You can
keep your head buried in the sand, but humanity is moving on.
However, as much as I would like to
keep my head buried in the sand, I see too many running roughshod and doing their best to ruin this fledgling industry for as many as they can.
But go ahead and
keep your head buried in the sand and tote the party line without questioning it, I'm sure in the magical land you live in you will randomly receive a check for $ 1,000,000 for all your efforts.
While many kids forego toys entirely these days, opting instead to
keep their heads buried in their ubiquitous iPads & Read More
Not exact matches
Yes, lets
keep doing that P.C. liberal thing of
burying our
heads in the sand.
It's often through this extreme **
bury your
head in the sand, and stick your fingers in your ears ** approach, that
keeps believers from actually questioning things that just might be good to question and open up their minds.
It's not rocket science, you can't
keep burying your
head in the sand hoping we will just
keep our first XI fully fit all season.
Instead, I
buried my
head in my husband's shirt, bent forward, and gripped his biceps with my cold, fragile hands, desperately trying to stop my body's convulsions — convulsions from being famished, from running on 42 hours without sleep, from complete physical weakness — all while the anesthesiologist
kept repeating:
It didn't bring better tidings than its predecessor, which was all the more reason for me to
keep my
head down and
bury myself in work — not that I had much choice as regards the latter.
People in Boston are actually smiling from ear to ear instead of having their
heads buried into scarves to
keep warm while they hustle down the sidewalk.
Stewart has such an odd energy on the screen, withdrawn and deadpan, her face
buried in multiple cell phones as she juggles handling the particulars of Maria's ongoing divorce proceedings with her career and working to
keep her on a level
head as the play's premiere looms on the horizon.
Kevin Courtney, joint general secretary of the National Education Union, said: «The government can not
keep burying its
head in the sand about the issue of workload.
«The Government can not
keep burying its
head in the sand about the issue of workload.
This is not the first time Mr Gibb has said this so he will continue to deny there is a crisis.Even if he was correct the solution is not to train as many teachers as possible because they would still be inexperienced and a great number of these will leave in the first 5 years after they have qualified.Mr Gibb needs to do some serious talking to teachers which is something I suspect he is reluctant to do and so the government will
keep burying its
head in the sand and the problem just will not go away.I take my hat off to all the teachers who ply their craft under very trying circumstances.
Will we wake up in time to protect our world as we know it, or will we
bury our
heads under the covers and
keep sleeping?
I guess we'll just
keep our frightened
heads buried in the sand and let future generations fight it out, Mad Max style.
Don't
bury your
head in the sand and think «it'll happen at some point if I
keep going», because it may not.
Therein, the danger of
burying one's
head in the sand when it comes to
keeping abreast of technology and more importantly being effective in the actual use of the technology tools used in the practice of law truly lies!