Sentences with phrase «happy stories of»

There are thousands of Japanese women who are looking for their happiness abroad while being inspired by the happy stories of their friends who have also used japancupid.com earlier and have found their love there.
As well access column named testimonials and read happy stories of those who found their partner on this webpage.
A happy story of well - crafted policy leading to life - changing results, you say?

Not exact matches

Some haven't been happy about it, while others are gleefully trying to take full advantage of the media attention generated by the biggest (and most embarrassing) story to hit Toronto in decades.
Now, here's a happy story: A combination of better screening, investments in drug research, and better lifestyle choices (including declines in cigarette smoking) may have helped lead to a downtick in the rate of cancer drug deaths.
Being relatively new to the industry myself, I have become acutely aware of new cosmetics & hair launches (Cosmoprof North America is my happy place) so when I found out Lawless was all natural and started by an entrepreneur whose business I was already familiar with, Suja Juice, the largest organic juice company in the US, I was immediately interested in the story.
In the archives of Inc.com, you can find stories about happy alums from the programs at Emerson College and UC - Berkeley.
«Orson Welles once said that if you want a happy ending, you need to know when to end your story,» offered the 9th premier of Newfoundland and Labrador as he announced his resignation.
«In a lot of stories you read, it regresses back to happy talk at the end — there was a problem, we solved it and now it's all fixed,» says Michael Freeman, a psychiatrist who is studying the personality traits of entrepreneurs at University of California, San Francisco.
It's easy to count the number of positive happy conversations we've had or the number of great Tweets we've had, but that doesn't tell the full story either.
The wait is officially over, people, and it's one of the happiest Fridays we can remember in recent history because Fenty Beauty has officially dropped, and not one of the amazing - looking products in dozens of shades has sold out as of the time this story posted.
Mitzi will share her story of living a more self - sufficient (and happier and healthier) life in the small mountain town of Santa Fe.
Morin teaches you how to embrace a happier outlook and arms you to emotionally deal with life's inevitable hardships, setbacks, and heartbreaks — sharing for the first time her own poignant story of tragedy, and how she summoned the mental strength to move on.
Whether following the adventures of Pepe Urban, a comic - strip character with a unique voice and interesting stories to share or participating in one of the happy hours, lectures or conferences, they can feel part of something bigger: this is the spirit of URBAN STATION.
We're happy to report that Asterisk L., the subject of this week's FlexJobs success story, made the great escape from working in a cubicle all day to the freedom that comes with remote work.
It's not a happy story, as Lord Lawson's complaint about their conflicts of interest is well taken for the most part, although I lack the expertise to know if his precise comparison has merit.
Arsene Wenger wants a happy ending to his Arsenal love story and admits their Europa League semi-final against Atletico Madrid on Thursday will affect the future of the club.
I was also deeply moved by this story, and would like everyone to know that there are many, many families with stories like these, and not all of them have happy endings.
I am happy to share part of my story with you.
Where are the stories of people saying they are strong and live a happy life and think they should now turn to the church?
We imitate Jesus because we love Him, and this is the continuation of our story — the happy ending beyond the eucatastrophe that endures suffering in order to journey outward in small victories, eventually breaking through to the light.
I think I'm too simple in my thinking that; if you don't like it, DO N'T WATCH... if you don't agree with it, DO N'T CHOOSE TO LIVE YOUR LIFE THAT WAY... Seems like a very simplistic way of thinking, but I have personal opinions on EVERYTHING, but I don't force others to live their lives according to my moral fiber... i don't judge people for living their lives the way that makes them happy... And i believe that IGNORANCE is the basis for INTOLERANCE... people are famous for HATING things that they don't understand... again, if it MORALLY offends you, don't read stories on things that you don't agree with, don't watch shows that portray choices that you don't agree with... The Brown family seems close knit, almost like extended family living under one roof... the kids work together and get along much better than a lot of «mainstream» households i see...
Surely this is a story with a happy ending — the sinner is brought to repentance and a dialogue will ensue which, presumably, will heal Ward of his zealotry.
Ivan Krylov's fable «The Quartet» tells the story of four happy beasts who decide to make music.
I saw that young mother read stories to her infant son, not out of obligation, but because it made her happy to read to her baby boy.
In a way, the story of Jesus is like the sci - fi story, the Midwich Cuckoos with a happier ending.
I've always gotten a kick out of how each of us (well, at least the happy folks), usually tell stories where they are the heros.
She was so happy I just wanted to talk with her that she shared much of her story with me.
The Radha - Krishna legend, then, is not a story in the sense of an orderly narrative whose protagonists have a shared past and are progressing towards a tragic or happy future.
I have wondered at times whether it isn't this old anticipation of the Kingdom that explains Keillor's childhood fascination with radio (a subject he returns to frequently in his New Yorker stories, published recently by Atheneum under the title Happy to Be Here).
This may be why my favorite stories in Happy to Be Here, and the two that seem closest to the spirit of certain features of Lake Wobegon — «Powder Milk Biscuits,» «The Chatterbox Cafe,» and «Our Lady of Perpetual Responsibility» — have little to do with radio.
The stories in Happy to Be Here are not Lake Wobegon stories — fans of the radio show should be forewarned.
Like the show, the stories are hit or miss, and if you like Keillor, or the man Keillor is in many of his stories (whether in print or on the air), you'll appreciate even the misses, because even when the right word doesn't quite come, or when the timing is just a shade off, the tone usually survives — something lingers in the air, making us feel at home, comfortable, happy to be here.
In a very childlike way they are happy with their fairy stories and their promise of the magical place at the end of the rainbow where they will go when they die.
If the resurrection is the true dénouement of the whole story and not a «happy ending» tacked on to a tragedy, then there is an element in the story itself which brings us to the frontiers of normal human experience, where experience runs out into mystery.
And just as families select artifacts that suggest past happiness in order to soften the blows inflicted by actions of family members in less happy times, congregational histories can create illusions: authors might relate in two sentences the experience of an unhappy pastorate that led to two decades of misery — and distort the whole story by dwelling on the beauty of the old sanctuary, hence suggesting general happiness.
The more prosaic minds have not been happy with it, and some of the philosophers of language, in spite of their use of stories, have difficulty with the rich, mythic, paradoxical imagery.
This is a happy and inspiring story — the only sad thing is that the Riches are unable to recount that the various battles — for example to ensure that marriage is once again established as the foundation of community life, or to ensure protection for unborn babies from abortion — had been won.
I'm happy to welcome this honest, brave, and hope - filled story to the pages of the farm's front porch today...
There is a second respect in which the Altizer story is a happier one than that of Daly.
Its not a happy ever after story but a feeling of wholeness and an ability to withstand... come what may.
Follow Jamie on Instagram @jamieivey, find out about her upcoming speaking and tour dates at jamieivey.com, download The Happy Hour wherever you get your podcast and check out her new book «If You Only Knew: My Unlikely, Unavoidable Story of Being Free.
Wilde's story tells of a beautiful and much - admired statue called The Happy Prince that stands «high above the city, on a tall column» and is «gilded all over with thin leaves of fine gold.»
Whereas A Sort of Life is content to report, «I married and I was happy,» the biographer tells the extraordinary story of courtship, wedding and early marriage, as well as suggesting what would undo that union in the end.
This must mean that the Pope was not at first told everything: that a story was cooked up for him which was designed to explain why Wielgus's Polish critics were not happy with the appointment but which did not disclose enough to convince the Pope that Wielgus really could not function as head of the Polish church.
Thus, Augustine learned — more from the story of Jesus than from that of Aeneas — «what the difference is between presumption and confession, between those who see their goal without seeing how to get there and those who see the way which leads to that happy country.»
Her story (whose theme, by the way, is «the lot of single women in rural Palestine») may seem to have a happy ending, but don't be fooled, girls; The Book of Ruth is actually «a pernicious, exploitative tract,» reinforcing the idea that «a woman's happiness and fulfillment require men, that is, a husband and sons.»
Jamie Ivey is the host of the popular podcast «The Happy Hour with Jamie Ivey» and the author of If You Only Knew: My Unlikely, Unavoidable Story of Becoming Free.
He is so engrossed in the story that He is constantly trying to convince us, the cast of characters, to follow the happiest, most successful path we could imagine (and no that does not mean «go to church, pray, submit yourself to a monkish lifestyle»).
One happy coincidence was the performance at a nearby university of Archibald MacLeish's J.B., a modern interpretation of the story of Job.
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