Sentences with phrase «just kind of figured»

I spotted Justin Ishmael and the whole Mondo crew, but I just kind of figured they were there to have a good time.
I know many people have reported that but I just kind of figured they were making things up.
I always just kind of figured that it's everywhere already.
Her name is Cadence and we did do a hospital birth which was an incredible experience at the hospital that I was able to deliver at here in Nashville, Tennessee, and just kind of figuring everything out, breastfeeding wise, but we're doing pretty good so far.
«You don't want to kick the door in, but at the same time, if you're passive about it — if you just let the system work — you could lose two or three months of time where the teachers are just kind of figuring out, What's this kid's status, how is he doing.

Not exact matches

So I think that we just kind of jumped on it and started playing around and started trying to figure out how we were going to grow our overall presence.
At the same time, «there are all kinds of other institutions that have been very successful creating these wealth management services, where they help you figure out not just your investments but also all the other financial services that you have.»
He [Irwin] just had to figure out what was the right kind of tool for each situation.»
In this edited excerpt, the authors offer suggestions for figuring out just what kind of business you'd like to start.
I was kind of like I said interested in gambling or at least speculating or figuring things out and then taking a calculated gamble and what they were telling me was don't try, there were saying that no one can beat the market and the stock prices are efficient and just through simple observation looking at the newspaper and they used to have the 52 - week high low prices in the newspaper, it seemed unreasonable that you know the fair price was 51 day and eight months later, it was 120, and that was pretty much every stock had that kind of range every year and it didn't make sense to me that the fundamentals of the underlying businesses were actually changing that much.
Christians are just like everyone else, they are trying to make sense of their world, figure out how to survive in a world full of hate and bigotry and try to bring some kind of normalcy to the world they live in.
A computer program can be designed (the word deserves emphasis here) to do just about anything, including to mutate stick figures that look vaguely like animals (or trees) into all kinds of shapes.
Again, just to cite a single example, the practice of formulating fixed and stereotyped figures of speech, already reflected to a lesser degree in the Himayana scriptures, becomes here a kind of codification of a quantity of rigid formulas which seem to threaten all life with suffocation.
It is an observable, contingent, historical fact that our minds are of just the right kind to be able to figure out a great deal about the universe, while keeping the figuring - out process challenging.
The winter months are hard on my banana addiction — I can't get them to ripen fast enough and the stores sell green ones I should probably just buy way more than I need so that they can ripen at home, but I haven't figured out how many that'll take, or what kind of intervals I should buy them in.
I figure there is more to it than just the ingredients like at what time you eat the bar, do you eat it by itself or with what kind of liquid?
She schools you on the fundamentals — how to talk to a sommelier, how to figure out what kinds of wines you actually like, whether it's okay to buy a bottle just because the label looks cool — with humor, not judgment or pretension.
As for the academics thing, that's the kind of information that should be ingrained in the athletic department rather than just one football coach, because I doubt football is the only sport that may need to figure out how to get premiere athletes admitted to the school.
Because they think that if they need some kind of «mental» fix or coaching, or something like that, that it is a sign of weakness or that they are broken... or that they just don't want their parents to meddle in their stuff and they want to figure it out on their own.
«So we kind of quash all the analytics for stuff like this, and all of a sudden we're on TMZ and Twitter just trying to figure out — any whispers, any kind of rehearsal information, historical performances.»
Or are you «just» content to «figure» in the top four season after season and call it «some kind of achievement»?
I might have continued longer if I'd been given support instead of just a you figure it out but don't give formula kind of attitude.
They just figure they are strong willed children that are troublemakers and they kind of scoot them off to the side.
First time moms - we're kind of going through enough; we're trying to get our bodies back, and hormones and temperature elevated and regulated, and just to figure out what you need in a diaper bag to get out the house.
Like all parallel medical services, it falls to the patient to figure out who is legitimately skilled and who is not: EXCEPT, most women having babies are in their twenties and early thirties and I personally didn't have the kind of life - experience necessary to question whether or not my government would provide me with sub par care and just assumed that if the government was paying, it must be safe, and the midwifery community capitalizes on this by running advertisements (which OB / GYN are not permitted to do) advertising themselves as being less interventionist, less c - section (no shit, Sherlock, but you'd have to read between the lines to understand why), and better outcomes.
MARIE BISHOP: Well with my 4 year old he was actually in the NICU he was a preemie, I had to pump for him for the first month and I kind of figured it out when the nurses were a are little shocked by me bringing in like 12 ounces at a time for each pumping and I just ended up encouraging my oversupplies so I could donate and then this time I ended up having it, I just started pumping it as soon as my milk came in and it squirts everywhere and it's just a ton
Figuring that we only had three more months until I could move him over to cow's milk and I might as well dip into those free formula samples from the hospital, I just kind of let it go.
KRISTINA CHAMBERLAIN: Well sometimes moms will deal with it more in the first couple of months just while their bodies and babies and still you know figuring out what's the supply and demand is, so, a lot of times after the baby's hit you know the 2 or 3 months mark that starts to get better just because again moms and babies bodies are you know dancing together a little bit better they're getting more in to rhythm, so sometimes that the time and then in itself will kind of resolve it as baby gets bigger and kind of figures that out but if after the 2 months mark it's still an issue when it's making nursing hard for mom and baby I would say then start doing some of the things that we talked about to be a little bit more assertively treating it
Then I kind of figured out I think that my body was just trying to adjust after the treatment, and if I would just kind of lay back and be like «It's okay,» then it would go back up.
ROBIN KAPLAN: There are, you know, most women probably can attest to feeling engorged or feeling like they have oversupply in the beginning when their babies are first born and that's, that's pretty typical to have that kind of engorgement in the beginning just because your body and your baby are still trying to figure out what exactly your baby needs.
My younger one is a bit of an enigma, but maybe was partially due to being a bit of an introvert so loves the imaginary world of books, and maybe partially due to neglect parenting — we weren't reading to her nearly as much as her sisters, so she had to figure it out on her own (joking — kind of — we obviously don't neglect her, reading just took a backseat, but hey it all worked out in the wash so am not sweating it).
But yeah I just kind of need to figure out because I, you know work can be stressful enough to have a fair commute, and I would actually have to add time into my workday to fit in the pumping's during the day and that would take time away from my daughter at night and I really don't want to do that.
So, I needed someone amazing and you were amazing and we just started kind of figuring this out together.
She just kind of taught me and we figured it out.
He wasn't a great nurser either so wasn't like, you know, we'd gotten off to this fabulous start but it was just, I think this second one learns how to kind of go with the flow a little bit more because it was not all about that child and for me, I didn't necessarily set up a routine but what I did do is, actually a little bit opposite of yours, mine was, I had to satisfy the toddler first, because I figured that, the infant kind of walk around, kind of keep him pacified a little bit, but my toddler was like me, me, me, me, me, like I need this now, so we had a box of toys, that he could play with, like they were only set up for when I were nursing, so they were like his special toys, a special snacks that I knew that would be safe and I wouldn't be giving the Heimlich Maneuver you know, while I was trying to breastfeed.
If you're having trouble getting your baby to take a bottle easily, one great option is the First Foods bottle pack — it has 5 different kinds of bottles, and once you figure out which one your baby likes, you can buy more of just that bottle (instead of wasting a ton of money on packs of bottles that it turns out your baby hates).
SUNNY GAULT: For moms and dads that end up needing some counseling after their kids are born, would you say most of it just a handful of sessions to kind to get back on track and then they can figure it out or is this something that you really recommend regular counseling for just to make sure you stay on track, what do you see happening here?
«Louise was the kind of person who was always looking to support the underdog and figure out the ways that the government could be fair, and just safer for everyone who needed government to work on their behalf,» said Deborah Hughes of the Susan B. Anthony House.
Just read the statements she issues, kind of like 2 + 2 = 4, its not that hard to figure out.
«It's kind of similar to going to the doctor's to... you know you have some bad news and you just have to figure out how bad it is and some of it will be good and some of it will be bad,» said Allen.
We spent a lot of hours just kind of relaxing in order to figure out which of these products we should include in our inflatable lounger review.
Just remember not to shoot a salary figure to anyone without disclosing the fact that you also get benefits such as travel to meetings or insurance of one kind or another.
A brand new science for studying this networked phenomenon, and in effect it's kind of a reverse engineering the World Wide Web that we know and the kinds of networks that we see on that to try to figure out how they took shape and maybe from that we can learn what principles involve and how networks do grow and you might be able to use that sort of thing to be able to develop a better system s for example being able to create more efficient networks and that could be very valuable in industry, there may be a lot of practical applications, involving protecting privacy, for example, and stopping people from stealing identities; and you should, you know, should be of just an interesting phenomenon.
«Because the contributions are in kind and members are not obliged to tell us what it cost them, we will never have a detailed cost of ITER,» Claessens said, adding that participants will likely have to wait until 2027 before they figure out for certain whether this is a game - changing energy source or just the most expensive way to boil water ever built.
I mean I know it's just a point of trivia, but it does kind of hammer home this point of these figures sort of aligning up on our timeline.
And if you want to amuse yourself for an hour, look at the first few issues of their journal The Philosophical Transaction, filled with deadly serious experiments and a whole lot of various sort of flakey, gentlemanly figures who sent in all kinds of, well, just observations.
«The UH research going on up here is just super vital when it comes to picking crews, figuring out how people are going to actually work on different kinds of missions, and sort of the human factors element of space travel, colonization, whatever it is you are actually looking at,» Tristan Bassingthwaighte, a doctor of architecture candidate at the University of Hawaii who served as the crew's architect, said in a statement.
Unfortunately, this subject is just too painful for most people to talk about, so it can be difficult to find community or to figure out how to take care of yourself when faced with this kind of heartbreak.
And I just want to quickly say that we'll definitely at some point, I want to give people some very specific tests they can do and actionables they can go through for trying to figure out if they have an underlying gut issue and how to kind of resolve that.
I have to give up these foods that I absolutely love just so I can be healthy, and I was kind of in a state of die — denial and I went through this process of thinking to myself, uhm — «I'm gonna figure it out, and one day, I'm gonna be able to put these foods back into my diet and I'm gonna be fine.»
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