Brooke Shields quotes:

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  • Don't waste a minute not being happy. If one window closes, run to the next window- or break down a door.

  • I have a group of friends in my life, and we all give each other something different. I've known my two closest friends for many years. One is a friend from high school, and the other I met right after college. My deep, deep friends remind me every day of the good parts of my personality.

  • The difficulty of IVF or of any fertility issues is the hope and the shattered hope, the dream that it might happen this time and then it doesn't happen.

  • Have faith in your own thoughts.

  • Smoking kills. If you're killed, you've lost a very important part of your life.

  • My father's death, my move, and my frightening and difficult delivery created a tremendous amount of stress, pain, and sadness for me. I was practically devastated beyond recovery.

  • It was my mom and I against the world. We lived in New York in this bohemian lifestyle where an extended group of artists and photographers were like my aunts and uncles.

  • I hope this will help new moms not feel alone or desperate, and that there is no shame in their feelings. PPD is out of their control, but the treatment and healing process is not.

  • I'm so adamant that being a really good parent does not mean you have to be there 24/7. I find that I'm never not thinking about where they are, but instead of it stressing me out, it comforts me to know that I'm completely aware of their schedule, and they're with someone I trust.

  • I suffered from post-natal depression after Rowan was born. I had a healthy, beautiful baby girl and I couldn't look at her. I couldn't hold her, smile at her. All I wanted was to disappear and die.

  • I went to an ordinary school in New York City with no other actors. I learned to compartmentalise different parts of my life. I was one person at home and then another person at work and for that reason my career didn't challenge my family life.

  • I was always with a single mom, and we never had schedules or anything. We were just Bohemian, us against the world, which was kind of great, but it certainly didn't breed security. I've gotten hyper-sensitive to schedules and bath time and eating at the dinner table. We don't just 'Bohemian' go out at nine o'clock and go get Chinese food.

  • What does good in bed mean to me? When I'm sick and I stay home from school propped up with lots of pillows watching TV and my mom brings me soup - that's good in bed.

  • At Princeton I gained a great deal of pleasure from success in my classes. knowing that I could accomplish those things, and I realized that my success was directly proportionate to the work I put in.

  • The most rewarding thing is being on Broadway. I went into Cabaret as a replacement and was really challenged beyond anything I could have imagined.

  • I love getting baths and going to the Korean spas and getting pummeled and scrubbed, and its so hot in the sauna you can't even stand it. I have to do things in a pretty extreme way to calm down. So a Swedish massage is not going to do it! I need to know that they're in there with their thumbs and moving stuff around.

  • I look back at myself, this innocent person, and I think, 'Gosh, she's okay.' I handled a lot, and I'm still here.

  • I always sold other peoples' fashions, so I wore jeans and t-shirts, and I put on what they needed to sell, and I'd sell it. So as far a nurturing my own style, it took me quite a long time to do it.

  • My younger years of modeling were really just filled with fun trips. I was doing catalogues for Alexander's and Bloomingdale's.

  • Louis Malle was the best filmmaker I've ever worked with. He was such an artist. He was dealing with the theme of innocence and experience.

  • I am a city girl I think, at heart.

  • I don't like to leave my children for long periods of time. It's made me more picky about roles that are close, especially on television.

  • Too many people use abortion as a form of birth control. And that's very wrong. I could never, ever have an abortion.

  • I have bad-mom moments all the time. Sometimes I have the wrong reaction, but I try to remember to pull back and think about it. Even when I make the mistake, I'm able to then go, 'Oh, okay, let's do this again.'

  • Love can produce the children, but it has nothing to do with the raising of the children. I grew up thinking, 'Oh, that's it. All I have to do is fall in love.' You may think love will change everything, but it really is different with children. Children don't necessarily bring you together; they challenge you.

  • I'm a hands-on mum and I'm lucky to be able to be that. I can remember the things my mum used to do with me and that time together is so important.

  • I always feel like the odd mom out, because trust me when I tell you I'm on my girls. And every time I am, I know from the outside it looks like I'm an overbearing, controlling parent. But I don't think we have any responsibility to anybody else but our kids and ourselves.

  • My husband perpetually makes fun of me about my creams and my jars and potions and lotions, but its simpler than anyone makes it: clean, tone, keep yourself moisturized. The rest is internal: Protect yourself from the sun and drink water.

  • I was the first child at four at a modeling agency, so I had an advantage.

  • I have always liked lionesses. Female lions have always seemed like the best. They were really strong and took care of their babies and are beautiful.

  • We live in New York. To be able to have a steady job and take your kids to school, and be around and work hard, is the perfect life.

  • I think I'm going to have to live vicariously through my daughter's rebellion because I certainly never did go through adolescence.

  • Honesty is the quality I value most in a friend. Not bluntness, but honesty with compassion.

  • I have a place in the Broadway community that can only be earned.

  • The thing I'm the most proud of in my personal life is that my daughter actually thinks that I'm fabulous.

  • Humour has always been a self-defence mechanism for me.

  • I was Hannah Montana's mother ... Where did I go wrong?

  • I just felt as though I would never be happy again, and as if I had fallen into a big black hole.

  • I absolutely would categorize myself as one of successful professional females. I think you can be successful and still be extremely present in a healthy life.

  • Modeling is the world that I feel most welcome in.

  • ~Trust me when I tell you I'm on my girls. And every time I am, I know from the outside it looks like I'm an overbearing, controlling parent. But I don't think we are responsible to anybody but our kids and ourselves.~

  • We all struggle. I'm not saying any successful woman's life is without struggle. But it doesn't mean it has to be miserable.

  • The very damaging, frightening part of postpartum is the lack of perspective and the lack of priority and understanding what is really important.

  • The thing about Broadway, they always welcome you with open arms.

  • Being nice to everybody, saying hello to everyone in the room, signing every autograph; it was instilled in me at a very young age that this was what I was suppose to do. But I don't think it helps at all. I see more people who are rude or arrogant being rewarded - but, this way, I can put my head on the pillow at night.

  • Someone said adversity builds character, but someone else said adversity reveals character. I'm pleasantly surprised with my resilience. I persevere, and not just blindly. I take the best, get rid of the rest, and move on, realizing that you can make a choice to take the good.

  • As I'm getting older, I'm enjoying my vices so much more because I feel like I've deserved them.

  • I'm just starting to realize the type of work that I want to do. Not everyone can fit into the sitcom world because it's so fast-paced, but it feels comfortable to me.

  • I've never found therapy to be a sign of weakness; I've found the opposite to be true. The willingness to have a mirror held up to you definitely requires strength.

  • I would have thought that I would have become one of those parents - just because it's my nature to be such a perfectionist - that anything falling short, I would have seen as a failure. But something has happened to me over the past few years - it's not Zen, believe me, I'm not at all Zen - but I'm so appreciative of even the chaos.

  • What Tupperware has stood for all these years is the independence of women, allowing women to work from home, earn a living - and that what this Boys & Girls Clubs of America program, the SMART Girls program, is about.

  • Everybody says, 'When you have kids, you really get away from yourself.' But really, it's the most selfish thing I've ever done. It's like, Okay, I'm going to create unconditional love for myself, and I'm going to need it and want it and ask for it every day, and I'm going to get it.

  • You don't necessarily have to be in misery to be talented.

  • If my jeans could talk, would I be embarrassed?

  • I'm so naive about finances. Once when my mother mentioned an amount and I realized I didn't understand, she had to explain: 'That's like three Mercedes.' Then I understood.

  • There are no dumb male questions. There are dumb males, but not dumb male questions.

  • Eight shows a week is daunting, and it can be terrifying. But it just instills such a sense of confidence and growth.

  • My mother totally protected me as a model. She took me on every look-see, she was there on the set if I wanted her to be.

  • You are only as pretty as you are nice and smart.

  • People say, 'I love my wrinkles.' I don't love my wrinkles - come on!

  • Guys think that if a girl is pretty, she's automatically going to say no. Most of the guy's I've gone out with, I've had to make it completely obvious that I'd like them to ask me out. Or, I've had to ask them.

  • People think of me as a mannequin. All show and no substance.

  • I could never, ever have an abortion.

  • Two eggs do not an omelette make

  • It's nice, it gives you a feeling of security so that if something breaks we know we can always call a guy over and he'll bring a drill or something.

  • Someone said adversity builds character, but someone else said adversity reveals character. Im pleasantly surprised with my resilience. I persevere, and not just blindly. I take the best, get rid of the rest, and move on, realizing that you can make a choice to take the good.

  • I took my work seriously, but not as a craft. More as a life.

  • It's okay to be successful and it's also okay to be happy with your success even though it might not be easy.

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