Sentences with phrase «believing something about themselves»

Hauge's basic premise of character development is that the character starts with an identity: believing something about themselves or the world around them that isn't actually true.
She also believed something about God, and when the spies came to her, she acted on what she believed to deliver and rescue them.
I think we already have an Henry type in Welbz if he would take lessons from the king himself when he is back... i believe he something about him that im sure Wenger can click and get out of him!
It's not the silly (voting) Americans who believe something about Obama that's racist, untrue, or both.

Not exact matches

«No one cared about mattress companies before them; that they believed in creating something that was really hard to do was really attractive,» Osborne says.
Peretti and others have talked before about the criteria that they believe causes someone to share something — things that trigger strong emotions such as love, joy, etc..
I realize that they're a necessary evil, but you need to be very careful that you're not saying things or doing things (even worse) to «prove» something to these people because (a) it's never enough to satisfy them in any case and they won't believe you anyway; and (b) it's a fool's errand to waste your time trying to impress people whose livelihood is much more about finding the warts and shortcomings in your story than in celebrating your successes.
Tom: When you're dealing with technology we haven't discovered yet, when you're thinking about science that can completely alter the way we see ourselves and what is possible... if it takes movies and documentaries to plant the seeds, when Steve pulls something new out onto the tarmac, seeing will be believing.
-- there is one aspect of the cryptocurrency that I believe can teach us something important about the future of healthcare: Bitcoin and its coinish ilk are self - organizing systems that operate utterly outside the traditional structures and rules of financial engagement.
I can understand why there might be questions about something new that's different, but we've really tried to do it from the point of view of the publishers, and we believe that we can create an environments that's actually really great for the publishers, really great for the readers, and also really great for the advertisers.
But those who follow the company closely say they believe it can — that there is something truly intuitive about Intuitive's grasp of the future of surgery.
Early on in our history when things weren't really going well — we had hit a tough patch and a lot of people wanted to buy Facebook — I went and I met with Steve Jobs, and he said that to reconnect with what I believed was the mission of the company, I should go visit this temple in India that he had gone to early in the evolution of Apple, when he was thinking about what he wanted his vision of the future to be... That reinforced to me the importance of what we were doing, and that is something I will always remember.
When you believe that people are human beings first and worker bees second, you say something about their worth.
But for better or worse, there's not much reason to believe users will be that upset about it in the long run, as long as it offers something useful in return.
Each time you speak publicly, or even privately for that matter, about your business I believe that you learn something and help improve and sharpen your pitch.
I'm living it right now, and I may even write a book about it soon because it's something I really believe in with everything in me, so much so that I'm living and breathing it weekly.
Speaking in Poland, U.S. President Donald Trump said something would have to be done about North Korea's «very, very bad behavior», before adding that he believed Russia had interfered in the U.S. election.
It's as if the marketing world believes that consumers buying something for themselves are totally emotional, but the minute they go to work and buy something as part of their job, all they care about is optimization and efficiency.
For them to hear from me about this project and that I believe it's something they would like, rather than a commercial, was key.
This professor explains in The Conversation why he believes Europeans have something to teach the United States about how to protect citizens subject to Russian internet propaganda.
But Palmer, a software engineer who'd worked with NASA, and Goodwin, an astrophysicist by training, believed they were in a position to do something about it.
He continued, «I don't believe in hobbies — if you are really passionate about something, it should be your job — but I do like to play poker.»
Now is also a good time to understand that it's not necessarily about appearing bigger — and leading your customers to believe your company is something that it's not — it's about identifying the advantages your company has from being a proverbial small fish in your market and leveraging that to your benefit.
Swersey cautions against the idea of brainstorming, believing instead rewards should be given to the idea generators who do something about their ideas.
There's nothing wrong with feeling good about a branded corporation taking a stand for something you believe in.
The reason: «Walker believed that you could not let high - profile executives think for you... [It is] better to give them something tangible to consider, because once you've left their presence, they are not going to spend more time thinking about you.»
He's fine with and even welcoming of negative criticism about him when he believes it's accurate, but when the press gets something wrong about him or his companies, he usually can't help himself and will engage them and correct their error.
[30:08] Life is too short to suffer [31:01] It's the thoughts that are stressful that you believe that mess you up — when you question them, you break the pattern [31:20] The more you train yourself to do it, the easier it becomes [31:40] Don't wait to be rich, richness is joy and abundance [32:01] Loss, Less, Never: the sources of all suffering [32:06] The antidote is to see it for what it is, know it's «BS,» and find something to appreciate [33:49] So much of our life has become about expectation.
And at the end of the day, the fact that this conspiracy refuses to die says something about how Facebook users view the company: as a stalker that creeps on their privacy, and then can't be believed when it tells you, «no, trust me, we don't do that.»
In 2002, an Ipsos - Reid poll found that 86 per cent of Canadians believed that the federal government should do something to alleviate public concerns about media concentration.
If you believe they've found something that helps them satisfy their needs, reinforce their image about that purchase.
If being a Pure Barre owner is something you are passionate about and believe is right for you, you can make it happen!
«But I believe there's something missing from most of the discussion: You should spend just as much time thinking about how to bring in extra money as you do thinking of ways to save what you already have.
I believe you can still do something about it.
Dr. Brett recently wrote about something I believe is called hindsight bias.
I believe Susan was making a statement about the Wildrose party that they seem to say that pretty much the government should get out of the way of the oil companies and let them do whatever they want and we should be grateful when they do something nice for Alberta.
While I believe markets are efficient when it comes to stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities and reflect all known information at the time, in the case of bitcoin, and a few other instances like the ONLY stock I've bought in over a year (now up big), when I start to see the mainstream media reporting on something, google search volume through the roof (chart below) and lastly, when your mom asks about it — it may be signaling mainstream acceptance and further expansion of a major bubble.
Something about their consecrated life kept the rest of us on the right track, reminded us of the mystery in which we believe.
It is strange that people go out of their way to seek out articles they know they are about something they supposedly don't believe or care about.
If you care about people and believe you have something with which to help them, you will tell them.
To claim to «know» there is no God, and yet still not knowing so much of what there is to know about the universe, is just taking something you want to believe on faith.
@ jack3 no you have the right to believe what ever you want, but we might mock you for believing in something that has talking snakes, a story about the world flooding and being able to fit all the animals on the planet on one boat, that believes in magic, that believes a person lived in the belly of a whale, and that people coexisted with dinosaurs all without any actual proof.
America's leading financial news channel is back in full «interest rate» coverage... as producers appear to believe that non-stop speculation (about something we already know won't happen) is good for ratings.
They say they believe on something, but are very selective about it.
Somehow both old as the hills and joyful as the sun, his greatest lie is the one he seems (almost) to believe: «My lord, I was born about three of the clock in the afternoon, with a white head and something a round belly.»
When everybody believes the same thing, about something that is essentially not comprehensible, every kind of moral and scientific progress is inhibited.
For a clear definition of «perfectly fine,» go over to the article about the London Cleric resigning and see haw many perfectly fine people are posting in all caps, touting their personal beliefs as facts, and making fun of us for believing something we believe is factual.
I believe this wise and nuanced document says something true about human nature; I'm afraid Mr. Smalling might label it «common bigotry.»
This is about your willingness to accept Truth, even if it is something you would never have believed without seeing it for yourself.
He said that the latest study (Professor Jordan Grafman, from the US National Inst - itute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda,) suggests the brain is inherently sensitive to believing in almost anything if there are grounds for doing so, but when there is a mystery about something, the same neural machinery is co-opted in the formulation of religious belief.
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