Wrestling was you wrestle in college and you become a high school coach. That was it for wrestlers. We just started to realize there is a legitimate career choice we can choose to use all our wrestling skills we spent our entire lives learning. There is something we can do it now, it’s MMA.
Being funny wasn’t a career choice growing up, it was my way out of situations; a way to survive another day.
Maybe if I found something I was really passionate about, which is entirely possible, I would make another documentary, but it’s not a good career choice for anybody. I don’t recommend it.
When I was younger, I always liked acting. You know, like, acting locally, or community theater at school. But it’s not an especially insured career choice, so I was like, ‘It’s a hobby. Whatever.’
My grandparents actually, whenever they got the chance, took me to Broadway, but that started when I was in high school, because that’s when I realized… At the very beginning of high school, I realized, ‘Oh my gosh. Okay, this is a career choice for me.’ So yeah, then they always brought me to New York to see Broadway shows whenever they could.
Many kids turn to selling drugs. It’s not a good career choice, but they see it as a way to get money.
Many kids turn to selling drugs. It’s not a good career choice, but they see it as a way to get money.
I could do John Wayne, Jack Benny, Jack Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and entertain my friends. But I never seriously considered it as a career choice.
I could do John Wayne, Jack Benny, Jack Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and entertain my friends. But I never seriously considered it as a career choice.
Acting is no longer a taboo. The stigma has gone because people have realised that it’s a perfectly valid career choice.
I always knew that I wanted to be an actor. I made my debut on stage when I was 12, and I was sure that this is what made me happy. However, nobody takes a 12-year-old’s career choice seriously. Everybody laughed it off. I also ran away from it, but acting eventually found me.
My grandfather was wary of me being a part of the industry for various reasons, ranging from the fact that we didn’t know anybody; it was an unconventional career choice, and because he felt that I needed somebody to guide me.
I love my parents and we have a terrific relationship. They have been very supportive of my career choice.
Modeling was never anything that was a career choice. I did catalog work in Toronto to make money so that I could go to school.
I’d gone to Wellesley College, an amazing women’s college where the students were encouraged to follow our dreams. However, after I graduated and had a historical romance published, more than a few people indicated that, in some way, my career choice was a ‘waste’ of so much education.
I started young in my profession, in my second year of college. I had to make a career choice. College life is the best time when you can hang around and do all kinds of crazy stuff. Everything clicked so well that the films started coming in bunches.
As a kid, I liked to write, but I didn’t think that was a viable career choice. My dream, actually, was to be a white girl rapper and join Salt-N-Pepa – which obviously was a much more viable career choice.
The minute you decide to do what you love to do, you have made a life plan for yourself and a career choice.
It’s almost an impossible task to sum up all the things my parents have taught me over the years. Whether it was how to tie my shoelaces or encouragement in whatever career choice I wanted to pursue, they have both always been there to support me.
I predict that you students who are burning out from the pressure to fix upon a career choice as early as possible and tailor your studies accordingly, will find relief for a few hours here and there in a great library.
My career choice has largely been what I wanted to do. I always knew that technology would be one of the threads.
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