I'm a morning person because I learned to write my novels while still practicing law. I would get to the office at 6:30 a.m. and write until other people arrived around 9. Now I still do that. I start at 6:30 or 7 and I'll write until 11 then take an hour off then work until about 2 p.m. By then my brain has had enough.
I could wake up six in the morning go downstairs and record. I learned how to use ProTools and everything. Whenever I felt it I could record.
What I couldn't help noticing was that I learned more about the novel in a morning by trying to write a page of one than I'd learned in seven years or so of trying to write criticism.
One thing I've very quickly learned is that if you wake up every morning worrying about what's in the press you would go completely and utterly potty.
I'm not one of those writers I learned about who get up in the morning put a piece of paper in their typewriter machine and start writing. That I've never understood.
Each morning sees some task begun each evening sees it close Something attempted something done has earned a night's repose.
Money won is twice as sweet as money earned.
Banks are an almost irresistible attraction for that element of our society which seeks unearned money.
As Americans we realize that there is no taxpayer money that wasn't first earned through the sweat and toil of one of our citizens.
Never spend your money before you have earned it.
Too many people spend money they haven't earned to buy things they don't want to impress people they don't like.
My mom and my dad wanted my brother and I to have a better life you know better education better jobs. It was probably harder much much harder for my parents. When you're a kid you can learn a language much more easily I learned English in less than a year.
My mom used to tell me stories at night read books to me - and I read 'em over and over and over again. And you know what I learned from that? I went back and looked at everything - Why do I like reading the same stories over and over and over again? What was I some kind of nincompoop? No - the narrative gave me connection with my mom.
I've never had my brows done - I tweeze them myself. I used to watch my mom pluck her brows that's how I learned.
I know that I'm getting the real deal with my mom. I know that she's telling it like it is. She's proud of me when I've earned it and she's disappointed in me when I've earn that. She's really my spectrum on where I am as a person.
I've learned that every working mom is a superwoman.
My mom was a seamstress and I wish I'd learned to sew because I'm obsessed with 'Project Runway!'
In her whole life Mom never earned more than five or six dollars a week. Being without a husband it was hard for her to find any place at all for us to live.
Every single thing I learned about marketing and building my business I learned from my mom and she had never been in the workforce. She just had great practical sense.
My Mom said she learned how to swim when someone took her out in the lake and threw her off the boat. I said 'Mom they weren't trying to teach you how to swim.'
There is frequently more to be learned from the unexpected questions of a child than the discourses of men.
Such is the nature of men that howsoever they may acknowledge many others to be more witty or more eloquent or more learned yet they will hardly believe there be many so wise as themselves.
When I was a child I was unable to go to any type of sleepaway summer camp because of health issues. Once I learned about the Lopez Foundation I knew I wanted to get involved send kids with kidney disease away to camp so they can still experience overnight camp with medical needs at hand.
The art of medicine was to be properly learned only from its practice and its exercise.