Sentences with phrase «feel about failure»

The answer will show me two things: one, how you feel about failure, and two, how you deal with it.
Asked her feeling about the failure of the original show, which, with more than 100 works, would have been the largest collaboration between Cuban and United States museums in more than 50 years, she said, «I don't want to call it disappointment because it's been such a long process that we're hopeful that it's going to continue to foster cultural exchange.»

Not exact matches

Congress's failure to resolve the Zika funding impasse may reflect a larger political reality: Most Americans just don't care about it or else feel they are safe from the possible spread of the disease.
«When we have to think about our failures - that puts us in a negative mood and research has shown that when people are in a negative mood state, they tend to indulge to make themselves feel better,» lead author Hristina Nikolova explained.
Miller believes you should feel good about taking risks and daring to innovate, even if it leads to some degree of failure.
Hopefully having a good wallow, really thinking about your feelings and showing yourself some compassion (sadly, there's no word from Gilbertson on whether that can come in the form of chocolate fudge brownie icecream) should help ease your fear of failure going forward, but Gilbertson suggests that you take things slowly as you move on from a disappointment.
«Constructive wallowing,» she argues, isn't simply a failure of backbone and grit, it's an occasion for self - compassion and a chance to learn about your negative feelings and fear so you can get better at working through them.
If we had the ability to re-wire ourselves to feel the same way about failure as we do success, we would lose our fear of failure.
She says one of the biggest lessons she learned as a leader is to be open and honest about disappointment, failure, or sadness — not to smooth it over, or in any way feel like you don't face it directly.
As I've listened to the stories of numerous wounded and hurt pastors I've realized that the less we talk about failure the more we feel it, but the more we can talk about it the less we feel it.
According to J.R. Briggs, «the elephant in the room for pastors is that many of us are afraid of failure, and we don't feel as though there are safe spaces to talk openly about it.»
I know it's not easy to write with such honesty and vulnerability about your own struggles and failures, but it's such a gift to people who would otherwise feel alone in their experience.
And then, when, like most of the kids in the youth groups or Bible colleges, we found ourselves in a rather usual sort of life, surprisingly not preaching to thousands on a weeknight, we were left feeling like failures, like somehow we weren't measuring up, we weren't serving God effectively, we must have missed it because isn't our life supposed to be about doing big, successful things for God?
Her honesty about the uncomfortable realities of life and faith — the unresolved, the disappointments, the mysterious, the gray, the hopeful, the routine, the failures, the valiant efforts — give this book a more conversational and intimate feel than any of her others.
Many conscientious revolutionaries, in all their serious self - examination, would readily feel at home in Paul's predicament about his failure to do what he knew he ought to do and his inclination to do the very thing that he hated [Rom.
And when I did overtly talk about the Jesus I saw and experienced, it seemed «unmarketable» that I started to feel like both a spiritual and artistic failure.
This was a failure sold as a success for all to feel good about themselves.
But with the widespread failure of the field to come to any agreement about the Bible's own categories of discourse, its special modes of literary expression and intentionality, and especially those social and religious factors that handed the Old Testament over to us, we have simply been thrown back on ourselves and the deeply felt convictions with which we began the process of interpretation.
I have asked those closest to me, why do I feel what I do about relationships and community that leads me to failure in the very system that I love the most.
In the first two years it was rather a growing concern about his relationship with God, a feeling that he was always doing something wrong, was never as good as he ought to be, a failure to love God.
Instead, her honesty about the uncomfortable realities of life and faith — the unresolved, the disappointments, the mysterious, the gray, the hopeful, the routine, the failures, the valiant efforts — give this book a more conversational and intimate feel than any of her others.
I have something to go back to if I ever can't figure it out, and I don't feel so completely down about ever trying again because of past failure.
This is what football cold turkey feels like... can blame the 4th place junkies on this site... they've gone all silent of course it's typical behaviour of cowards... particularly those who know nothing about what they r talking about... so what's the e plantation this time for another year of failure I've been so vocal telling me I am not a real fan... ffing pathetic bunch
Stan, Gazidis and Sir Chips or whatever he's called are all failures and bunch of greedy crooks who cares about there pockets alone and don't care how we fans feel.
As long as the fans pay their money Gazidas and Kroenke don't give a shit about the Arsenal fans feelings, we're just their cash cows to make more money for themselves, Wenger is a disgrace to receive # 8 million a year for failure, WENGER OUT!!!!!!!!!!!
The concerns about the repeated failures of Guardiola are real enough, but to an extent the disappointment over City's European exit was conditioned by the anticlimactic nature of the league campaign, the fact that it was so far ahead that the title has felt all but inevitable since November, if not before.
All you've done is go back to a historical past, pick out the bad bits that make you feel good, bandy about the idiotic comments that just fall off Mourinhos tongue «specialist in failure» and agree with the likes of Mourinho that we are no good as a club.
When Jose Mourinho called Arsene Wenger a «specialist in failure» in 2014 in response to a remark made about him being scared of failing by Wenger, I was among those who personally felt Mr Mourinho had over stepped his boundary!
What Sanchez eventually decides regarding his club future remains to be seen, but for the next few days, he is certainly going to feel disappointed about his failure to convert the spot kick that could have eventually led to Chile making it through to the quarter - finals of the World Cup.
Manchester United's exit from the Champions League might make City feel better about their own failure to qualify from the group stages, but Mancini believes it will make his team's task to win a trophy more difficult.
I've been thinking a lot about this recently — I feel like I am setting my students up for «failure», since I know that the things in the video's I show are not very realistic or possible in the hospitals in our state / area.
I still get very depressed about it even though I know there was nothing I could have done it still makes me feel like a failure as a mother.
I felt like a total failure, and I really didn't appreciate others asking me about it.
Whether it's about babywearing or circumcision or diapers, I think we'd end up with a lot more confident mamas owning their decisions instead of feeling like «failures» if we let «I don't want to» be reason enough.
This article makes me feel like less of a failure of a mother, and quite frankly there ought to be a lot more awareness of what's been mentioned in this story and a lot less sanctimonious preaching about «breast is best».
If weaning was not something that you wanted, it can make you feel like a failure and bring about a sense of sadness, anger, or guilt.
I had been so adamant about breastfeeding my daughter that I felt like a failure for having to supplement, but looking back on it I feel as though I did the right thing.
And I think the information that gets to women really needs to be about all the choices that they have available to them, and not making them feel like they're a failure if, for some reason, they end up in a hospital or, God forbid, they end up with a C - section.
And the more it hurts me, both by wasting so much time and energy looking for things or just navigating around the crap in my house or feeling bad about my apartment, or by making me feel like a failure because I can't seem to maintain a system of keeping things tidy and organized.
They feel guilty, a failure, a bad parent enough as it is without comments about them having «excuses» to stop breastfeeding.
It also allows them to learn about themselves, what they like and don't like, and even make mistakes without feeling any pressure or failure.
One of the biggest sources of children's problems after a divorce is the failure of parents to keep their negative feelings or disparaging comments about their ex (or their new spouse's ex) to themselves.
Achieving this transition smoothly, without making a child feel like a failure, can prevent negative feelings about sports and physical activity in general.
I also feel bad a lot like my breasts are defective, and this experience hasn't helped some feelings of inadequacy I had about their size (I realize lots of small breasted women breastfeed well and perhaps their size was not a factor in my lactation failure and in my case none of the LCs I saw mentioned an anatomic issue but I can't help wondering).
Overwhelm creates confusion and makes you feel like a failure when the technique you've just read about doesn't work for your baby.
The Benefits of Letting Your Child Feel Discomfort I think when we talk about failure and what your child can learn from it, we're really talking about the benefits of allowing your child to feel discomfFeel Discomfort I think when we talk about failure and what your child can learn from it, we're really talking about the benefits of allowing your child to feel discomffeel discomfort.
How to Talk to Your Child about Failing: 3 Questions Parents Should Ask Whether dealing with feelings of discomfort or feelings of failure, there are three simple questions parents can ask their child.
All these things I feel contributed to our failure to get the breast feeding going and after being bombarded with information about how «breast is best» in the lead up to giving birth I felt like a complete failure when it didn't work out.
Because many moms have been physically compromised themselves during the pregnancy or birth, and because they have such strong feelings of failure or shame about not being able to produce a «perfect» baby and protect him / her....
It made me feel like a failure and speaking about it brings those feelings back.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z