to be an artist or a painter but my mom had me taking piano lessons for about 10-12 years as a young kid.
And the greatest lesson that mom ever taught me though was this one. She told me there would be times in your life when you have to choose between being loved and being respected. Now she said to always pick being respected.
I took the fear of marriage from my parents' relationship because I didn't want to end up in a relationship like that whereas my brothers and sisters learnt a lesson from it and made sure they didn't carry it on into their own marriages.
Life is a long lesson in humility.
Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood.
To know ourselves is agreed by all to be the most useful Learning the first Lessons therefore given us ought to be on that Subject.
We also learn that this country and the Western world have no monopoly of goodness and truth and scholarship we begin to appreciate the ingredients that are indispensable to making a better world. In a life of learning that is perhaps the greatest lesson of all.
I'm thinking about learning a few new things - like taking classical guitar lessons - and I'd like to bring what I learn into hard rock.
Everything in life is a lesson and I have learned from each marriage. Yes I've made mistakes but every experience is a learning curve.
I got started when I was 3 years old because my father was a music teacher and my lessons were free. Instead of learning to walk you learn to play the piano.
Travel provided many interesting experiences but perhaps the most useful lesson I learned was that I really had no proficiency for learning the thousands of characters of the written Chinese language.
The only genuine elite is the elite of those men and women who gave their lives to justice and charity.