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I am not conscious of the fact that something special should be done for me.
I am a not exactly a gadget freak and have the regular phones. But I keep multiple phones because if there's a network issue in one, then I can use another one.
Whatever free time I get, I love to catch news and sports shows.
I don't know how others think about me, but if I have to walk the streets, I will, and if I need to stand in a queue at the airport, that's OK.
When I wrote my first blog, I got one response. Now, I sometimes get as many as 400 responses for my posts.
I feel a burden if I don't write.
I sign a film based on the story, the role I play, and the maker.
I don't spend much time looking back at what happened. I do remember it, but I don't see any purpose of wanting to look back.
I write my own blog every day. I do the Twitter every day and the Facebook. Without a gap. I do everything myself: I load my own photographs; I sometimes take my own videos and post them.
I miss the camera each moment and each day.
I've accepted that I was a failure in politics. I was not qualified for the job.
Rajeev Gandhi was prime minister. We've had a long family relationship with them. He asked me to fight an election, and I went ahead and did it. But I was not qualified as a politician, and I am not going back there again.
I guess I've been extremely keen on theatre, on getting on to the stage, taking on different roles, enacting vocations, personalities, people, situations, and I guess that's the interest that has driven me to work in movies.
A lot of my fighting qualities I inherited from my parents. They set tremendous examples right through my life.
My opening words to anybody I hire are, 'I'm an extremely vulnerable person.'
Whatever I do becomes controversial.
I really felt good after working in a film like 'Piku,' as many people could relate to my character. I got letters from my fans telling me how my character resembles to their grandparents.
I was born in fame. I was always recognised and known. Personally, I feel normal about it.
Indian films are like our food or our sense of dress or our languages: there's a great variety, and it changes every 100 miles, but there is something in common, a national Indian essence, that binds them all together.
I should only look back at moments that were disparaging, look down upon, negative for me - moments where I could learn something. And if I have been able to use that learning in future, then I am happy about it.
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