Not exact matches
It can be hard to juggle school,
work, soccer
practice, football
practice, dance, piano lessons, and
whatever else your children may be involved in.
I seem to agree that Kawhi's not about the money, that he'd
work his ass off in
practice and in a game to win for his team... and i doubt Kawhi wants all this attention on him now... but given all these leaks from former players and media sources about leaving SA, getting more money and getting into a bigger media market / shoe deal, that's not Kawhi at all... it has to be something / someone... looking at his camp... logically SAS wouldn't be leaking these unless they are nudging him to leave, and for what, for inevitably way lesser value in
whatever trade they get into.
Posting notices on bulletin boards, screening candidates that do not match your needs, and searching the Internet for information all take time — time you could be spending actually playing with your child,
working, going out with your husband,
practicing yoga, or taking the time to do
whatever it is that relaxes you.
In her private
practice, Camie
works off the 7th Principle, meaning that
whatever a person's choices, that person's actions have a ripple effect to the next 7 generations.
I would love to
work with you to deepen your
practice in
whatever way calls to you at this time.
Most guys already know this but they have a hard time putting it into
practice because as soon as they walk out of the gym after a ridiculously grueling session, they feel entitled to eat
whatever they want (read: a huge greasy burger) because they've
worked their ass off.
Feel free to
practice cyclical ketosis (maybe doing a ketogenic diet five days a week and going higher in healthy carbs the other two days) or
whatever works for you.
So before they come to a head, address the small contentious issues; maybe your partner tends to prioritize social engagements over dinner dates for the two of you, maybe they simply leave the laundry in the washing machine longer than you would like —
whatever it may be,
working through these small things is important because when you get to the big issues you will have had
practice in the art of compromise and conflict resolution.
Whatever it is you need to do online,
practice always makes perfect and learning online is a great step to understanding how things on the internet
work.
Designed for repeated
practice to help children who find it hard to accurately add full stops to their writing,
whatever age or key stage whilst also improving reading comprehension skills and the ability to check their
work for errors.
Whatever you do during Guided
Practice will constitute an incentive system for building in your students
work habits — either good or bad.
Eager to please, willing to
work, and happy to do
whatever you are doing, Bedlingtons are easy to train with consistency,
practice, and patience.
Whatever I know about level design comes primarily through
practice, in particular
working on different kinds of levels,
working with different types of tools and processes, and designing levels for different genres of games.
Louise Bourgeois One of the most influential artists of the twentieth century, Louise Bourgeois described her artistic
practice as an attempt to
work through
whatever tumult plagued her — psychologically, personally, or artistically.
Smit largely
works in sculpture and installation though his
practice, conceptually based, will assume
whatever necessary form depending on each project's requirements.
In his preface to Paul Frederick Bach's 2010 study for the REF, Professor Michael Laughton said, «The outstanding major concern in the
work reported here, and one with very serious implications - especially for the United Kingdom with its predominantly island system with inadequate international interconnection capacity - is the extent to which subsidized wind power can, in
practice, be used within the system without needing to be constrained off: in other words wasted, or exported at
whatever market prices, perhaps disadvantageous ones, prevail elsewhere.»
Despite
whatever preconceptions or judgments many people may have of lawyers and the
work they do, there are some facts about the
practice of law that can't be denied: It's tougher than most people think and frequently less fulfilling than they would ever believe.
Whatever your size or needs, we assess your requirements and create a solution that
works for your
practice.
Not that I don't enjoy
practicing law by any means, but that is, if you ask me, I'm much more interested in building successful businesses throughout the course of my life
whatever those look like and right now happens to be a law firm
working in family law and, like I said, I enjoy it, but at the end of the day, I'd love to not have the revenue generation rely on me so I can do more of that other, but until we see those scales tip, the majority of my
work will still be on the client side and the billing side.
You need to dive in, headfirst, and
work you butt off with
whatever time you have for your
practice.
He was recognized as being a thought leader or
whatever and he was up at the solo small convention in Minnesota and I went up to him afterwards and just felt like I finally met a kindred spirit who really had some neat, cool ideas about law
practice but really useful, effective ones for doing it differently and he was reassuring me that I'm not crazy for wanting to do things differently and that it could
work.
«We need to hear from claimant and defendant firms in personal injury
work, from large
practices to sole practitioner
practices, from
practices engaged in commercial litigation of
whatever size, and from inner city locations to rural areas across the whole country.
They need to
work hard to ensure that
whatever their backgrounds, the culture is supportive and that people across teams,
practice groups and sectors are able to
work seamlessly together.
Whatever the outcome, this will throw up a range of issues likely to cause additional
work across many
practice areas.
It seems that
whatever the
practice area, lawyers talk in hushed tones about their
work becoming a commodity.
For those lawyers who have a federal criminal
practice or who do federal post-conviction
work I pass along this information for
whatever value you care to give to it.
This curriculum helps foster, adoptive, step or birth parents: 1) Discover how disruptive behavior can be changed,
whatever a child's age; 2) Recognize «acting out» and «hidden» behaviors and know how to respond to both; 3) Understand the nature of positive, effective discipline and how to apply it using encouragement, behavior contracts, time out, setting limits and removing privileges; 4)
Practice using these tools by
working with a DVD portraying realistic family situations; 5) Know when to call for help and where to get help; 6) Experience cooperation in the home — and enjoy being parents.