Sentences with phrase «end of story live»

the xbox1 is a good machine but it is not as good as the ps4 end of story live with it.

Not exact matches

He says, «Nobody cries at the end of a movie about a guy who wants a Volvo [and achieves it]... But we spend years actually living those stories, and expect our lives to be meaningful.»
[01:10] Introduction [02:45] James welcomes Tony to the podcast [03:35] Tony's leap year birthday [04:15] Unshakeable delivers the specific facts you need to know [04:45] What James learned from Unshakeable [05:25] Most people panic when the stock market drops [05:45] Getting rid of your fear of investing [06:15] Last January was the worst opening, but it was a correction [06:45] You are losing money when you sell on corrections [06:55] Bear markets come every 5 years on average [07:10] The greatest opportunity for a millennial [07:40] Waiting for corrections to invest [08:05] Warren Buffet's advice for investors [08:55] If you miss the top 10 trading days a year... [09:25] Three different investor scenarios over a 20 year period [10:40] The best trading days come after the worst [11:45] Investing in the current world [12:05] What Clinton and Bush think of the current situation [12:45] The office is far bigger than the occupant [13:35] Information helps reduce fear [14:25] James's story of the billionaire upset over another's wealth [14:45] What money really is [15:05] The story of Adolphe Merkle [16:05] The story of Chuck Feeney [16:55] The importance of the right mindset [17:15] What fuels Tony [19:15] Find something you care about more than yourself [20:25] Make your mission to surround yourself with the right people [21:25] Suffering made Tony hungry for more [23:25] By feeding his mind, Tony found strength [24:15] Great ideas don't interrupt you, you have to pursue them [25:05] Never - ending hunger is what matters [25:25] Richard Branson is the epitome of hunger and drive [25:40] Hunger is the common denominator [26:30] What you can do starting right now [26:55] Success leaves clues [28:10] What it means to take massive action [28:30] Taking action commits you to following through [29:40] If you do nothing you'll learn nothing [30:20] There must be an emotional purpose behind what you're doing [30:40] How does Tony ignite creativity in his own life [32:00] «How is not as important as «why» [32:40] What and why unleash the psyche [33:25] Breaking the habit of focusing on «how» [35:50] Deep Practice [35:10] Your desired outcome will determine your action [36:00] The difference between «what» and «why» [37:00] Learning how to chunk and group [37:40] Don't mistake movement for achievement [38:30] Tony doesn't negotiate with his mind [39:30] Change your thoughts and change your biochemistry [40:00] The bad habit of being stressed [40:40] Beautiful and suffering states [41:50] The most important decision is to live in a beautiful state no matter what [42:40] Consciously decide to take yourself out of suffering [43:40] Focus on appreciation, joy and love [44:30] Step out of suffering and find the solution [45:00] Dealing with mercury poisoning [45:40] Tony's process for stepping out of suffering [46:10] Stop identifying with thoughts — they aren't yours [47:40] Trade your expectations for appreciation [50:00] The key to life — gratitude [51:40] What is freedom for you?
Much of the rest of this short story consists of memories of the protagonist's mother and father at the end of their lives, especially of his mother — his exasperation mingled with grudging affection.
An end - of - life protocol pushed by the UK's National Institute For Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) may have resulted in patients being sedated and dehydrated to death before their time, a major story reports today in the Daily Telegraph.
He, Jesus, is the new Temple, and to recognize that and live in this new mode of the divine Presence one must «remember,» as St. John writes at the end of the Temple - cleansing story (John 2:22).
I applaud what he is doing and hope that he brings others to God throught the torture and bloody human sacrifice of his son (himself, actually) where he died (well, for a few hours anyway) for us all (at least so the story goes) so that we may live with him in heaven (a great place for which no evidence or photographs exist) until the end of time.
@Margie: That's basically the same as asking you, if you followed all the possession stories through the years to the ends of their lives to see whether exorcism worked or not.
Their stories of new life touch us deeply and challenge us to pray for discernment, so we may know that the feeling of being «as good as dead» is not the end of the story.
Read the story of Nebuchadnezzar who ended up living as an animal until he came to his senses and acknowledged God.
I'd started to scratch it down in my journal and that scratching started decoding a bit of my life: You end up drinking mud soup whenever you see yourself as the passive victim in your story, instead of an active co-writer of your story, when you act like you don't determine your responses to a situation — but your actions and responses are determined by somebody else.
Moreover, as William Beardslee insists, the story form tells the individual «where he has come from and where he is going,» since «by creating its own ordered world, wherein through struggle and action an end is achieved, the story expresses faith in the ultimate reality of order and life.
On the other end of the spectrum, the Christian Post calls The Zookeeper's Wife «the real - life story behind the heroic efforts of two devout Christians.»
This story will go on for ever until the date life ends on Earth... this ever lasting conflict was planted there because ever since it started it created jobs for war arms manufacturers, it has created good business revenue for war and arms lords, made a good business for those con - fis - cat - ing Palestinians lands & olive trees, turning them in to residential areas for imported Jews, gradually removing Palestinians of all faiths further out of range every time...?
Schuller's television program is a tireless reiteration of the comic story of life that begins in frustration and discord but through enlightenment ends in beautiful harmony.
But then someone else ended up dead, and another story began to unfold — about a nasty feud, a hunt for hidden treasure and the mysteries of one man's life.
If the Jesus story ended on Friday, then the disciples can simply be «the eleven,» and after the appropriate rituals and a season of mourning, they can go back to life as it was.
The odds are slim that we will ever arrive at a place in our lives when all of our questions are answered, all our loose ends tied up, all our stories finished with «happily ever after.»
There is famous quote by the agnostic Dr. Jastrow «For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream.
The unique person and moment can be seen as unique because the story does not have to return to a certain point; but on the other hand, the end symbolizes closure, the cessation of the intolerable new, and the little story of the believer's life is subjected to these same tensions that appear in the overall story.
I'll bet the thief on the cross probably thought he wouldn't have much of a highlight reel, but how about all the people who come to faith at the very end of their life because of his story and testimony?!
The story of Narnia is that «the spell is broken» winter comes to an end and there is light, spring and everything comes to life.
The story opened in a swank Protestant church where at the conclusion of the service a poor, unemployed, shabby young man got up and told his story of unemployment to the startled parishioners and ended by saying: «You can't all go out hunting up jobs for people like me, but what I am puzzled about when I see so many Christians living in luxury and singing, «Jesus, I my cross have taken, all to leave, and follow Thee,» is what is meant by following Jesus?
And this is where the story would end for all of us were it not for God snatching us out of that living death, opening our eyes to His glory, revealing Himself to us, giving us new life.
just let people be free to believe what they choose to believe - it's all a choice — just as everything in life - if someone chooses to believe in God, it's their free will, if someone chooses not to, it's also their free will - I do nt get why people get so bothered if someone chooses to believe there is the God of the bible - to each his own I say - as for myself, i choose to follow God of the bible - in the end if it IS all just a story, then I am no worse off than if i choose NOT to believe!
If you divorce you will not marry if your spouse lives, unless your spouse died then you can, end of story.
We, too, are living at the end of the story; we — as were the apostles — are engaged in the second, christotelic reading by virtue of our eschatological moment, the last days, the inauguration of the eschaton.
We must counter the kinds of stories of poor end - of - life care that McKhann tells with stories of dying well.
Through case studies and autobiographical stories, she underscores how suffering will enter each of our lives at different points, to different ends.
The story begins with the great assize «when the Son of man comes in his glory,» and it ends with the decisive verdict of assignment either to eternal punishment or to eternal life.
The story ends with the description of a community knit together by the Spirit into a common life in which natural divisions and barriers were transcended.
Christianity cherishes story, not in the sense of a fictitious tale, but rather in a view of life which is whole, with a beginning (creation), a middle (the incarnation and crucifixion), and an ending (the resurrection).
We DO take that moral lesson to heart, and moreover we are captivated by the idea that our heroes not only lay down their lives for their friends, but that this is also not the end of the story.
But the earthly career was important not primarily because of what it was in itself but because of the place which it, considered as a whole, had in a great story of salvation which began in heaven, had its center in the human life of Jesus, and returned to heaven for its ending.
I would agree with you here if I believed that death from this life was the end of the story.
Jeremy i believe you are on the right track my take is slightly different but we end up in the same place if we look at the story we see the cross portrayed the condemned sinner judgement for sin condemnation and death Jesus the son of God intervenes on her behalf and forgives her and gives life restoration and the chance for her to start again without guilt or condemnation.That summs up our life storys.
Whereas A Sort of Life is content to report, «I married and I was happy,» the biographer tells the extraordinary story of courtship, wedding and early marriage, as well as suggesting what would undo that union in the end.
David and Goliath is so compelling because the points are made through the incredible true stories of real - life underdogs and «giants»: the man whose emotionally stunted single - mindedness enabled breakthroughs in leukaemia treatment; the French painters who chose to go outside the established art system that rejected them, and ended up launching the Impressionist movement.
They become apparent when Theo talks about his mother's «visitation» to him in dreams, when Hobie speaks affectionately of the Catholic Church and the Jesuit priest who protected him as a youth, when the otherwise cynical Boris admits to being moved to tears by Biblical stories, and again when Theo opens up to the higher purpose in life, despite all its difficulties and insanities, toward the end of the novel.
It is significant that even Coover's fictional exemplars, «Tiger» Miller and Paul Trench, come to their full realization of life's «joys» only as their stories end.
Often such stories end with the harlot giving all of her material possessions to the poor, leaving her former livelihood and committing herself to a life centered on the gospel.
Did they need to live through the weakness and despair of the end of Jesus» story on earth before they can be trusted with the fullness of his power?
Robert Jastrow (self - proclaimed agnostic): «For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream.
A story which revolves around the kind of choice that every individual must make to be on the side of life rather than death, and which understands that the seeming triumph of the evil one must in the end be endured in love and obedience, can not be dismissed as a neopagan rave - up.
As the story of man's Salvation in Scripture begins with his solitude in a garden, so it ends with his life in fellowship in the Heavenly City.
Then there are the stories of getting my biographer's job done amidst the often sluggish realities of Vatican life: stories that wouldn't have fit in Witness to Hope and The End and the Beginning, but which now retrospectively illuminate, not only my own adventures in Rome (and elsewhere), but the accomplishment of John Paul II in getting the balky machinery around him to work as well as it did under his creative, courageous, firm, and collaborative leadership.
Well, God hasn't let me see the end of the story yet, but He is letting me make decisions about how the main character of my story responds to the trials and frustrations of life in the story.
The writer did not know the physiology of marine life, and created this story, which ended up in your book of other fictional stories.
illy launched a new advertising campaign this year that is centered on the idea of living happy — LIVE HAPPilly, as the campaign has it — through perfecting who we are, which Illy says is a never - ending story.
Tiki Taka was played well by one team end of story, its fucking rubbish, but of course to the peanut brains who's never kicked a football in there lives it's «pure football» because their fucking clueless idiots
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