Just like all of
the instruments in a symphony need to be in tune, so do all of the hormones of the body need to be in balance.
They need to be in balance much like all of
the instruments in a symphony need to be tuned.
Not exact matches
Morris L. West writes: «The sick mind is a defective
instrument in the great
symphony which is God's dialogue with man.»
A revised vision today points the way: to work and pray for the «reconciliation of particularities» which protect our diversity and for a reimagining of «visible unity», not theological uniformity, not structural mergers, but diversity for the enrichment of one another, not singing
in unison but
in harmony, analogous to different
instruments playing the ecumenical
symphony.
A sequence of various types of electromagnetic radiation followed that gravitational trill, like musical
instruments taking turns
in a
symphony.
«An analogy would be: None of the
instruments in the philharmonic sounds like the
symphony.»
Well, hormones work
in synchrony to maintain balance sort of like an orchestra, where if one
instrument is out of tune the whole
symphony suffers, or like a seesaw, where too much weight at one end causes the board to swing wildly back and forth before it eventually slams to the ground.
Imagine a
symphony orchestra
in which the first violin automatically goes to the most senior violinist (or worse yet, to the most senior musician, regardless of
instrument).
An orchestra plays a
symphony together creating beautiful, moving music, and the composer understands each
instrument's contribution
in order to compose and orchestrate the
symphony.
The app lets gamers play with the game's soundtrack
in two different modes: «Legendary Mode» contains three tracks from the game that you can split into six instrumentals, turning them on and off for your own personal remix, and «Creation Mode» allows users to make their own music with five different
instruments, six sounds each, that they can share with friends (I expect full
symphonies will be made
in less than a day).
In her first Belgian solo exhibition, Nevin Aladağ creates meditative city symphonies with natural elements and local musical instruments, and reinterprets cities and its inhabitants in a rhythmic, ever - changing wa
In her first Belgian solo exhibition, Nevin Aladağ creates meditative city
symphonies with natural elements and local musical
instruments, and reinterprets cities and its inhabitants
in a rhythmic, ever - changing wa
in a rhythmic, ever - changing way.
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