Myself
in sentence
6423 examples of Myself in a sentence
I found
myself
in a cell, handcuffed, blindfolded.
Now, personally I've seen a lot of this struggle with data myself, because I work in computational genetics, which is also a field where lots of very smart people are using unimaginable amounts of data to make pretty serious decisions like deciding on a cancer therapy or developing a drug.
Now, it's not often that I surprise myself, but my own two mitts had created something crazy, and new.
And I was really pained by what I saw because I thought to myself, "These poor fisherfolk, how are they going to go about their daily activities with these restrictions."
And I thought to myself, "Three simple steps to a mega solution."
Or that Gertrude Stein is more of a computer than William Blake? (Laughter) These are questions I've been asking
myself
for around two years now, and I don't have any answers.
And then you get a phone call from a newspaper that says: 'We found you to be positive six times for EPO." Second: "I lost
myself
in all of that.
And every time I would run into a problem in trying to teach
myself
programming like, "What is object-oriented design or what is garbage collection?",
Now, just like trying to force
myself
to pay attention to my breath, they could try to force themselves to quit smoking.
You know, despite all my scientific skepticism, I found
myself
hiking into the jungle, guided by my aunt, over 700 kilometers away from the nearest volcanic center, and well, honestly, mentally preparing
myself
to behold the legendary "warm stream of the Amazon."
When I got there, though, everyone was very encouraging, supportive, and let me be
myself
without being judged.
After all, I consider
myself
a black woman with a white father rather than a white woman with a black mother entirely for social reasons.
And I wanted it not just for
myself
but I wanted it for my students as well.
They try to legislate to try and force people like
myself
to use the bathroom that they deem most appropriate according to the gender I was assigned at birth.
That's when you say, "Even if I can't do something today, I can improve
myself
through practice and achieve it eventually."
Anything that made me nervous, took me out of my comfort zone, I forced
myself
to say yes to.
If I have to ask you who I am, if I have to tell you who I am, if I describe
myself
in terms of shows and hours of television and how globally badass my brain is, I have forgotten what the real hum is.
I make it a firm rule for one reason, to give
myself
permission, to free me from all of my workaholic guilt.
I mean, let's be honest, I call
myself
a titan.
starts to become shorthand for indulging
myself
in ways I'd given up on right around the time I got my first TV show, right around the time I became a titan-in-training, right around the time I started competing with
myself
for ways unknown.
What could be wrong with giving
myself
my full attention for 15 minutes?
It takes a little time, but after a few months, one day the floodgates open and there's a rush, and I find
myself
standing in my office filled with an unfamiliar melody, full on groove inside me, and around me, and it sends me spinning with ideas, and the humming road is open, and I can drive it and drive it, and I love working again.
I've asked that question myself, "Why?" (Laughter) And I think the answer is in three parts.
I see
myself
in it.
I rationalized my silence by reminding
myself
that I was a guest in the country, that sounding the alarm could even get me kicked out, keep me from doing good work, taking care of my patients, doing much-needed research.
I regret not speaking up in Zimbabwe, and I've promised
myself
that as New York City's Health Commissioner, I will use every opportunity I have to sound the alarm and rally support for health equity.
So then I hear
myself
saying, "Hey, I have an airbed you can stay on in my living room."
But when I found
myself
back home one winter break, with my face planted in the floor, my hands tied behind my back and a burglar's gun pressed to my head, I knew that even the best education couldn't save me.
But it just so happened, two days later, I had to travel up the road to Harlem, where I found
myself
sitting in an urban farm that had once been a vacant lot, listening to a man named Tony tell me of the kids that showed up there every day.
And as the prosecutor read the facts of each case, I was thinking to myself, we could have predicted that.
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