«[That] can set
in feelings of failure and depression,» she says.
But for some reason, learning from my mistakes often results
in feelings of failure.
Not exact matches
The Seattle - based marketer says his depression stemmed from
feelings of shame, weakness and
failure — none
of which particularly inspire confidence
in employees, peers and investors, nor make a person want to crawl out
of bed
in the morning and captain the ship.
Taking the time to fully analyze your situation
in solitude, while focusing on solutions instead
of problems, can revitalize your mind and help you focus on where you are headed, how you
feel, and more important, how you view
failure from that moment on.
In my role as advisor to small businesses, I often hear first - hand the challenges and
failures of retail store owners who fear the advantages
of online and
feel the exodus to Internet eCommerce, led by Amazon and Ebay.
If you're mailing out a marketing campaign and
feeling unsatisfied with the results, you have to stop blaming the media as if it were the only factor
in determining the success or
failure of the campaign.
Hopefully having a good wallow, really thinking about your
feelings and showing yourself some compassion (sadly, there's no word from Gilbertson on whether that can come
in the form
of chocolate fudge brownie icecream) should help ease your fear
of failure going forward, but Gilbertson suggests that you take things slowly as you move on from a disappointment.
And sometimes the lessons come
in the form
of bona fide
failures; some so harsh that at the time it
feels like we're getting a PhD
in what not to do — the butt ugly.
Right from its opening sentence («One
of the most salient features
of our culture is that there is so much bullshit,») the book's message resonated with a public outraged by a rash
of corporate scandals and
feeling deceived by the
failure of American forces to find weapons
of mass destruction
in Iraq.
when Facebook market research
in Australia engaged
in sentiment analysis
of more than 6.4 million Australian youth, including 1.9 million high schoolers as young as 14 years old, to estimate when those children were at their most vulnerable, experiencing
feelings of being «worthless» or a «
failure» as part
of research conducted for marketers.
And I'm not alone
in feeling this way, judging from comments on a Globe and Mail story regarding class sizes, as well as Spencer Callaghan's Yummy Mummy Club post on the
failures of Ontario's kindergarten program.
Multipliers are frequently used
in offsetting to compensate for the risk
of failure of the offset measures and the time lag between when negative impacts
of the development project are
felt and the positive impacts
of offsetting come to fruition, often a period
of many years.
There have been lapses
in this program, most notably last year when Facebook market research
in Australia engaged
in sentiment analysis
of more than 6.4 million Australian youth, including 1.9 million high schoolers as young as 14 years old, to estimate when those children were at their most vulnerable, experiencing
feelings of being «worthless» or a «
failure» as part
of research conducted for marketers.
She says one
of the biggest lessons she learned as a leader is to be open and honest about disappointment,
failure, or sadness — not to smooth it over, or
in any way
feel like you don't face it directly.
The fallout from the
failure of a high - profile international meeting over Iran's nuclear ambitions could be most
felt in the cost
of oil.
Their
feelings of fear usually revolve scenarios
in which they see themselves failing as traders by losing all their money and their respect and / or repeating past
failures.
How does he
feel entitled to make any claim to be a better Catholic than Santorum (for that is what he's implicitly claiming) on questions that the church rightly leaves to the prudential judgment
of voters and public officials, within broad boundaries, when
in the next breath he confesses his complete
failure to be any kind
of Catholic at all on a question on which the church speaks with categorical moral authority?
And I have
felt the many ways Jesus reaches out his hand to catch me —
in the love
of family and friends, the sustenance
of spiritual practice, the bonds
of community and the moments
of unexplainable peace
in the midst
of the struggle and the
failure.
I'm sad because I
feel that our
failure only confirms my fears that a church like this one —
in which all are welcome,
in which women can lead,
in which politics don't get
in the way
of fellowship,
in which questions are encouraged,
in which a diversity
of opinions is celebrated,
in which gossip is kept to a minimum — simply can not make it
in Dayton.
Here, we see that
failure - avoidance is rooted
in the desire to protect our self - image and our view
of ourselves as «winners» so that we won't have to deal with the difficult
feelings of disappointment or rejection.
According to J.R. Briggs, «the elephant
in the room for pastors is that many
of us are afraid
of failure, and we don't
feel as though there are safe spaces to talk openly about it.»
Other folks
in the EC community
feel that Adam and Eve are typological figures, such as a representation
of the
failure of Israel to keep the covenant.
Many Americans, more than
in a long time, have come to
feel that our problems do not arise merely from a faulty choice
of means but from a
failure of our central vision.
Evangelical fitness maven Stormie Omartian led the way (even while plugging her own diet and exercise plan) by addressing,
in 1984 and again
in 1993, the tyranny
of contemporary body standards and noting that most dieters carry on a self - defeating battle with food and exercise that is «a prelude to the most intense
feelings of failure.»
And then, when, like most
of the kids
in the youth groups or Bible colleges, we found ourselves
in a rather usual sort
of life, surprisingly not preaching to thousands on a weeknight, we were left
feeling like
failures, like somehow we weren't measuring up, we weren't serving God effectively, we must have missed it because isn't our life supposed to be about doing big, successful things for God?
I quite realize that this may seem an exaggerated, even an emotive, way
of stating it; but I am quite sure that any honest man or woman, conscious
of his mortality, is also conscious
of the fact that he is not what he might have been, that he can not shift the blame to somebody else's shoulders (however many extenuating circumstances he may
feel justified
in adducing), and that,
in at least one sense, the sense I have indicated above, he is a mortal
failure.
Many Christians
in North America and Europe
feel alienated from the Third World ideology that seems to dominate WCC thinking, although perhaps this reflects the
failure of those Christians to acknowledge the economic exploitation and racism
of Europe and North America.
Youth who
feel trapped
in vicious cycles
of repeated
failures may be helped to interrupt the cycle by being coach - ed and supported as they accomplish modest realistic goals.
(14) Growth
in the ability to cope constructively can occur
in supportive relationships as the counselor or the support group helps persons gratify their dependency needs; drain off powerful, ego - paralyzing
feelings (e.g., guilt,
failure, anxiety); review their situation more objectively; and plan and implement realistic ways
of coping constructively with their situation.
Early school
failure may cause the child to
feel trapped
in a
failure cycle -
in which each
failure increases the probability
of another
failure.
This last has been forgotten
in a good deal
of traditional analysis
of human life, and
failure to see that we have those «
feeling - tones» is bound to produce a sadly distorted idea
of personality.
His poor marks, rejection
of religion, and dabbling
in drugs cause
feelings of failure and anger
in his parents.
She is too disturbed by the destructive emotional tornado
in which she is living, and too threatened by awful
feelings of failure, to look deeply within herself.
Thus for each
of us, the exacting and inescapable question, which must be faced and answered, is the question
of our total mortal life as we are now living it, a question which arises from our mortality with the responsibility which that entails, which puts itself to us
in the form
of our measuring up to the possibility
of becoming authentically ourselves, and which issues
in our realization (not so much
in thought as
in deeply
felt experience as existing men)
of blessedness, as we know ourselves becoming what we truly are, or
in destruction or damnation, as we know ourselves both frustrated men and
failures in our human fulfillment.
every actuality for what it can be
in such a perfected system — its sufferings, its sorrows, its
failures, its triumphs, its immediacies
of joy — woven by rightness
of feeling into the harmony
of the universal
feeling....
Significant morale problems exist among segments
of the presbyterate who
feel closed off from the decision - making process, and
failures in catechesis, perhaps to be expected
in the wake
of a world - shaking event like Vatican II, have left vast portions
of the laity barely literate
in the fundamentals
of the faith.
The wisdom
of [God's] subjective aim prehends every actuality for what it can be
in such a perfected system — its sufferings, its sorrows, its
failures, its triumphs, its immediacies
of joy — woven by rightness
of feeling into the harmony
of the universal
feeling, which is always immediate, always many, always one, always with novel advance, moving onward and never perishing.
I think
of the times I have
felt completely helpless
in the face
of this problem — the times I have failed — the
feelings of frustration that have accompanied the
failures.
This is an early example
of what might be termed «intellectual impressionism»: a
failure to provide definitions and a spurning
of clear meaning
in favor
of a fuzzy and foggy «
feel - good» factor.
In the midst of feeling like an utter failure in my life (not making money, my husband constantly wondering why I don't cook «like I used to,» being too exhausted to hit ten - thousand steps on that stupid FitBit), I realized something.
In the midst
of feeling like an utter
failure in my life (not making money, my husband constantly wondering why I don't cook «like I used to,» being too exhausted to hit ten - thousand steps on that stupid FitBit), I realized something.
in my life (not making money, my husband constantly wondering why I don't cook «like I used to,» being too exhausted to hit ten - thousand steps on that stupid FitBit), I realized something...
then you express your
feelings so 12 YEARS
OF FAILURE when there was room to improve are unacceptable
in any business..
How ridiculously small and embarrassed YOU must
feel now after THAT post
of yours earlier.The important issue you fail to understand is that even the fans who wish Wenger to leave
in a dignified manner accept that he must go.Very few defend his performance this season quite simply because there is nothing to defend.What they do not do is try to blame the support and fanbase for Wengers continuing
failure.This result is just another
failure from the manager.
The idea,
of course, is that if a player
feels comfortable taking risks, they will acquire new skills faster, but it may cost a «
failure» or two
in the beginning.
5 years
of wenger imposed
failure and u still have your rose tinted glasses on tight and you bag
of football cliches to sniff when
feeling down... But actually there are plenty
of positives bellerin... Coquellin (but limits exposed here) wilshere (idiot fans font like him I know but this is the game where we miss him) Alexis ozil cech (I was wrong there)... Just not enough to put us where we should be
in the european elite... save your football wisdom for mark Hughes he needs it
Saying things like:» the club is
in great shape» is irresponsible and frustrating as he seems oblivious to how we
feel for the recurring problems both on and off the field, the results,
failures and lack
of major honors since the emirates has been
in place.
Since the last day
of the season, i have been so devastated that i lost all desire for football seeing as we wont be
in UCL and ManU won the EL which gives them a slot
in the CL I just do nt wan na imagine how i would
feel if we lost to Chelsea, it would make this season a huge
failure... if we win, we can at least count ourselves among clubs with silverware (ManU, Chelsea, and other leagues) ManU even have 3 titles...
HUMVN, Machine?He made a funny comment
in one
of the justarsenal stories earlier.He said Arsenal don't need a new CB.Can someone slap me.I was even shocked at the thumbs up he got.I
feel so sorry for Arsenal and fans as well.We are really suffering.Till today how people rate Mertesacker is beyond me.The guy is not even a leader by example.I wonder why Hayden was sold as I think he could have surely done better and if Isaac Hayden solves his injury problems we gonna regret selling him.Even aliens know arsenal needs a CB.Aren't you guys tired
of always starting the season short
of players
in positions where needed.It's like some
of you want
failure but you don't know you want.Arsenal should complete the squad this season.It's a must.
Theo is an expensive
failure and to keep giving him the chance when he has repaid the clubs faith with being a bottler and acting as if he's a lazy git (watched him a number
of seasons ago against Blackburn away and all he did was run up and down the wing without even calling for the ball to draw defenders away from the centre) I hate to say it but
in my mind Alan Hansen was right when he said that «Walcott has not got a natural footballers brain» It infuriated me at the time but its been proven to be true I
feel he's been collecting his money for too long without a result to justify keeping him
in our employment.
Everything could hinge on what happens between now and the end
of the EPL season or even until the final whistle
of the FA cup final is blown and I have a
feeling that another FA cup trophy for the club and our boss to celebrate could trigger the departure
of Arsene Wenger, especially if it is preceded by the
failure of the Gunners to finish
in the top four.
It's only
in Arsenal that I see we are comfortable
in failure, yes the players are criticize not out
of hate but love because we want the best from them, but
of course some here
feels venting out anger means we do not support them no it's because we do that why we says it they way we see it.