Sentences with phrase «go swimming worry»

Not exact matches

«a day in the life» is the rambling monologue of a housewife (not a million miles from myself;) juggling with household chores and sorting out the kids, answering the phone while cooking dinner and worrying about the economy — but at the end of the day when the jobs are done, you can escape from everyday worries by going for a run, a bike ride or for a swim — where you're alone to think stuff through or think of nothing at all — and certainly not about the phonebill or the mountain of ironing that needs doing.
Our 6 year old swam for hours every day in the shallower pool with no worries (two large twin pools, impeccably kept — one a metre deep and the other went from shallow to deep).
No need to worry that your beloved swim diaper is going to come out of the wash horrendously stained.
They become anxious and worried, but only after very specific triggers, such as a thunderstorm, spiders, being left alone, or going in a swimming pool, etc..
Regular periods, not having to worry about pregnancy, taking the pill during my actual period so I could go swimming up at the cottage.
You don't have to worry when you're going on a swim.
While staying at this magnificent hotel, your only worry will be whether to sunbathe beside the swimming - pool or to go for a swim in the sea.
But while still maintaining that such analysis is useful, I increasingly wonder if assigning dollar figures to currently unpriced nature, just undermines efforts to get people to see that there is more to nature, there is more to the world than the economic or financial value we place on it?I've been going back and forth about writing something about this ever since my colleague Stephen Messenger tried to explain why we must not consider nature priceless, but never quite got around to it — partly because I realize it's swimming upstream a bit and I wondered if I wasn't just overreacting or worrying to much about an abstract eco-philosophical concept.
I'm not going to tell you that you should go and take the Watch 2 swimming, but you certainly don't have to worry if you get caught out in the rain.
It's no good saying «I'm a psychotherapist, I don't worry about the technology stuff» — which is a little like an underwater welder saying «I'm just going to focus on my welding, and not worry about the swimming».
Not to worry though, they only get lit once the sun goes down so there's no worry of swimming amidst the flames.
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