Sentences with phrase «experience feels less»

But without it, the fitness experience feels less than holistic, and misses out the chance for dedicated and complete training plans that would help you really achieve your goals.
No matter how you do it, being focused on one child at a time will make the cry it out experience feel less daunting.
Over 90 % of the enemies you face don't even friggin» fight back, making the experience feel less like an epic battle so much as a systematic genocide.
While playing, you can also occasionally see the souls of other players run past in your own game world, making the solo experience feel less like a lonely crawl through a punishing world.
Maggie provides compassionate and nonjudgmental support to clients and their families to help the difficult times they are experiencing feel less painful and more manageable.

Not exact matches

As opposed to the negative feelings some people experience while using Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, Lidey and Hirabayashi wanted to use technology to make people feel less alone in the world.
Sure, women and men going through menopause and andropause may experience the odd gap, but there is absolutely no reason why our elders should be considered less valuable than their younger counterparts or feel they have to be shown the retirement door at age 65.
After about five minutes, I felt less anxious,» one wrote of the experience.
Even less experienced players will notice the difference in the way the ball feels coming off the Ping Glide 2.0 Stealth.
While our lives are becoming less people - centric, you can still use technology to create an experience that feels personal and genuine.
The less experience you have, the more pressure you'll feel from this, and the harder time you'll have coming up with acceptable plans.
Rallying together makes us feel less alone in the experience, explained the sociologist Christine Carter, a fellow at the Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley.
And in his book, Children of the Great Depression, Glen Elder wrote that adolescents who experienced hardship in the 1930s became especially adaptable, family - oriented adults; perhaps, as a result of this recession, today's adolescents will be pampered less and counted on for more, and will grow into adults who feel less entitled than recent generations.
On the one hand, it's really helpful because it makes me feel less alone, even though my experience is much less severe.
I receive a full time salary from the church (less than $ 84k), but much of the freedom that you have described as a benefit I feel I experience, because I know if tomorrow things changed radically, I have my hands and my tools, and my knowledge.
We think we are making our friend feel better and less alone, when really, we are diminishing her experience.
All our sensible experiences, as we get them immediately, do... change by discrete pulses of perception, each of which keeps us saying «more, more, more,» or «less, less, less,» as the definite increments or diminutions make themselves felt... [All our sensible experiences] come to us in drops.
Some human beings, especially those less advanced culturally, less civilized, less sophisticated, less well educated — or, to borrow Hegel's famous metaphor from his Hinrichs - Foreword, more «doglike» — have indeed been documented as experiencing these feelings.
The problem is if you either don't have certain experiences or you have different experiences or you experience the same thing but in a different way, you are made to feel less than.
I would begin by assuming that many hearers in the pews at River Oaks find it difficult, by virtue of their education and sophistication, to imagine what the Pentecost of Acts 2 would be like, much less feel any degree of comfort with such a cataclysmic experience.
On a less than exuberant note, I no longer feel comfortable in the mega-church environment and can not find the type of home church family I would love to experience.
This talk on education makes me feel less crazy about my school experience - straight A student who was fidgety and hated every minute of school, until college.
In describing and accounting for the lives of the Religious Right, which we define simply as religious conservatives with a considerable involvement in political activity, the book and the series tell the story primarily by focusing on leading episodes in the movement's history, including, but not limited to, the groundwork laid by Billy Graham in his relationships with presidents and other prominent political leaders; the resistance of evangelical and other Protestants to the candidacy of the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy; the rise of what has been called the New Right out of the ashes of Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964; a battle over sex education in Anaheim, California, in the mid-1960's; a prolonged cultural war over textbooks in West Virginia in the early 1970's — and that is a battle that has been fought less violently in community after community all over the country; the thrill conservative Christians felt over the election of a «born - again» Christian to the Presidency in 1976 and the subsequent disappointment they experienced when they found out that Jimmy Carter was, of all things, a Democrat; the rise of the Moral Majority and its infatuation with Ronald Reagan; the difficulty the Religious Right has had in dealing with abortion, homosexuality and AIDS; Pat Robertson's bid for the presidency and his subsequent launching of the Christian Coalition; efforts by Dr. James Dobson and Gary Bauer to win a «civil war of values» by changing the culture at a deeper level than is represented by winning elections; and, finally, by addressing crucial questions about the appropriate relationship between religion and politics or, as we usually put it, between church and state.
Firstly, that «the embryo has no precursors of nerves or blood, so it can not possibly know or experience anything» so it has «less complexity than the simplest microscopic worm and less feeling or intelligence than a parasite in dirty drinking water».
The idea is based on his experiences with a similar worship service called The Bridge back in Ventura, where he feels the «very community - based» approach made worship services «very real, more about relationship and less about religion.»
The more we celebrate sustained, non-sexual, sacrificial relationships in our society, the less people will feel like the only way to experience love and intimacy is in the context of a marriage or a sexual relationship.
Thank you for sharing your experience with your readers because after reading it I feel less alone in my struggle.
Not only have I lost weight, but I feel less bloated, I am eating less meals without experiencing hunger pains or feeling like I'm starving myself.
Since my elimination diet, I haven't really had sugar and I've felt better because of it - less drowsy, my cravings have gone way down, and haven't had any headaches or that «foggy» feeling I would experience after having sugar.
Both batches left me less than enamored... Oh - well, we bake, we learn... Now armed with a little experience and the knowledge of what I didn't want, I felt empowered to try things on my own.
The roster was going to be too experienced and talented for anything less, and the frustrations of a stagnating offense and a growing gap between the Tigers and rival Alabama meant Miles» job wouldn't feel safe until he beat Nick Saban in Baton Rouge on Nov. 5.
Mertesackers absence has been less felt, although missing his experience at the same time as Santi has been clear to see.
If parents had more people to turn to in order to help make decisions (relying on others» experience, expertise and yes, opinions) and these people could also be counted upon to help when decisions / thoughts turn to action... well, I think everyone would be better off and there would be less bad feelings, guilt and shame.
Young people, in particular, filter much of their experiences through their phones, so turning phones off for extended periods of time may actually cause them to feel less connected.
Some families find it very helpful to make up humorous NEW endings to the nightmare that their child has just experienced to help them feel safe, secure and less frightened.
In my own experience, I have noticed that my babies have had less of an appetite when they're not feeling well or teething.
I know the healing journey it has set me upon and I am writing about my experiences for other women that know grief, that in their loss they may feel less alone.
It is vital to learn these lessons in high school as the adult world is much less forgiving than high school — and young adults with behavioral or developmental problems often experience deeper feelings of failure as they move into their adult identity.
Chances are the more experienced with breastfeeding you are, than the less uncomfortable you will feel doing it in front of others.
I have by no means dealt with this issue to the degree that you have, but in my experience, these kinds of disappointments are all too frequent — and the wheels of change so incredibly slow — which contributes to people feeling hopeless that the issues will ever improve (and therefor less motivated to pitch in and try to make change).
As for down there, you may experience dryness and feel less - than - tight (if you had a vaginal birth).
I don't think «using those words publicly» is any less hurtful to breastfeeding moms than a women talking about breastfeeding being a wonderful bonding experience would be hurtful to someone who feels like Moakler does.
Some prefer the term gestational surrogate, or GS for short, because they feel «gestational carrier» doesn't capture the complete experience of being a surrogate or feels less personal.
Those first trips when our daughter was a baby gave me the confidence to do more of it, and also the experience to feel confident doing it for less.
I hope you feel less silly and more empowered by the entire experience, it «sounds» pretty awesome!
Long ago I had found that learning as much as I could about an experience I was facing helped me feel less out of control and more calm.
As a parent, especially a less experienced one, there is nothing more frightening than seeing your child sick; besides remorse that you may have failed them, or even caused the sickness, there is this desolate feeling of helplessness to taking the pain away and making it all feel better.
In recent years, the option of giving birth in a Birthing Center has become popular among mothers around the world, especially for those women who are looking for a more humane and less stressful experience, which is something that many moms feel in hospitals, when all we see is different nurses going in and out of the room, and whom apparently seem to be focused only on the facts and not on the person.
While Bowlby's research focused on the potential harmful effects of separation, other research indicates that the more people a child feels safe and comfortable with, the less separation anxiety they will experience.
These benefits include but are not limited to the power of the human touch and presence, of being surrounded by supportive people of a family's own choosing, security in birthing in a familiar and comfortable environment of home, feeling less inhibited in expressing unique responses to labor (such as making sounds, moving freely, adopting positions of comfort, being intimate with her partner, nursing a toddler, eating and drinking as needed and desired, expressing or practicing individual cultural, value and faith based rituals that enhance coping)-- all of which can lead to easier labors and births, not having to make a decision about when to go to the hospital during labor (going too early can slow progress and increase use of the cascade of risky interventions, while going too late can be intensely uncomfortable or even lead to a risky unplanned birth en route), being able to choose how and when to include children (who are making their own adjustments and are less challenged by a lengthy absence of their parents and excessive interruptions of family routines), enabling uninterrupted family boding and breastfeeding, huge cost savings for insurance companies and those without insurance, and increasing the likelihood of having a deeply empowering and profoundly positive, life changing pregnancy and birth experience.
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