Quotes on the topic: Muscles


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Muscles come and go; flab lasts.


Your pupillary muscles relax when your body gives up.


I went to a Gestalt therapist and said that I want to be able to at least tell my muscles that aren't involved that they don't have to go into spasms too.


If you do a character that resonates enough, people are always going to see you as that character. It will just be up to me to make choices where I can flex other muscles.


You've got muscles and you use them everywhere else in your body when you want it. Why not your face?


I don't like being away from theater that long. The muscles get atrophied if you don't exercise them.


I like being able to marry the actor and the technician inside of me. It's really fulfilling. It exercises all of my creative muscles.


I'm excited to flex my Broadway muscles - it keeps you alive as an actor.


It's so rare to get all of your muscles firing at once. That's what I look for in any role.


If you only exercise your soloist muscles, the other muscles quickly atrophy.


I just use my muscles as a conversation piece, like someone walking a cheetah down 42nd Street.


It's happened a couple of times in training when I hyper-extend my back. Some facet joints send all the muscles in my lower back and lumbar-spine into spasm.


I don't want to do free jazz! Because free jazz - which is the musical equivalent of free marketeering - isn't actually free at all. It's just constrained by what your muscles can do.


I found it possible to observe at least the superficial capillaries of muscles both in the frog and in mammals through a binocular microscope, using strong reflected light as a source of illumination. Resting muscles observed in this way are usually quite pale, and the microscope reveals only a few capillaries at fairly regular intervals.


Muscles do not use oxygen at a constant rate.


I'm sure a psychologist would see something highly significant in how absent-minded I am. I mean I'd forget my head if it wasn't attached to my neck by muscles, ligaments and my esophagus.


Besides walking, I do stretches every day. I had back trouble starting when I turned 40, so I have to stretch out my muscles every day.


I look at American movies, the big muscles, and try to apply that to Chinese film-making.


Because her voice is, it's like the muscles and it develops all the time. That was the fantastic thing for us.


I'm always aware of trying to put my body in different positions to test it and strengthen muscles that you don't get when you do dumbbell press or pulls or weight-type exercises.