Sentences with phrase «hearing or experiencing»

That is, they tend to process information more effectively by hearing or experiencing information.
But the other six Canadians who were sickened did not hear or experience anything similar.
They have heard or experienced many of the horror stories related to food addiction and know that the disease is always with them and they are just one bite away from losing their abstinence and all they have worked for.
So when we hear or experience sound, that sound carries along the vagus nerve.
While you've probably heard or experienced birthday freebies in one way or another before, (yup — cake at your favorite restaurant counts) you may not have come across a list of brands and stores that will give you free makeup — all for signing up for an email, and for being born.
Also, he has apparently never once heard or experienced a human conversation in real life, because not one written word sounds like it could have been spoken by live people.
True art always elicits a contribution from those who view or hear or experience it.
You don't have to look far to see, hear or experience drama.
The performance comprises of an interlinking series of narratives derived from legal cases that revolved around evidence that was heard or experienced through walls.
We have all heard or experienced firsthand the sad stories of a father or mother developing cancer or having a heart attack at a young age.
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I've never heard or experienced anyone at our in person auction.com auctions losing the house after winning a bid.

Not exact matches

Every day of the week, even Saturdays and Sundays, since urgent care is a 365 - day - a-year business, I look forward to hearing from our caregivers about their day — where we exceeded expectations or saved lives, as well as where we fell short of our goals or saw process or infrastructure breakdowns, so that we can learn from those experiences and deliver even better care the next time.»
It's actually quite a relief to hear from someone with years of experience who has built a substantial, multi-decade career in a major industry at a global corporation (BP / Amoco) instead of a wet - behind - the - ears «expert» who's had about 15 minutes of startup success and no clue about how he or she got there, or what to do next.
So, when I heard some negative backlash about Chris - calling him «a hate - filled killer,» «coward,» or «mass murdering [sic] sniper» - I had to share my experience.
Any time a prospect or customer sees or hears from you, his or her experience should be the same.
Have you ever wondered why after a stressful experience - like getting into a fight with your spouse or hearing that your office is announce massive layoffs, you have a physical reaction like a headache or stomach pain?
When I work with companies, I often hear things like «takes initiative», «works well on a team», «great problem solver», «knows the business», «brings experience», or «fits with our culture.»
For years I'd heard the argument that any MBA that wasn't from Harvard or Stanford was a complete waste of time, and my own experience told me that wasn't true.
When the Jack Morton survey measured the effectiveness of experiential marketing across 14 product and service categories, in 11 out of 14, consumers said they preferred to learn about new products and services by experiencing them for themselves or hearing about them from someone they knew.
We've all had the experience: you hear your voice recorded on a voicemail message or after a presentation and you recall in horror.
Most sales and business professionals have had the experience of placing a sales call or email pitch and hearing nothing back.
The affected diplomats experienced a wide range of sensations: Some heard sharp, piercing noises or a cicada - like buzz.
It was an eye - opening experience for DiBenedetto's 9 - year - old daughter, who heard from a few young teenagers that to finish their homework, they had to go to the library to access computers — and that, sometimes, enough computers weren't available or they had no transportation there, so they weren't able to complete their assignments.
As none of us had any experience or knowledge with hearing aids we did some simplistic brainstorming to develop the personas we would be targeting.
How is that two people hear the exact same message or experience the same event and react completely differently.
Whether you are a new client, or a Pure Barre enthusiast, we want to hear what your first class experience was like.
You may have personal experiences or have heard stories where lending someone money has not worked out well.
Through memory, Augustine explains at various points in Book X of the Confessions, we are able to review our past actions and discern a variety of important themes: we can see when we were moving towards God and (conversely) when we were moving away from Him; when we discerned the good rightly and sought it properly and (conversely) when we misidentified the good and sought experiences or possessions that were bad for us; when God was calling us towards Himself, whether we heard His voice or not; and so on.
What university professor has not had the experience of hearing a student gush with praise about another professor whom he or she personally finds to be a less than excellent teacher?
I've also heard an interesting idea that Heaven and Hell are the same place, and whether you experience God's presence as unimaginable ecstasy or like diving into the sun is largely dependent on your own individual bent.
There is no evidence that what these men claimed to hear, see, or feel was actually god, even if they did experience it.
I noticed I cry when I read or hear stories about people who have experienced great personal pain in life.
I occasionally find myself at a loose end when I am experiencing something exception (like a happy moment / event or hear something that is very sad and I then find myself deferring to god)... but that's not worship I guess.
V / hat one reads, hears, sees, or otherwise experiences leaves in varying degrees its stamp upon both consciousness and conscience.
Surely not merely by hearing Freud analyze it or Browning sing about it as «all a wonder and a wild desire,» but by experiencing it.
I put hours into a blog post or article, hoping to hear from people people who gained new perspective or experienced personal change through my words.
Specifically, it's far less common to hear about how a student who finds their way to or from Christianity, Islam, or Judaism (or even Atheism for that matter) while attending a university.Taking classes and sharing experiences alongside classmates from varying backgrounds can cause even the most religious or nonreligious person to inspect, analyze, and even question their beliefs.
(I'd be interested to hear from other LGBT folks who may have had similar... or perhaps radically different... experiences at Wheaton.)
According to Acts, what Paul experienced when, as he tells us, the Lord appeared to him (or was seen by him) was a blinding light and the hearing of a voice speaking to him.
Atheists often get a bad rap among Christians, but in my experience, many atheists are atheists simply because they have the courage to ask questions many Christians are afraid to ask, and when Christians hear these questions from atheists, the Christians either condemn the atheist for asking such questions, or gives some answer that is not really an answer at all.
Ask them what they heard from God or what they experienced during the prayer time, and listen respectfully to what they have to say.
Or if you were witness to that lovable young man's beautiful enthusiasm when he read and heard of the great men who fought with a heavy destiny and suffered badly in the world, the glorious ones whom earth renounced because it was not worthy of them, would you dare, when no clamor caused your speech to wander but when the stillness of intimacy, of the lovable one's confidence, the in experience of the young man, all obliged you to tell the truth; at such a time would you dare lay your hand on your heart and say, «Such things no longer happen.
She saw Jesus in the most lowly, she heard him speak through the begging leper at the train station «help me, feed me...», an actual call for work and action, not a feeling or experience mainly or simply.
I try to give credit for others thoughts or ideas whenever I know I am using them but I am sure, since I read a lot of others blogs, articles, and books some of what I think are my ideas have developed from a combination of my personal life experience and ideas or thoughts I have read or heard.
My wife recently went to a doctor about some health problems she was experiencing, and it quickly became obvious to her that he did not care to hear about her symptoms, take the time to answer her question, or explain to her what was happening.
Your self is thus a field of awareness or a field of feeling which includes seeing, hearing, and caring, plus numerous other modes of experience.
If the apparent togetherness in experience of both clear and dim consciousness, or of hearing and seeing, is declared unreal, as in this alternative, then no basis remains for any doctrine of togetherness whatever.
The argument is that the «togetherness in experience of both clear and dim consciousness, or of hearing and seeing» requires a doctrine of regional inclusion.
So far I have never seen, heard, read, watched, felt or experienced anything supernatural, though I have experienced Yosemite Falls in winter which was naturally super
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