Sentences with phrase «interested in these things now»

So to answer your question, I'm probably more interested in these things now than I was even in high school.

Not exact matches

Brimmer: I think the future of agencies is in serious crisis right now, and I think just kind of seeing a little bit of what's happening with WPP and Martin Sorrell recently and the way that that model has changed — is really going to be interesting to watch how things unfold over the coming years.
«If we could solve the problem of getting to space more effectively than we do now, I think we would find ourselves doing more interesting, potentially game - changing things in low Earth orbit.»
«The interesting thing is that after I left my job to pursue a master's degree in strategic entrepreneurship, I was surprised to find that many of my peers had faced a similar experience,» said Maier, now the co-founder of Impraise in New York.
Until now, this served Trump's interest: the less we can focus any one thing the less trouble he's likely to seem to be in.
«They think things are balanced right now and for the foreseeable future» in the context that they will continue to move interest rates higher at a gradual pace, he added.
Now he does the same thing from his perch in Eugene, Ore., and his FedWatch blog is must - reading for those interested in following U.S. monetary policy.
So the interesting thing is that over the last few days it does seem like we're getting a bit of that back and Gold is now trading in opposition to the Nasdaq...
By now you'll no doubt see the obvious correlations between them all as well, and the really interesting thing about it all is that in each and every one of them, both the ones I have reported on here as well as others we are yet to review, the lessons we take from them are not to be found in academic institutions.
Because they generally get now education about this sort of thing, a mentor (with no financial interest in the outcome) of some sort is desirable.
Considering Europe he says, «the last thing Europe needs now is stability, because stability means stagnation» and he concluded by stating that in his opinion «interest rates were going to go up sooner, further and faster» than widely predicted.
Fundraisers can now only offer rewards in single quantities (or a «sensible set» if deemed appropriate); additionally — and this is where things get interesting — they are no longer permitted to use product simulations or product renderings in their campaigns.
VIX and all these other things became a symptom, of what I call now, a disease of rising inflation and rising interest rates that then caused this explosion in volatility.
Cryptocurrencies seem to be the in - thing now as governments express interest in creating their own.
But the interesting thing is that in the eyes of many investors, Apple's quarterly iPhone sales numbers seem to matter less now than they have for years — at least relative to how much cash Apple is generating and returning to shareholders through dividends and stock buybacks.
The overall exchanges have been interesting to read to me, because with the clear exception of Julie — who was outright wronged and is due the apologies she seeks — it reads like a lot of typical in - house backbiting, now that things have come to light.
We are still in disagreement about some important things: that used to bother us but now we think it keeps things interesting.
Now, I'm not trying to get into a debate, I just find it interesting, that when things go badly for christians, it is that they are being tested, or told to wait, or that somehow their faith in the face of adversity is more noble.
So I mainly follow links on twitter now (and facebook to a lesser extent), following people who are good sources of the things I'm interested in, and trusting that the good quality articles will float to the top... When I want more things to read I turn to Google Reader, but normally end up just picking up on the few blogs I'm really interested in.
As time passes, though, and there is increasing interest in Orthodoxy from outsiders (well over half of Orthodox clergy are now converts, which is creating wonderful revival), these things need to be thought through.
Now, sitting in Westminster Hall, I heard all this challenged, and new and much more interesting vistas opened up: of course we must be allowed to think along large lines, to lift our minds to things that are great and noble, to ponder the things of God, and to connect these with our public life, our common life and the search for the common good.
Jeremy i am surprised you never countered my argument Up till now the above view has been my understanding however things change when the holy spirit speaks.He amazes me because its always new never old and it reveals why we often misunderstand scripture in the case of the woman caught in adultery.We see how she was condemned to die and by the grace of God Jesus came to her rescue that seems familar to all of us then when they were alone he said to her Go and sin no more.This is the point we misunderstand prior to there meeting it was all about her death when she encountered Jesus something incredible happened he turned a death situation into life situation so from our background as sinners we still in our thinking and understanding dwell in the darkness our minds are closed to the truth.In effect what Jesus was saying to her and us is chose life and do nt look back that is what he meant and that is the walk we need to live for him.That to me was a revelation it was always there but hidden.Does it change that we need discipline in the church that we need rules and guidelines for our actions no we still need those things.But does it change how we view non believers and even ourselves definitely its not about sin but its all about choosing life and living.He also revealed some other interesting things on salvation so i might mention those on the once saved always saved discussion.Jeremy just want to say i really appreciate your website because i have not really discussed issues like this and it really is making me press in to the Lord for answers to some of those really difficult questions.regards brentnz
There appeared to be in me then, as I find it to be in me now, such an entire loss of what regards myself, that any of my own interests gave me little pain or pleasure; ever wanting to will or wish for myself only the very thing which God does.»
Many things in this story seem like coincidences: that I happened to get interested in James Joyce and ask my Catholic friend about chasubles; that I and my boyfriend Steve, now my husband, happened to meet the same Polish Capuchin in little Broken Arrow; that the priest who prepared us for marriage ten years later happened to be a Polish Dominican from the priory in which the Krakow seminar was held; that Prof. Russell Hittinger happened to come to Tulsa, which led me to Poland and to First Things, all of which played a part in bringing my parents into the Cthings in this story seem like coincidences: that I happened to get interested in James Joyce and ask my Catholic friend about chasubles; that I and my boyfriend Steve, now my husband, happened to meet the same Polish Capuchin in little Broken Arrow; that the priest who prepared us for marriage ten years later happened to be a Polish Dominican from the priory in which the Krakow seminar was held; that Prof. Russell Hittinger happened to come to Tulsa, which led me to Poland and to First Things, all of which played a part in bringing my parents into the CThings, all of which played a part in bringing my parents into the Church.
In his reply (May 8, 1939) Hartshorne writes, «I understand better now why you are so interested in maintaining a distinction between what is necessary to and what is part of a thing.&raquIn his reply (May 8, 1939) Hartshorne writes, «I understand better now why you are so interested in maintaining a distinction between what is necessary to and what is part of a thing.&raquin maintaining a distinction between what is necessary to and what is part of a thing
It has been our contention, however, that this way of looking at things is of special interest to the Christian theologian; and now and again this has been noted in the context of some given assertion of process - thought.
What I find the most interesting in all of this campaign is that the evangelicals who all along would have said that Mormonism is a cult are now rallying behind Romney and basically ignoring that they believe he and all members of his religion are going to hell for rejecting the mainstream version of things.
satan was responsible for his own actions as Adam and Eve were and so are we.Its interesting that because of satans fall satan is now Gods lap dog he gives him a leash and tells him his constraints and he allows him to test his people so that through testing he builds our faith and so we can say that all things work for good to those that love God.brentnz Holiness in the prescence of sin makes it more holy so they help to define what is holy and what is evil or sin.We see that all the way through the bible so they co-exist temporarily until evil has run its course and then God will judge and we know that satan is cast into the fiery pit for ever.Even towards satan God is merciful.brentnz
Now that I have fun things like quinoa flour in the house, I'm more apt to try to find interesting ways to use it.
As the restaurant critic for LA Weekly, there are three things I know for certain: (1) L.A. is arguably the most interesting place to eat in America right now; (2) much of our most remarkable dining happens in places that are hard to infiltrate and understand — even for those of us who live here; and (3) this is particularly true of the San Gabriel Valley (the SGV), the 284 - mile swath of land that lies to the east of the city and holds the most thrilling international eating in America.
Now there's renewed interest in all things small - batch, heritage, and homegrown, the humble American pie is refreshing terrain.
I've been interested in pressure cooking for a number of years now... because when I was growing up pressure cooking was the in thing... when microwaves came in, pressure cooking went out.
There seems little in the way of interest now I now that difernt clubs do things in diferent ways but you get the feeing from most of the board that its caution caution caution with the Arsenal board and as long as the wheels keep turning (a profit) the board are happy.
United may not have worn anything like this in living memory, but a bit of change every now and then makes things a bit more interesting, doesn't it?
But it was extremely lateral in terms of compensation and the career path for current role is... uhhh... well - paid but not really the career path that interests me as any sort of short, medium, or long - term thing right now.
We are still a club with no benefactor to bankroll us so the books have to be balanced.That is a way of life that we must live with and accept.But from now on there can be little or no excuses in the players we buy.Wengers control in these matters have been taken from him so the emphasis and accountability lies with Ivan Gazidis and his new teams.We can't get things wrong.Big and better players cost more in fees and wages so it's certainlg going to be interesting.
Now maybe I'm just looking at it from the perspective of someone who is interested in this type of thing, but I can't for the life of me see a position where anyone can hear that the president of Chechnya wants to pay you a bunch of money to fly over and do promotion work, and you don't question that at least to the point where you spend absolute maximum 2 minutes looking him up.
Players want to win things and its been clear from Wengers Approach to the transfer window over many years that he is not interested in buying in a super team, he wants cheap players that he can nurture into superstars and then take the credit from signing the «new thierry Henry» ect Players now do nt want to play for Arsenal as they know we are always going to be the «Also Rans» of the EPL Wenger it has to be noted has had very little success in the transfer window since David Dein left and that to my mind is significant he is currently sitting in france commentating for french TV during the euro's while everybody else is buying up the available players that should be on our radar.
It's now getting interesting like it's some soap on TV., well if you think OX should be sold, try reconsider He outmuscled Azpilicueta and Rashford He outrun the whole of Man City's defense He kicked it right in the face of Coutois to score that lone goal in the shield He even at some point dribbled almost half of Liverpool players... Is that how sooner you forget things????? I wonder..
Although I've found it very cathartic to speak, vent and end occasionally rant about all things Arsenal, we need to act carefully and intelligently right now or we're going to get played by this club even worse than at present... the pro-Wengerites and the suits, who represent a considerable proportion of the season ticket holders, don't want to believe that there is no plan and that Wenger has mailed it in for several years now or that things are going to get much worse before they get better... why would they... many have spent a considerable sum buying some of the highest priced tickets in the World... they want to have a front row seat to see something special and to be seen doing so, which simply provides ample justification for the expense and the time invested... to many of them, Wenger is the sun in their soccer universe... his awkward disposition, misplaced arrogance and his utter lack of balls makes him a rather unusual cult figure, but the cerebral narrative seemed to embolden those who already felt pretty highly of themselves... many might not even of really liked football that much before his arrival and rarely games they weren't attending... as such, they desperately believe that Wenger, and only Wenger, can supply them with their required fix... if he goes, they were wrong and that's a tough pill to swallow... they would have to admit that they were duped... they will definitely resent whoever made them feel this way, but of course it will be too late by then... so when we go overboard with ridiculous comments bordering of anarchy, it scares the shit out of them and they shift their blame towards us rather than at those who really perpetrated this act of treason... we aren't the enemy... we simply woke much earlier and the reason our comments have gotten more vile in recent years is out of utter frustration... in order for any real change to occur at this club we need to bring as many supporters as possible with us or the big money interests will fade and our ultimate objective will be lost... so it's time to focus on the head instead of the heart for now
But Ray Parlour goes even further and thinks that Wenger could find himself in trouble if things don't work out the way Le Prof hopes it will, and he doesn't think he was ever interested in buying Benzema either: «It'll be interesting to see what happens now because he'll be under pressure Arsene Wenger,» he said.
Van Dijk does not see things quite the same way though and has now not only handed in a formal transfer request but has released a statement complaining about the way his current club are dealing with him and claiming that there has been transfer interest in him from more than one source, The Mirror reports.
WHY would we show interest now in Van Dijk when we have just tried our uttermost to discourage Sanchez from doing much the same thing (transfer request apart)?
Arsenal will not progress until a forward thinking board, owner and managers are in place, clearly this club is just a money making venture for the greedy Stan who cares only for his pocket, wenger sadly is his puppet and gazidis is the silent partner, turmoil and lack of profit in business is a sure thing to sell and move on, this is needed so we / us supporters have a voice and direction in our club, the previous board are to blame for selling to Kroenke & co we are now reaping the benefits of ill thought, blinded, pathetic former directors who were only interested in profits not the club, we are a laughing stock, i will be happy if we finish mid table with this lot... when you are on the bottom there is only one way to go..
for Sanchez, playing without any long - term security might seem unnecessarily careless in light of his potential future earnings (this next contract, wherever he is, will likely be the most lucrative deal he will ever sign)... for the club, there is a delicate balance between protecting their monetary interests and not appearing shady in the process... it rarely works, especially now without 24 hr access to all things club - related
OK, in terms of the drivers Ericsson isn't exactly the most exciting choice (probably the most interesting thing he's ever done is crash his bike into a chicken) but he's a solid performer and was closely matched with Pascal Wehrlein (who now looks likely to drop out of F1) for much of the year.
Linked to a sooner return to his home country, with Bologna allegedly interested in signing him back, Italian international forward Manolo Gabbiadini (26), as his agent, Silvio Pagliari, stated: «First things first, we must point out Manolo is playing in Premier League, and, even if he's getting less game time than before right now, he'll give a lot of thought before leaving.
It will be interesting to see how things pan out for Sterling once players like Sturridge and Gerrard return as well as any signings likely to be made in the January transfer window but for now as long as he is in the team, Sterling looks settled and assured and can only improve with age so a run of games is always likely to result in consistent performances which is what he, Liverpool and the current England manager, Roy Hodgson, who was watching in the stands at White Hart Lane, will be hoping for.
Cuper said, «I've received confirmed news revealing Real Madrid's interest in Salah, but let's not rush things, to me, he is in an amazing position right now
I did a bit of reading on the subject, and one of the interesting things I learned was that countries who brought in this type of legislation decades ago are now seeing a lower incidence of violent crime that appears to correspond to the change in the laws.
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