Sentences with phrase «fear death like»

I don't think animals fear death like humans do and I have to believe that I'm helping her find peace, in a place where she will no longer be in pain.
We fear death like nothing else and we create these elaborate religions and belief systems designed to calm our anxieties around death.

Not exact matches

She says she no longer has a fear of death because she feels like she is using her life well to offer this service and positively disrupt the higher education system.
People fear what they don't understand... Like death.
To «create» a solution out of pure thin air that can take away his fear of death, can be something to aspire to be like in an imperfect world, can provide a promise of better days to come no matter how hard things are today, even if that time is only after you've died.
And while Jesus, like Sarpedon, endured the death of the body, he ultimately was saved from death at his resurrection: «Fear not, I am the first and the last, and the living one.
Like many great books, Rosenzweig's The Star of Redemption has a stunning first line: «From death, from the fear of death arises all knowledge of the All.»
Fear of death, like other fears, may be transformed into anger and expressed in the marriage.
In fear, fear of death, of pain, of despair, of fear itself, I have prayed for strength, for hope, for courage, but perhaps like you I have always felt it foolish to pray that the pain itself would go away, although I have been driven to my knees by the immense force of several terrible events.
RD.. How path - et - ic to see your hate and fear driving you to death...!?! Man pull your self together and have the courage to face the returns of your deeds... Wars were always there in life whether were religious or not so stop doing it on your self... Beside learn to wish people well whether you agree or disagree with might you succeed in life rather than being a loser... by being a cowered... My posts were meant for the friendly people I had known for some time, whom I found they were full of compassion and not for black hearted one's like you who hate all God creations...
First you assume that non-believers are more afraid of death, which I would like to hear your reasoning behind, and next you assume death is everyones worst fear.
Do you mean to say that simple rules like «Don't steal — coz you won't like it if it happens to you», «Don't kill — coz you won't like it if it happens to you», can only be followed if there is fear of religion and repercussions after death?
I, being human, do understand it and know of no reason why I should, except on «faith», which itself can not be understood except that it depends on our more primitive instincts like fear of death.
Originally it was created to dispell fears of death... like «oh you'll go to a better place» and to explain things we did nt understand like why the sun rises and sets.
Mind you I haven't had a cold in a decade, and then within two days I felt like death and fear contributed to that, I am undetectable but this is my first bout of illness after my diagnoses... I was sick.
But now the fear of death has begun to follow him like another man's shadow.
There are few things that strike fear into the heart of a parent like sudden infant death syndrome.
Like a number of other lawmakers, Lanza fears that faded memories and the death of witnesses could impact the due process rights of those being sued.
We also have tendencies to conform our opinions to those of the groups we identify with, to fear man - made risks more than we fear natural ones, and to believe that events causing dread — the technical term for risks that could result in particularly painful or gruesome deaths, like plane crashes and radiation burns — are inherently more risky than other events.
Like most westerners, my image of North Korea was not a good one: a backward, totalitarian state, gripped by famine and ruled by fear, and in a state of uncertainty after the recent death of its leader Kim Jong - il.
Nothing, some say, turns an atheist into a believer like the fear of death.
by Walter Chaw Alan Parker likes to use his platform as a film director to preach about all manner of society's more obvious ails, reserving the bulk of his ham - fisted proselytizing for the problems he himself identifies as endemic to the United States: hedonism and drug abuse (The Wall, Midnight Express); the price of a culture of fame (The Wall, Fame); the price of Vietnam and our broken social services system (Birdy); the rampant Yankee tragedy of divorce (Shoot the Moon); racism (Mississippi Burning, Come See the Paradise); our love / hate / fear relationship with food (The Road to Wellville); and, most recently (and egregiously), the death penalty (The Life of David Gale).
Fear rises like gas from a corpse in Armando Iannucci's brilliant horror - satire The Death Of Stalin.
Beyond the paranoia, fear of death, and thinking one brother murdered the other, did you ever think what that movie would be like if it were funny?
Aside from helping to clarify why some viewers revel in downbeat and sometimes downright disturbing movies like The Woman, the sentiment also speaks to why many contemporary filmmakers» own fears and paranoia — about the end of civilization, or indie cinema — increasingly inspire dark, depressing works emphasizing domestic abuse, apocalyptic angst, religious opposition, the after - effects of war, suffering, and death.
I was scared to deathfearing I might end up like Tommy Wiseau from The Room, and have people think I made a film just to be in it.
Though the thought of losing her husband terrifies her, Ruth has no fear of death for herself: «I am not afraid of dying and I never have been... Perhaps chronic daydreamers don't fear death because we are used to slipping away... It feels like arrogance not to fear death when Simon lives so fearfully close to it» (93 — 94).
Surrounded by the Amis teens he'd met a week ago, he laughed inwardly at their grunts and groans when axes split heads like melons — Hollywood probably used canteloupe and honeydew — but Roc had seen blood as thick as Log Cabin syrup, smelled death where the rotting odors forcecd him to smoke a cigar to counter its effect, and tasted the coppery tang of fear.
Fear of death and other consequences keeps us (most of us) from doing stupid things like driving drunk or trying to wrestle a crocodile.
Actually, this story has pretty much nothing to do with gaming, but I'd like to announce my new greatest fear in the world and that is Sudden Adult Death Syndrome.
As Death, the oldest and most feared of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, you use your acrobatic prowess to explore the world like you never could as War.
Many games are about learning from mistakes, but the ability to jump right back into battle after death without the fear of lost progress means failure rarely feels like punishment in Cuphead.
Every firefight in this game can be compared to an encounter in a game like Ninja Gaiden, where fear of death is possible from regular enemies.
Man's disfigurement comes from his capacity for tragic error, a capacity which has permitted him to garble and to falsify the fact of death so that fear of death no longer seems like the uneasy impulse for all that we do.
The four - part «Death Hope Life Fear» (1984), big as an altarpiece, bright as a stained - glass window, has an army of them, with Gilbert & George soaring upward on either side like exuberant guardian angels.
Both genres basically tell the same stories as any other genre (stories of love, death, fear, possibility) but I like the capacity of sci - fi and horror to discuss big questions in ways that aren't necessarily tethered to everyday vagaries of life.
Links: May Heatwave Sparks Fears of Hot Summer in Egypt Egypt Heatwave Kills 42 Japan in Hot Water Earth Nullschool It Felt Like 165 Degrees in Iran Today Heatwave Mass Casualty Event in Pakistan Heatwave Mass Casualty Event in India Record Japan Heat Leads to 32 Deaths in One Week
But the Guardian has managed to get a laugh out of me by poking fun at the recent Twitter obsession in the media (represented in the Globe by stories like Margaret Wente's «Ego Tweeto, Ergo Sum» and Ian Brown's musings that twittering is motivated by a fear of death) with their story:
She tweeted: «My life is now like an episode of House = the impending fight against death and the look of fear in everyones faces!»
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