Sentences with phrase «by in a blur»

And the result is time feels like it is going by in a blur.
But to be honest, the last 6 weeks went by in a blur for me.
Binge watching television shows is likely the closest we'll ever get to time travel, because there's no better way to make an whole day go by in a blur than queing up an entire season of a good series.
We're busy getting ready for work, packing lunches, getting kids ready for school -LCB- well not in my case, but still -RCB-, mornings fly by in a blur.
Christmas took me by surprise this year — December flew by in a blur of work projects and deadlines, and then suddenly it was December 25 and just as suddenly, it's now the last day of 2017.
While at times it seemed like the weekend would never end (or rather that I would never sleep again), it also seemed to go by in a blur.
The next few weeks will pass by in a blur of night feeds, visitors, films and countless cups of undrunk, cold tea.
Your baby's first year will whiz by in a blur, so record all the sweet memories you're making together.
Chances are, your short - term memory isn't quite up to par as a result of sleep deprivation: Your days and nights are going by in a blur.
I don't remember much these days, and honestly, it kind of went by in a blur.
You get all hyped up on adrenaline and excitement that times just goes by in a blur.
Most of it went by in a blur due to being sick and relaxing...
The last few weeks before the holidays always speed by in a blur of happy hours, parties, dinners and concerts.
Most of it went by in a blur due to being sick and relaxing because this spring and summer is about to get crazy busy.
My weekend went by in a blur of Mardi Gras events.
Much like for Chips himself, the film shows years as they begin to fly by in a blur, as new boys replace old boys, and new faces look the same as their fathers and grandfathers before them, in particular, little Colley, as played by Terry Kilburn (John Colley, Peter Colley, Peter Colley II, Peter Colley III).
This year's Fantastic Fest went by in a blur, a seven - day avalanche of drinking, interviews, more drinking, and kick - ass genre - films that — from time to time — could feel a little overwhelming.
First gear goes by in a blur.
When I look back at my time in optometry school (it's already been almost 5 years??!!), it seems like it went by in a blur.
This year at GRB has gone by in a blur.
Trackside detail still looks rather flat, but it's hard to notice when everything is going by in a blur.
Some aspects of the story go by in blur and never get the fleshing out they deserve, while other elements take far too long to play out.
Beautiful, highly detailed courses zoom by in a blur that will leave you wrapping your head around the mechanics at first glance.
Blaze by in a blur using the super...
Like buzzing avian fairies darting with purpose from one bloom to the next, they pass by in a blur, never seeming to rest.
Push the button, and as you look at the display representing what's in front of the phone (using the rear camera), you'll see things zooming by in a blur.
Though it might seem like November passed by in a blur, there is one upside to the end of the month getting here quickly: it's almost time for a fresh batch of PlayStation Plus games.
It all went by in a blur, but I was ready for the week to be over a few days ago.
Seriously, this year has gone by in a blur and I can't believe that soon enough the season will be over.
It went by in a blur for me.
Otherwise the moment will pass on by in the blur of my to do list.
Our week flew by in a blur and today is a holiday here in Denmark, so we are already jumping in to the weekend with both feet, but before we run off and keep decorating the house, visiting flea markets, and going to soccer matches, I wanted to give you a peek into this beautiful and modern home in Copenhagen.
It isn't enough to let days slip by in a blur of chaos and busyness and just hope things turn out for the best.

Not exact matches

Volkswagen made headlines in 2011 by announcing it would stop its servers from distributing email to employees after work hours in an effort to prevent employees from feeling that the lines between workplace and home had blurred.
Thus, Witham dealt with her boyfriend in the most 2018 of ways — by dumping him, screenshotting him, and posting their text exchange to Twitter (with his name blurred out), so that everyone else could drag him.
Unlike the dogmatic secularists you meet in college faculties or in prestige journalism, Blur are the sort who seem ready to admit that the actual world brought to us by secular modernity is pretty pathetic, and that it gets old.
The brown bunny in the forest, the hubcap by the side of the road, even individual trees — all of them are a blur.
The distinction is further blurred by the mystical tradition in every major world religion, including Christianity and Judaism.
In one popular study of the problem of God today, John A. T. Robinson questions the relevance of a theism that would think of God as a heavenly, completely perfect person who resides above the world and mankind.4 The same issue is raised by Harvey Cox, who writes: The willingness of the classical philosophers to allow the God of the Bible to be blurred into Plato's Idea of the Good or Aristotle's Prime Mover was fatal.
This principle is doubly relevant to the task at hand because it is characterized by Whitehead both as blurring the sharp distinction between universals and particulars and as constituting «the first step in the description of the universe as a solidarity of many actual entities» (PR 65).
The lines are also blurred by large segments of Pentecostalism (especially in the south and among blacks) that are also «Holiness» in that they teach «three works of grace» — conversion, entire sanctification and a «baptism in the Spirit» with speaking in tongues.
The distinction between the nuclear and traditional family was also blurred in the recent report on human sexuality by the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) titled Keeping Body and Soul Together: «Although many Christians in the post-World War II era have a special emotional attachment to the nuclear family, with its employed father, mother at home, and two or more school - aged children, that profile currently fits only 5 percent of North American households.»
The Darwinist strategy depends upon a certain blurring of the issues, and in particular upon maintaining the fiction that what is being promoted is an inoffensive «fact of evolution,» which is opposed only by a discredited minority of religious fanatics.
Rather, it is a projection by a percipient subject onto a (fictitious) contemporaneous spatiotemporal manifold of certain highly refined and analyzed features of entities directly (but more vaguely and dimly) encountered in the percipient's immediate past through the mode of causal efficacy.8 The important distinction between true perception — what we might now in Rortyan jargon call nonmentalistic «unanalyzed raw feels» — and this second - order symbolic projection of select percepta characteristic only of higher - order conscious organisms is somewhat blurred by terming both equally «modes of perception.»
Similar sentiments are heard today from «pastoral planners» who take their cues from Protestant megachurches in which creating a feeling of «ownership» on the part of the congregation, often by blurring the border between sacred and profane, is very much part of the marketing - and - retention strategy.
They have become bored with God in part precisely because his transcendent glory has been blurred and muddled in their minds by the noise from groups with trendy acronyms.
But they are obscured by China's PR campaign drive — the 2008 Olympics were a virtuoso exercise in propaganda — and blurred by the sycophancy of other nations and institutions.
On the other hand, we are introduced to the nature and spirit of transcendentalism, but aren't told much about how the «softening contours and the blurring of details» in landscapes by George Inness reveal «underlying structures that directly mirrored the divine.»
It should also be pointed Out that the memory - lane of dalits in re» member» ing their cultural values is blurred by the influences of world - view of other religions to which they converted later.
They point to other destructive aspects of television that have been stressed by television researchers and theorists; the privatization of experience at the expense of family and social interaction and rela - tionships; (33) the promotion of fear as the appropriate attitude to life: (34) television's cultural levelling effects which blur local, regional, and national differences and impose a distorted and primarily free - enterprise, competitive and capitalistic picture of events and their significance; (35) television's suppression of social dialogue; (36) its distorted and exploitative presentation of certain social groups: (37) the increasing alienation felt by most viewers in relation to this central means of social communication; (38) and its negative effects on the development of the full range of human potential.
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