Sentences with phrase «how little we talk»

ShareHave you noticed how little talk there has been on MommyNiri.com about toys?
It's strange how little we talk about money and how difficult it is to know the real financial situation of people just by observation.
What is surprising is how little we talk about the effects of hair loss — not just aesthetically, but emotionally, too.

Not exact matches

Lots of companies talk the talk on diversity — but it's the little touches that demonstrate how your culture really works
Like many other pieces of expert commentary on personality difference, Little's entertaining talk offers plenty of examples of how introverts and extroverts tend to differ, according to research.
Talking for just shy of an hour, Trump's banter shows how little he knows and cares about the domestic politics and constraints other leaders face.
So we're always talking about, as a content marketing team, how can we push the boundaries in terms of showing great design but also doing something that feels a little bit outside of the box?
And for me as a business owner, I'm out there a little bit, but I'm not going to go to a TED Talk and tell people how to solve the problems of Detroit.
«Be mindful of how you talk about money because little minds are like sponges,» says Jacobs.
So was Grant, who explains in the TEDx talk below, how he had to repeat similar experiments at a fundraising call center a half dozen times before he was convinced that such a little thing could make such a big difference.
In a piece he wrote for Medium recently, Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz talks about the early days of the company and how he slept little and ate badly, and was hyper - competitive with co-workers.
Depending on how noncompetitive they are, I'll even resort to a little bit of friendly trash talking.
Musk is expected to talk a little bit more about how the company plans to finance several of the projects he outlined in his master plan, which includes solar - powered roofs, self - driving trucks and minibuses and a shared network of self - driving cars.
A little over a year ago, Chesky reached out and asked if he could travel to Omaha to have lunch, in part to talk about how Airbnb might help expand the number of rooms available in town during Berkshire's annual meeting weekend.
But he becomes increasingly anguished when we talk about Starbucks, not because of Schultz's missteps — he's proud of the company for taking a stand — but because it solidified to him how little support there is for black issues in general.
Julie will talk you through this so you'll leave this session with an understanding of how to ensure: Content (big rock and little rocks) has a purpose and is connected to other content Content is rooted in actual customer and competitive data / insights Content is tied to your value propositions through the customer perspective
The next time the premiers huddle together they should start talking about how to wean our economy off its overreliance on high - cost carbon fuels that the rest of the world has little need for today and will need even less of tomorrow.
Action: Block some network requests Who is this for: Paranoid people How difficult is it: Need to be tech savvy Tell me more: On macOS, you can install something called Little Snitch to get an alert every time an app tries to talk with a server.
The little feller has a long way to go before he can even start learning how to walk, talk, and operate without diapers.
RITHOLTZ: Let's talk a little bit about you guys hanging your shingle in 1980, really the final innings of a 16 - year bear market; how did you guys have the nerve to launch into that environment and how did you get clients?
Talk to me a little bit about how you came to the view, or whether you hold the view, that that is what we need, that a consumer - centered healthcare system is actually a good thing as opposed to a category of some kind.
We've already talked a little bit about how you can improve your credit score.
I could talk about how consumer staples have very little fluctuation in their demand or how major brands like Colgate - Palmolive own valuable shelf space in stores, but I think the chart below tells a better story.
When we get back, I want to talk a little bit about the modern workplace and how we change it, because I think there's a lot of discussion about how we create innovation, how we come up with innovation, and how we get to the new work environment, which I think everyone feels like there is one coming.
I'm always dismayed, for example, by how confidently analyts and economists talk about the relationship between monetary policy and economic outcomes, when the fact is that the level of interest rates, changes in interest rates, and changes in the monetary base provide very little additional forecasting power for GDP, over and above forecasts based on lagged changes in GDP itself.
You want to talk a little bit about how some of these placements are different than investing in traditional stocks and some things that people that aren't as familiar with the history might want to know about?
Maybe talk a little bit about, you know, kind of how you frame this with young people, the challenges of both, «Hey, start early.»
When you're talking about such magical things as gods and little folk how can anyone ever prove that they were never real?
Many people in America think they are so smart, but they prove to themselves every day how ignorant and unwise they are by talking on threads like this logically within their own small little peanut brains trying to explain and interpret God?
Like so many crazy religious people think a «God» speaks to them or believes in preachers / evangelists who think they talk to God, so how do they justify it in there little brains that this guy isnt also talking to God.
I talk about how the evangelical obsession with sex can make Christian living seem like little more than sticking to a list of rules, and how millennials long for faith communities in which they are safe asking tough questions and wrestling with doubt.
He'd have never known if she'd simply left it in her suitcase, but Traci wore that little pin proudly, and I loved how her eyes twinkled when she talked about her kids.
Oh, and how when they were little, we put them to bed early for two reasons — first, it's best for them and second, it made sure we had a few hours together every night to talk or make out or just watch telly.
I suspected I'd get a little pushback from fellow Christians who hold a complementarian perspective on gender, (a position that requires women to submit to male leadership in the home and church, and often appeals to «biblical womanhood» for support), but I had hoped — perhaps naively — that the book would generate a vigorous, healthy debate about things like the Greco Roman household codes found in the epistles of Peter and Paul, about the meaning of the Hebrew word ezer or the Greek word for deacon, about the Paul's line of argumentation in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 11, about our hermeneutical presuppositions and how they are influenced by our own culture, and about what we really mean when we talk about «biblical womanhood» — all issues I address quite seriously in the book, but which have yet to be engaged by complementarian critics.
Those of you who followed the comments from Friday's post caught a little glimpse of how talk like this can come back to me.
Best Insights: Lisa Bloom with «How To Talk to Little Girls» ``... One tiny bit of opposition to a culture that sends all the wrong messages to our girls.
And I'm not talking about how he was a little boy.
We former evangelicals LOVE to talk about our faith and are sometimes surprised by how little opportunity there is to do so in a Mainline Protestant church environment.
We always allow the other person to determine how much or how little they want to talk about spiritual matters.
What heartened me most about the whole affair was how little formal talk there was about Christian unity and how much direct experience of it.
If you knew how many of the «debaters» in this forum were paid shills sitting in boiler room type operations all day basically getting into character and arguing the agenda their boss gave them you would spend less time debating them and more time talking about their little known but thriving industry.
You know: when most people get ready to write a little something for the Christmas season, they fire up the Yule log, and they have a little eggnog, and toss a little tinsel, and eat a cookie, and then they have this sweet smell on their breath as they talk about how joyful a season this....
We do not yet talk about how much we all are interdependent and need to relate to an equal, how challenging and beneficial that process can be, how often this need is thwarted, how little practice we get in it, and how much of our life is spent at the much more primitive level of learning how to be either one - up or one - down.
And to assume that all men are engaging in disparaging talk against women behind closed doors is to think little of how God created us and designed us to honor one another.
I firmly believe in the power of prayer, but I get a little irritated when I hear people talking about how God answered their prayer for a great parking spot...
It is pointless trying to talk to a believer, as they will never let go of their myth regardless of how little evidence they have to back up it veracity.
Chapter 11 of Close Your Church for Good looks at some of the forms of evangelism today, and how they amount to little more than talking at people.
I firmly believe in the power of prayer, but I get a little irritated when I hear people talking about how God answered their prayer for a great parking spot or something like that.
Cresson talked a little about how he managed two careers at once, according to this LA Focus interview highlighted by Christian Post.
In this chapter, we look at some of the forms of evangelism today, and how they amount to little more than talking at people, which is not Scriptural and does more damage to the Gospel than good.
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