Sentences with phrase «felt at your old job»

Not exact matches

After a year of complaints from subordinates, feeling like failure, crying jags and eventual burnout, she asked for her old job back, at which she had been outstanding.
There is worry about not being able to accomplish their old job at the same level of competency and there are usually ambivalent feelings about the job itself since all values and priorities are shaken and changing.
We feel guilty because we know we are so lucky to be able to stay home with our kids but still don't love it at every moment and sometimes think about what it will be like when we return to our old jobs.
Pros - very easily opened and closed - rides so smoothly and easily - variations of seats / car seats are incredible - doesn't feel incredibly bulky like other double strollers Cons - seats seem quite a bit smaller compared to the older version - the bar under in the basket was not helpful to me at all when grocery shopping (older version allows easier access to items in the basket)- no trays / cup holders for the little ones... (you can purchase some attachments online but I wish at least one came with the product) Overall this Stroller is a keeper for us, gets the job done in style and suits our needs!
I finished the ad feeling uneasy and only after thinking about it for a bit did I realize what it was... I'm a breastfeeding mother that feels consistent judgment regarding my choice to feed in public, not necessarily wanting to cover my child while feeding, pumping at work for my «older child» and she's less than 1 yr old, organizing my life / job / childcare to prioritize our nursing relationship... I feel judgment and yet I'm making an effort to do the best for my baby.
At first sight it felt less like a reshuffle and more like a re-appoint with more than half of the old cabinet - and almost all those in the top jobs - keeping their old posts.
Like the wristwatches they try to peddle, their wares are feeling pretty old for today's modern consumers, and try as they might to make things hip and hilarious, we've seen this same routine so many times that it might be more fitting for the duo to try for jobs at America On - Line instead.
In his job, he takes care of old people; he makes very little money but at least he feels like he does the right thing.
A 9 - year - old boy in my class, who hated and felt disrespected at school, shoved me into a sharp table at my first teaching job in New Jersey.
My sister is 20 years old has a part - time job and is not in school and still lives at home with the parents they do pay for things for her but not everything I don't know the exact percentage of how much they pay but I feel like they shouldn't be able to claim her but I'm not sure
Crystal Dynamics did a great job at making a ten - year old game feel current, and it still shows in this collection.
But when he proposes links between his own historical field and that of climate science he drops all scholarly standards and quotes any old conference paper or telephone conversation he feels like; mad activists and conspiracy theorists like Oreskes and Powell; or Mark Maslin, a professor - cum - company director who combines his job at my old university as palaeontologist or geographer or climatologist (all descriptions of his expertise taken from «the Conversation») with that of director of Rezatec Ltd, a company set up by the Royal Society as a «Leading provider of data - as - a-service geospatial data analytics» to serve those who may be worried to death by forecasts of eco-doom to be found in the books and articles of Mark Maslin.
these rehearsal questions kind of explain to me anyway why PJ was so nervous at the «COMMONS INQUIRY», he was expecting the worst (his mind would have been racing, feel sorry for the guy even though he mostly brought this on himself) imagine the relief when he got exonerated & back in the old job again.
As I found myself leaving the comfort of a perfectly safe airplane, I realized I had felt this way once before: on my last day at my old job.
You may harbor bitterness at your old organization, or feel like a loser when you're talking to new employers about job opportunities.
For instance, this year I've seen online resume writing advice from professional resume writers and HR professionals like myself and my colleagues on Career Rocketeer, a 75 - year - old retiree who is at least 10 - 15 years behind the times in his take on what works today, a secretary with a degree in English and a CPRW who has never interviewed or hired someone for a job who now feels qualified to offer resume writing advice, a 2012 college graduate who has yet to find his first job but is undeterred in offering his 2 - cents, and countless others who profess they know the right way to write the perfect resume.
Look at your old job: If you enjoyed your old job, they enjoyed you as an employee and if you left the company with no bad feelings between you and your boss then you may be one of the lucky ones.
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