Whitehead's fundamental relation of prehension is something broader and more elemental, the generally unconscious emotional feeling by which one
bit of life responds to other realities.
Not exact matches
Since
live tweeting can be a
bit of a rapid fire experience, it's okay to keep your responses brief, but it's important that you
respond.
«There stands a person who is
responding out
of anxiety, who may not have the peace
of God that you have... who may not know the forgiveness
of sins, who does not have the hope
of eternal
life... Jesus died for that person every
bit as much as he died for you.»
Now, Sundance regulars are often correctly skeptical
of how those willing to stay up till 2AM for a horror movie
respond — it's often a
bit, shall we say, genre - biased — but this is a case in which the film completely
lives up to the hype.
I definitely saw
bits of myself as a teen in Lady Bird — I was also a theater kid in high school, so seeing that in the film was a total treat, but also remembering that as a time in your
life where you could try on different versions
of yourself to see who you want to be, and what other people
respond to.
We shall not bring back a single
bit of gold or silver, not a gem, nor any coal or iron... If you can not understand that there is something in man which
responds to the challenge
of this mountain and goes out to meet it, that the struggle is the struggle
of life itself upward and forever upward, then you won't see why we go.
In her memoir, All
of Me: How I Learned to
Live with the Many Personalities Sharing My Body, Kim Noble (a name given to her at birth that she has now learned to
respond to) describes, with great honesty and a
bit of a dramatic flair, her experiences
living with DID.