I developed a passion for the Middle Ages the same way some people develop a passion for coconuts.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I always felt there was some kind of nobility centered in my desire and passion for what I do.
Sometimes you develop a passion for something because of some personal experience.
My passions were an intersection between peace in the Middle East and climate change. I know how to understand a technology problem, break it into its components and solve it. I also knew I couldn't make peace solely through technological inventions.
Passion has been in my DNA for generations.
In my late teenage years, I developed a real passion for it, and wrote a lot of poetry.
If you have a great passion it seems that the logical thing is to see the fruit of it, and the fruit are children.
I shall confess at the outset that it was only shortly after the beginning of this century that I entered active life - with a somewhat precocious capacity for involvement.
I discovered I was passionate about the creative process, the product development, creating a concept around a fragrance or lipstick.
I was nuts for stuff in the Middle Ages when I was just in the third and fourth grades.
I use the word 'passion' a lot when I talk to young people. In every pursuit I've been on, I've had a lot of passion behind it. It continues to motivate me every day on what I like to do and where I'm going.
No opposing quotes found.