Sentences with phrase «everyone sees relief»

However, not everyone sees relief from antibiotic treatment.

Not exact matches

I could not bear the smell, the sights, the truth of this place, and I saw babies the age of my tinies there, naked, hollering HEY YOU snapping sass, and all of my carefully reasoned understandings about how everyone has a different calling and some of us are just called to different things than poverty relief and caring for orphans stank rank like heresy.
[10] Looking into these matters (for example the disputes between Jesuits and Dominicans about sufficient and efficient grace) is not always pleasant, but after we have studied the more abstract ideas ofpredestination and election, it is a relief to read Paul's saying that he does not live but rather Christ lives in him, his assurance that God wants everyone to be saved, and his confidence that while he does believe he will face divine judgement, he still can not see how anything can separate him from Christ's love.
After a difficult spring which saw him struggle at the plate and at the rubber, his debut was a relief for everyone.
To an extent, the away side's punishment of two Town mistakes would have been of a huge relief to everyone involved after seeing the first ten minutes pass through safely following Town's high intensity pressure.
It is such a huge relief to see the things that happen in our home happen in everyone's home.»
As one of my online friends put it, «I see that everyone else is having exactly the same problem, and that is SUCH A RELIEF.
Breasts are thrust in everyone's face in TV ads, online images, magazine and newspaper pages, and blown up in store windows but many women have never seen breastfeeding aside from when it is used for comedic relief or perfectly staged and lit for a parenting magazine.
Finally the first week of paying guests arrive: John, the American movie star thinks he has arrived incognito; Winnie and Lillian, forced into taking a holiday together; Nuala and Henry, husband and wife, both doctors who have been shaken by seeing too much death; Anders, the Swedish boy, hates his father's business, but has a real talent for music; Miss Nell Howe, a retired school teacher, who criticizes everything and leaves a day early, much to everyone's relief; the Walls who have entered in 200 contests (and won everything from a microwave oven to velvet curtains, including the week at Stone House); and Freda, the psychic who is afraid of her own visions.
Now that the chaos of the One Room Challenge is over, we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief and enjoy the best part — seeing everyone else's transformations!
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