Not exact matches
«But though by the end of the battle the men
felt all the horror of their actions,» he writes, «though they would have been glad to stop, some incomprehensible, mysterious power still went on governing them, and the artillery men, covered with powder and blood, reduced to one in three, though stumbling and gasping from fatigue, kept bringing charges, loaded, aimed, applied the slow match; and the cannonballs, with the same speed and cruelty, flew from both sides and crushed human
bodies flat, and the
terrible thing continued to be accomplished, which was accomplished not by the will of men, but by the will of Him who governs people and worlds.»
If you have
terrible withdrawal symptoms and
feel like crap during this phase, that is your
body telling you how badly it was suffering under the load of all those substances in food that you thought you couldn't live without.
«My
body's ability to produce milk, and so the sustenance to keep my baby alive, also helped to restore my faith in my
body, which at some core level, I
felt had really let me down, due to a
terrible pregnancy, labor, and birth.
One
felt natural, almost neutral, and the other made me
feel like my
body was fighting something
terrible off.
The pain can vary from irritating to completely incapacitating, so in better cases, it
feels pretty much the same as the ordinary leg cramps, but at its worst, it can cause a
terrible burning sensation in one side of the
body, forcing people to take painkilling drugs to relieve the symptoms.
This is why «listen to your
body» or «trust your gut
feeling» is often
TERRIBLE advice.
I bet you'll notice you
feel better and at least when it comes to food, you won't consume these meals that are
terrible for your
body.
For example, I
feel terrible after I eat corn because my
body considers corn an invader and releases IgG antibodies to attack it.
She was chronically fatigued, overwhelmed, depressed and anxious; suffered
terrible headaches and
body pain; always
felt cold and unable to keep warm; had trouble eating and sleeping; and seemed to be allergic to everything.
Howard isn't a pedophile, but he is something pretty
terrible: he's a misogynist who
feels entitlement over a woman's
body.
He shares his memories and the fleeting moments of his
body — places it has been, things it has
felt (both wonderful and
terrible)-- through threaded vignettes constructed of languorous sentences that
feel much like memory itself.
I know first hand how
terrible sinus problems are; still so frustrating because you
feel like your
body doesn't have your back against the environment!