Sentences with phrase «dying to talk»

I am writing a real live book I'm dying to talk about but won't just yet... it is the book I'd want to read.
I also asked the agent to give me a call back; I was dying to talk with her and find out the scoop on this place.
At New York Fashion Week, the designer was dying to talk to everyone, but was convinced that she wasn't important or cool enough to talk to anyone.
OK, I know somebody's dying to talk about Russian political risk, domestic Russian oil prices, the implied value of the Oil India deal, etc..
Read this and get back to me because I am dying to talk to someone about it.
I have many questions and am dying to talk to someone about it.
After seeing Colossal, I realized I hadn't seen anything like it before and I was dying to talk to someone about it.
This means, she would never first express her interest in a man, even if she was dying to talk to him.

Not exact matches

After the talk of foreign assignments, pension plans and leadership roles had died off, I mentioned that I was looking to start my own company.
I only ever talked to Si, who died over the weekend at age 89, a handful of times in my two years at WWD.
A few weeks after Dave died, I was talking to my friend Phil about a father - son activity that Dave was not here to do.
«Be it taking a different route to work, talking to a new person, or experimenting with something you haven't before, don't let your curiosity and awe die in the daily grind,» writes Nistha Tripathi
After Bushnell moved to Los Angeles with his family 13 years ago, he didn't talk to Jobs as frequently, though he made a final visit about six months before he died.
«In my community, there were two groups: those who didn't die, and those who came back to life,» she says in an explosively popular TED talk on desire.
It makes sense to mainly talk about your products, but that's where social media goes to die.
I was thinking this the other day, when a lot of the Facebook executives get on Twitter and feel victim - y, they're doing their victim - y dance right now a lot of the time, and at one point, Boz, Bosworth, when he said, «Maybe people will die,» that memo, and instead of being like, «Oh god, we really have to be more mature about this,» their thing was, «We can't talk now.»
He says, «Nobody learned anything by hearing themselves talk, or speak,» and he goes on to say, «The ability to lock in and listen is a skill that has served me well in life,» says Branson, «Although, it seems to be a dying art, I believe that listening is one of the most important skills for any teacher, parent, leader, entrepreneur, or just about anyone who has a pulse.»
The investment pledge would help create around 50,000 new jobs as well as rekindled speculations that Softbank's Sprint, one of the country's biggest telecoms with 82 percent shares owned by Softbank, would renew its merger and mobile deals talks with T - Mobile US, Inc. that died due to pressure from regulators.
We're all dying to hear some details about the talking snake who spoke to the woman who was made from a man's rib.
if you are talking to a conservative evangelical you just point out how each christian hopes to become a communist when they die (or socialist if you do nt want to be too damning).
Gerald, not only are you talking about a 2000 year old viewpoint where people died off much faster and earlier than they do today, but to quote another verse in the bible, it says that a mans seed should never be wasted and would serve better in the belly of a wh * re.
I just lost my soul mate this last Monday, he told me «I will love you forever» in a text message I was the last one he talked to... he wasn't sick he just died @ 49 The strange thing is he believed in God, but also he believed in true love!!
The eve before he died, my sister was the in a cot beside his bed, she woke up to dad talking to someone in the corner of the room.
A dying person has the right to talk about what they want.
This was an incredibly good article about what people really want to talk about when they are dying.
you know what mr. professor... when you are talking to someone who is dying... It isn't about YOU.
What, that god sent himself in human form to earth to live and die, so that he could live again and then rejoin himself in heaven, so that the creations, who apparently have original sin because a talking snake convinced a rib lady to eat an apple thousands of years ago, could choose to believe in Zombie Jesus and if they did they would go to heaven but if they didn't believe in Zombie Jesus they would fry in Hell forever, regardless of how good a life they lived on Earth?
All of us have forgiveness, The article was about what people want to talk about when they are dying, not some last moment attempt to «save» someone.
My thought would be, if someone's dying... if they want to talk about religion, they can.
To paraphrase him, I'd say: «That if I was ever sick in the hospital, if I was ever dying, that the last person I would ever want to see is some Harvard Divinity School professor wanting to talk to me about faith or the depth of his spiritual life.&raquTo paraphrase him, I'd say: «That if I was ever sick in the hospital, if I was ever dying, that the last person I would ever want to see is some Harvard Divinity School professor wanting to talk to me about faith or the depth of his spiritual life.&raquto see is some Harvard Divinity School professor wanting to talk to me about faith or the depth of his spiritual life.&raquto talk to me about faith or the depth of his spiritual life.&raquto me about faith or the depth of his spiritual life.»
The most loving thing that you can do to a dying person is talk to them about forgiveness through Jesus and seeing him on the other side, and then trusting the Holy Spirit to do his work while you speak.
And if you were to ask me the same question - What do people who are sick and dying talk about with the chaplain?
Offering comfort by listening and allowing the dying to express their understanding of the Divine (God, for me) by talking of family and love is the ultimate expression, in my opinion, of what a real person of God should be like, especially at the end.
people with alheimer's really talk some crazy stuff before they die, god and love don't have a damn thing to do with it
I was holding my Dad's hand on the night he died... He was sitting in his chair... he was alert to the very end... I was talking to him, and he squeezed my hand and leaned forward said» I can do that Dad, I can do that» and slipped off to what I believe is heaven.
If you are not talking to the dying about the sacrifice of Jesus Christ and His redemptive work on the cross, if you can not confess that you are a sinner and that you NEED Jesus, you WILL BE CAST INTO THE OUTER DARKNESS loved ones.
If I am dying, I want to talk about what I want to talk about — these are my final moments, let me say what I want to say.
They talk about their families because that is what really matters in a person's life... that is thier true legacy and their only real immortality... most people, I am fairly sure, know deep down that god is a fairy tale, a cushion, and that death is truly the end... what this very excellent young woman heard from these dying people makes perfect sense... death is a time to end the bs and look at and reflect upon what was real and important in that individual's life
If they're dying and wish to spend their last few breaths talking about their loves and sorrows, you might want to listen and not speak... you shouldn't spend their last moments for them, but with them.
You know since his passing, many people have talked to me, and I never realized just how many have had a similar experience of watching a friend or loved one die.
If I were lying in a bed dying, my family would be the thing I want to talk about, to make sure that I can make a stranger understand my love for them and hopefully keep them alive in one more person.
I am not Kerry Egan; I have not been in the dying rooms with these specific patients in order to know what these particular patients talked about before death.
I agree with so many in that I have never given much consideration to what a dying person wants to talk about.
Religion has a place on those whom believe, but one doesn't have to talk about GOD when one is dying.
And to say that a person of the cloth needed to go in and tell a dying person they should listen instead of being able to talk is what's really irresponsible.
Most of the people I've talked to as they were dying have the issues of faith and hope in God settled.
I suppose talking to the dying about their families is all well and good if the dying are all confirmed Christians, but I believe it was C.S. Lewis who articulately bemoaned the friends and doctors who tell a dying patient the classic «everything is going to be all right» when from a Biblical viewpoint, everything will not be all right.
Its good to talk about the family, Somehow the first goal of any chaplain is to try to lead the dying person (If he / she is willing) to face the eternity with confidence.
My opinion, if someone is dying they should talk about what they want to talk about.
If I'm the one dying, it should be my choice what to talk about.
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