Quotes about Performance
RELAX IN MY PRESENCE, KNOWING THAT nothing can separate you from My Love. The worst-case scenario in your life—that I might stop loving you—is not even in the realm of possibility. So rejoice that you don't have to perform well enough to earn My Love, or to keep it. This Love is pure gift, flowing out of My own perfect righteousness. It secures your connection to Me—your Savior—for all eternity.
— Sarah Young
APRIL 19 I LOVE YOU regardless of how well you are performing. Sometimes you feel uneasy, wondering if you are doing enough to be worthy of My Love. No matter how exemplary your behavior, the answer to that question will always be no. Your performance and My Love are
— Sarah Young
behave or feel. If you like what you see in the mirror, you feel a bit more worthy of My Love. When things are going smoothly and your performance seems adequate, you find it easier to believe you are My
— Sarah Young
Be more ambitious. Don't bunt. When you get a job to do a story or an ad, try and hit the ball out of the park every time
— David Ogilvy
The first time I went to see a Second City show, I was in awe of everything. I just wanted to touch the same stage that Gilda Radner had walked on. It was sacred ground.
— Tina Fey
I'm not saying I look cool, but every single time I go onstage, it is a fail if I don't feel like I'm going to pass out at least twice.
— Kesha
I'm talking about intellectually and emotionally challenging, but at the same time it's actually not that challenging. So there's this dichotomy.
— Marina Abramovic
I think I could beat Joe Frazier singing. I was in a Broadway musical called Big Time Buck Wright.
— Muhammad Ali
It usually takes me two or three days to prepare an impromptu speech.
— Mark Twain
It takes three weeks to prepare a good ad-lib speech.
— Mark Twain
Speaking professionally, it was admirably done. -John H. Watson- -The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes-
— Arthur Conan Doyle
She had never done these things before; she did them expertly. She had a capacity for action, a competence that clashed incongruously with her appearance.
— Ayn Rand