Sentences with phrase «feeling smart enough»

I can say unequivocally I was guilty of trying out Defense Grid before because I was afraid of failing or not feeling smart enough.
I don't have the urge to concoct a supernatural being in order to make me feel smart enough (that I have the answer to everything, i.e. god) or feel whole enough (that I will live on forever).

Not exact matches

Make it catchy, easy - to - remember, smart, and maybe even funny.Havea look at some of the most popular brands in your niche of activity and borrow some inspiration.The process of choosing a name is pretty tough, but make sure that you build enough confidence to trust your gut instinct and go with the one that feels right.
While Musk is clearly smart enough to have considered all this already (or at least to pay someone else to consider it), Maynard ends with a word of caution for the SpaceX team: «If enough people feel SpaceX is threatening what they value (such as the environment — here or there), or disadvantaging them in some way (for example, by allowing rich people to move to another planet and abandoning the rest of us here), they'll make life difficult for the company.»
It's that, if the hack is smart enough, you'll save so much time you'll feel like you must be doing something naughty.
«Well, we avoided the tech stocks, but as we felt we had no advantage there and other people did and I think that's a good idea not to play where the other people are better, but you know, if you ask me in retrospect, what was our worst mistake in the tech field, I think we were smart enough to figure out Google,» Munger said.
You may be lucky enough to pick a short term top that will make you feel smart for a day or even a week; then suddenly you will be left standing at the station with your hands and money in your pockets, watching as the Gold Rocket Ship takes off and you will not have the courage to jump back in at accelerating new highs.
14 % of respondents believe that insider trading practices in the alternative investment industry have become less prevalent since the FBI arrested Raj Rajaratnam and scared the bejeezus out of everyone, a noticeable drop from January 2016 when 25 % of respondents felt this way; 37 % of respondents think the news of arrests and convictions there has had little impact on insider trading because those who engage in such practices think they are smarter than everyone else and will never get caught, compared with 39 % of respondents in 2016; and 49 % of respondents believe the influx of money into funds in recent years and the explosion in the number of hedge fund firms has put enough pressure on fund managers that there will always be a few desperate enough to try anything, including insider trading, a significant increase from the 36 % of respondents who felt this way in the Roundtable's previous survey on this topic.
you believe we have enough quality CB when aside Kosci n maybe Mustafi the rest are more Quantity than quality... yet u feel we need another winger in a formation that uses only 2 AMs occupied by Alexis - ozil alrdy... Lemar ll only be a smart signing if he is to play CM... anything short of that, N it misplaced priority
Forget about raising a child who is kind and smart and feels supported and loved: these days, that's not nearly enough.
Because as I was reading this chapter it dawned on me that perhaps this was why I feel so... incompetent, and not - smart - enough as an adult.
Well my child is 1 and will be 2 in August and I feel that she is smart enough to understand how to potty.
If you're lucky enough to have a helping hand in this business of bringing up baby and are smart enough to accept that help without feeling guilty (there's the key!)
I grew up attending public school in poor neighborhoods and didn't feel that I was smart enough to homeschool.
A terrified child will feel that she's alone; that no one can help her; that she can't figure things out; that this terrible thing will go on forever; that she might not survive; that she's not smart enough, good enough or strong enough to survive; that no one else cares.
Once you feel your way to an answer, ask who put this idea that you are not good enough or smart enough or attractive enough in your head.
[Laughs] Im feeling better, and, hopefully, smart enough to get the lessons I need to learn and to appreciate how fragile and beautiful life is.
It stemmed from a long childhood of not feeling «enough» — not smart enough, not pretty enough, not skinny enough, not «cool» enough, not enough.
Nothing serious but I am smart enough to know it's only takes an off balance move or a quick jerk and I could be feeling more than tightness.
Beatriz At Dinner, in other words, is smart enough to recognize that privilege means being comfortable everywhere and never taking offense at anything (which, in Strutt's case, includes getting an object lobbed at his head), while others feel like they're servants who have been allowed to sit at the big table even when they've been invited as family friends.
Even though it relies on a gripping feel of intense paranoia, this is an overlong sci - fi / horror movie that suffers from certain problems in logic and kills its tension with long passages that make the pacing irregular, not even being smart enough as an allegory like the original film.
When the writers on The Simpsons needed a generic - sounding movie for Marge and Homer to see, sans kids, they came up with «The Stockholm Affair,» a spy thriller plotted enough to make Marge feel smart, but with enough action to entertain Homer.
His appreciation of the grindhouse pictures informing the project feels MST3K - ish to me: if it's less hostile, that's mainly because he's not smart enough to know that his admiration doesn't have much to do with respect and the drive for defiant individuality that an affection for these pictures can represent.
JR: It felt like it owed a lot to Soderbergh's Traffic, but Soderbergh would've made more with that character and would've been smart enough to realize that he's actually kind of the central story.
Annie is smart enough to forge its own identity, but the movie feels unsure of itself about what that identity is.
I'd kind of avoided them for awhile because I never felt that any of them were really smart enough.
And he has done so on occasion with such a keen, almost cruel eye for the pettiness, pretension and self - delusion that accompanies these processes that he mines acute, broad - based truths from relatively rarefied milieus; Baumbach's characters are overwhelmingly white, college - educated East Coast - ers, smart enough to know that their privilege gives them little right to the angst they feel, but dumb enough to feel it anyway.
Little Red Rashômon is a great idea for a movie — telling the Red Riding Hood tale from the alternate views of Little Red (Anne Hathaway), Granny (Glenn Close), the Woodsman (James Belushi) and the Wolf (Patrick Warburton)(who feels he got a bad rap)-- but this low - budget animation doesn't have enough comedic smarts or sufficient visual ingenuity to quite make it work.
It's easy enough for anyone to complete but complex enough to feel kind of smart playing through it.
And not smart enough, as meta - introspection goes, to bridge the gaps in Chronicle, like a badly under - developed «hero» and an equally under - developed «villain,» their relationship to each other, and, at the end, an emotional coda that feels unearned and tacked - on.
It's an undeniable fact that the concept seems familiar (the 2010 comedy The Other Guys had a similar premise) but Feig and McCarthy are smart enough to make so many elements of this idea feel fresh.
I detested the feeling of not being smart enough.
When hope is lost, and kids don't feel they are capable or smart enough to succeed, they might give up too soon.
They informed them that everyone at their college feels overwhelmed and not smart enough and asked them to react in writing to that idea.
This prediction will puzzle, upset, and maybe infuriate a great many readers — and, of course, it could turn out to be wrong — but enough clues, tips, tidbits, and intuitions have converged in recent weeks that I feel obligated to make it: I expect that PARCC and Smarter Balanced (the two federally subsidized consortia of states that are developing new assessments meant to be aligned with Common Core standards) will fade away, eclipsed and supplanted by long - established yet fleet - footed testing firms that already possess the infrastructure, relationships, and durability that give them huge advantages in the competition for state and district business.
Timid - but - smart Michiganders now feel safe enough to drive, but I wish the roads were still snow - covered and populated by those who know no better.
With three distinct variants including a hybrid, there are enough choices to make every buyer of Acura's new entry - level premium sedan feel smart.
I also kept thinking about how it's not just in high school where we have this public persona that might be different from what we truly feel inside... everyone wonders if they're good enough, smart enough, pretty enough, no matter how old they are.
She also kept thinking about how it's «not just in high school where we have this public persona that might be different from what we truly feel inside... everyone wonders if they're good enough, smart enough, pretty enough, no matter how old they are.
It's easy enough for anyone to complete but complex enough to feel kind of smart playing through it.
The quality of the Animal Crossing line was crappy compared to the Smash Line, people didn't feel like they were worth $ 14; Maybe $ 7, but still they'd be smart enough to avoid the buyers remorse surrounding them.
Too Much too soon, they were released along with 5 of the Smash Line; people didn't feel like getting them if it meant missing out on the Smash line, because they were smart enough to know not to trust Nintendo with handling restocks appropriately.
Later in the game you'll be dying a lot as you run through the level memorizing sections so you can finally put it all together in one slick run from start to finish, but it never enters the real of unfair as you feel like every death is your own fault for simply not being quick enough or smart enough.
The game was never too hard, but it was challenging enough to make me feel smart when I found a clever solution.
It feels like Nintendo is trying to say we got enough buttons (competely out of reach) on the remote teathered to the pad (I am going to assume they plan to make it so the remote is inserted into the pad for right now because a billion dollar company bragging about how smart they are at making controllers should be able to see how ridiculous it is to tell users let the remote hang from the pad's cord between your legs).
Now, super powerful class upgrades are spawned into the map occasionally, giving you flamethrowers or heavy machine guns — it's a smart way of diversifying play enough that it feels like a thrill whenever you pick one of these up.
But I feel they are there somehow, or at least creating enough of a division between forms, allowing for a bit of consideration before zapping off somewhere else in the painting, perhaps like Anne Smart's scraping back into the paint.
We also don't have other smart - home systems for it to integrate with — the landscape still feels rather fractured and undeveloped so I keep feeling like the water isn't quite warm enough.
I feel like I should hate it, given how much I despised the loved - one - only - notification smart ring I discussed last week, but somehow Oura seems useful and unobtrusive enough to take for a spin.
The HomePod is just not smart enough when pitched against the likes of the cheap little Amazon Echo or Google Home, Siri is not refined enough and even the experience between the iPhone and the HomePod feels confused.
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