Felicia Day
I have dozens of loyal fans! Baker's dozens! …they come in thirteens.
— Felicia Day
I love sitcoms, and I grew up on sitcoms. That's my tasty junk food.
— Felicia Day
In retrospect, crappy chemicals in my brain were working overtime, driving me to destroy myself, like that thing that makes lemmings throw themselves over a cliff.
— Felicia Day
...it always felt good to have that moment of resolve, like saying, "I'm going to learn French!" It doesn't matter if you do it or not, deciding is the high, right?
— Felicia Day
It might be extremely dorky to point out, but who you are is singular. It’s science. No one else in existence has your point of view or exact genome (identical twins and clones, look for inspiration elsewhere, please). That is why we need people to share and help us understand one another better. And on a bigger level than just taking a selfie. (Not hating on selfies, but a few is enough. You look good from that angle; we get it.) We need the world to hear more opinions, give glimpses into more diverse subcultures. Are you REALLY into dressing your cat in handcrafted, historically authentic outfits? No problem, there are people out there who want to see that! Probably in excruciating detail!
— Felicia Day
It's either perfect, or it's the worst thing ever made and everyone is an artistic failure, including myself. (Yay, emotional extremes!)
— Felicia Day
I've always felt like a failure inside if I'm not already a success, if that makes any sense.
— Felicia Day
I was obsessed. I couldn't stop myself. It was not healthy, but I couldn't stop. I didn't feel like there was anything else in my life to stop for. We all have periods of our life when we're trapped doing something we hate, and we develop habits that have nothing to do with our long-term goals to fill the downtime, right? I hope you identify with that idea. It's the only way I can explain becoming so emotionally invested in a video game that I would get in my car and drive around town sobbing if my internet went out.
— Felicia Day
...make sure if you're working hard at something it's in a subject you actually want to remember something about ten years later.
— Felicia Day
My dad was in the military, yeah. He was in the Air Force, and he was a doctor, so he would go places for six months here, and two years there. And I was homeschooled because I played the violin, and I did a lot of competitions.
— Felicia Day
© Spoligo | 2024 All rights reserved