Sentences with phrase «forgotten past felt»

Not exact matches

And the past few days have had residents feeling forgotten while help pours into the rest of New York and New Jersey.
As a matter of fact, finite individuals would not be subject to perspectives in the sense that some feelings in their pasts had been forgotten or that some actualities in their pasts had been forgotten.
Many men would like to think that much of the past is both gone and forgotten, and Hartshorne has not fully persuaded me that God could not possibly feel the same way.
And when i look into the mirror and see myself wearing a 70 bucks arsenal puma jacket i feel so proud ozil should be even prouder i know hea german he may hate the british cuz of world war and stuff but he should forget the past and look into the future
I think people are forgetting (and I feel like we've said this every year for the past five) it's really open this season.
Forget the cheapo title, «Badsville» is a powerful, deeply felt crime drama about letting go of the past and getting out of Dodge - before it's too late.
When Margot is goaded into climbing that tree (suspected to be rotting, the tree doctor gives it a clean bill of health), which stands as sentinel between the childhoods better remembered and the present better forgotten, and finds herself stuck there with a bug crawling into her ear, there is, stark and indelible, the feeling that we've come somewhere in our process of grief — past vengeance, into despair, no looking back.
I did not know him, had only spoken to him a few times on the way past his cottage when I was out with Lyra most often at quite an early hour, and I suddenly felt like going back in again and forgetting all about it; what could I do anyway, but now he must have seen the light of my torch, and it was too late, and after all there was something about this character I could barely make out there in the night alone.
When I asked Simonson what she felt women today could learn from the past, she responded that she thought her book might «remind women not to forget where we've come from.
She felt its commanding logic, both internal and external, powerful enough to keep her tethered to home, to silence the fears that she would never write again, eliminate the horrid daydream in which she sometimes indulged, about simply walking away from this alternative life she was living, filled with its soft poetry and hard tediousness, its spectacular, love - ridden times measured against meaningless hours and days and weeks and months, a life where her past accomplishments were long forgotten, where she was called, most often, Joan Manning, leaving her tongue - tied and wishing she could say, «I'm not Joan Manning, I'm Joan Ashby, the writer.»
Memories such as these linger, vividly etched in my mind, but feel too like remnants of a long - forgotten past.
In years past the NCAA games have felt like they were playing the role of the forgotten older sibling in compared to the effort placed on the Madden football franchise.
«In resurrecting a very specific sort of puzzle adventure that the industry has seemingly forgotten, Gareth Noyce's heartfelt love - letter to the past succeeds in weaving a yarn which manages to feel both fresh and compelling at the same time.
At times it feels low budget and it's hard to look past unlicensed teams in 2016, but then that perfect goal happens and you forget; your senses dulled by the unstoppable one - touch move that peeled a defensive line like a big sweaty banana.
Often utilising film stills, footage of actual events, or photographs of urban and rural environments, Peter Doig's paintings emanate a quiet sense of nostalgia reminiscent of one's past or conjure up an atavistic feeling of a long forgotten memory.
Or maybe, past situations are now causing feelings of sadness, anger, or shame because you can't forget the memory though you try.
I feel as if the past 2 months were a waste of time, but I can't forget about it either.
Have you ever felt embarrassed because you missed an appointment or forgot key details about a past client?
by Nika Zupanc Inspired by the classic English china with pink roses, this chair reflects a love for almost forgotten values & feelings from a noble past.
We wanted a luxurious looking space that gave a calm, serene feel and could make our guests forget about the past five hours they just spent ripping down lath and plaster.
All through this past winter, and now spring - since I made the decision to do this - I have focused on the pain, the anxiety, the awful feeling of having to have someone else take care of me — and I've forgotten to look ahead to being with my twins who are now 16 1/2 and my husband who makes all of our family's dreams happen.
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