Not exact matches
-- > The value of investing in
relationships for the long - haul — > Investing in your health
and longevity as a way to increase your lifetime earnings — > Why longer
life expectancies should change the way you think about investing — > The shockingly low rate of personal savings
and investment in the US — > My favorite part of the interview: whether we can reasonably expect the US markets to keep going up at their long - term average 7 % per year after inflation, or whether that was a unique period of US expansion which won't be repeated
again.
And I nod and feel it again and relationship with Him is always the answer and then how we live that out in relationship and this is what I know: Relationship is reali
And I nod
and feel it again and relationship with Him is always the answer and then how we live that out in relationship and this is what I know: Relationship is reali
and feel it
again and relationship with Him is always the answer and then how we live that out in relationship and this is what I know: Relationship is reali
and relationship with Him is always the answer and then how we live that out in relationship and this is what I know: Relationship
relationship with Him is always the answer
and then how we live that out in relationship and this is what I know: Relationship is reali
and then how we
live that out in
relationship and this is what I know: Relationship
relationship and this is what I know: Relationship is reali
and this is what I know:
RelationshipRelationship is reality.
While resolutions fail time
and time
again, start the year in pursuit of a
relationship that can bring wisdom into your
life.
Again as I have stated, it's in my personal
life and walk with Christ,
and I'm solely responsible for my soul
and my
relationship with Him.
The directness of the
relationship is established not only through the mediation of the senses, e.g. the concrete meeting of real
living persons, but also through the mediation of the «word,» i.e. the mediation of those technical means
and those fields of symbolic communication, such as language, music, art,
and ritual, which enable men ever
again to enter into relation with that which is over against them.
Even the images of fantasy, dreams, delirium, draw their material from this foundation; our speech
and our thinking are rooted in it
and can not withdraw from it without losing their tie with
life; even mathematics must concretize itself ever
again in the
relationship with it.
i can feel love for him throughout my heart
and soul... i want to grow old with this man... i am 47
and he is 45... he has never been married... he said there is not a chance of getting back together
again regardless of how we feel towards each other because we committed adultery
and God will never forgive us
and it will be wrong to do so... so am i supposed to go on
living my
life being so deeply in love with this man i can never have... why would God put him in my
life to make me feel so spiritually happy, so wonderful, so at peace with myself
and someone I can finally worship Him with just to take him away from me... I've never been with someone who was so religious
and i thought this was it... i finally have someone to read the bible with
and go to church with
and put God first
and share things with my self
and my daughter as a loving
relationship would be....
Again, arguments from order
and design in nature may be an inadequate basis for a
living relationship to God, but they still have a significant role.
It is noteworthy that
again and again in AA, as an alcoholic reconstructs his
relationships, his spiritual
life gradually becomes more meaningful to him.
In describing
and accounting for the
lives of the Religious Right, which we define simply as religious conservatives with a considerable involvement in political activity, the book
and the series tell the story primarily by focusing on leading episodes in the movement's history, including, but not limited to, the groundwork laid by Billy Graham in his
relationships with presidents
and other prominent political leaders; the resistance of evangelical
and other Protestants to the candidacy of the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy; the rise of what has been called the New Right out of the ashes of Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964; a battle over sex education in Anaheim, California, in the mid-1960's; a prolonged cultural war over textbooks in West Virginia in the early 1970's —
and that is a battle that has been fought less violently in community after community all over the country; the thrill conservative Christians felt over the election of a «born -
again» Christian to the Presidency in 1976
and the subsequent disappointment they experienced when they found out that Jimmy Carter was, of all things, a Democrat; the rise of the Moral Majority
and its infatuation with Ronald Reagan; the difficulty the Religious Right has had in dealing with abortion, homosexuality
and AIDS; Pat Robertson's bid for the presidency
and his subsequent launching of the Christian Coalition; efforts by Dr. James Dobson
and Gary Bauer to win a «civil war of values» by changing the culture at a deeper level than is represented by winning elections;
and, finally, by addressing crucial questions about the appropriate
relationship between religion
and politics or, as we usually put it, between church
and state.
Again, as in the case of
life, person,
and property, reputation may not be falsely violated without also violating God
and the aggressor's own
relationship with God.
Again and again, among the families I treat as a psychologist, I see a disconnect between the skill set that parents are pushing (compete like crazy, get good grades, over-prep for tests, go to a prestigious college, make lots of money) and the assets and attitudes that actually bring young people success in college, at work, in relationships, and in
Again and again, among the families I treat as a psychologist, I see a disconnect between the skill set that parents are pushing (compete like crazy, get good grades, over-prep for tests, go to a prestigious college, make lots of money) and the assets and attitudes that actually bring young people success in college, at work, in relationships, and in
again, among the families I treat as a psychologist, I see a disconnect between the skill set that parents are pushing (compete like crazy, get good grades, over-prep for tests, go to a prestigious college, make lots of money)
and the assets
and attitudes that actually bring young people success in college, at work, in
relationships,
and in
life.
It has taken me many months
and another pregnancy that resulted in the birth of a
living baby for me to come to find a loving
relationship with my body
again.
Many adopted children have honed survival skills to deal with a dangerous childhood
and developed a confused view of family
life and relationships — so you can help them start
again.
If real
life was a romantic comedy, starting a new
relationship would go something like this: You'd lock eyes, knowing in some deep
and spiritual way that you'd found The One,
and from that moment forward tumble head - over-heels into love, never to be separated
again.
I'm trying everything I can to get balanced
again because it's truly been horrible
and affecting not only my quality of
life, but my
relationship,
and my work ethic.
I would like to point out a couple of targets I reached since starting Vivica's program...
and of course thank her for her dedication to help us
and the passion she puts in her job My blood pressure is getting back to normal
and now my sleep is good
again (I began not to sleep well because of high blood pressure... I think)-- I had some pain in my knees
and hips (nothing serious, but it bugged me from time to time)
and I realized today that they do not hurt anymore — I also find that I'm less «bloated» (or, at least, I find that some garments are less tight, although I don't know if I lost weight or not... I had such a bad
relationship with the scale throughout my
life that now I tend to stay away from it So Vivica, thanks so much for what you did up to now...
and for all you will do in the next weeks.
2013 was very though year for me, I got sick, my mom got sick, so many things
and relationships were / have fallen apart that at some point last year I have wondered what's the point of waking up day after day just to see my
life fall apart piece by piece... Then
again, when I look back, I've had one of the most significant
and path turning years.
I just started dating
again and she helped me understand the kind of
life partner I was REALLY looking for (
and how to start the
relationship off right!).
I've been «healing» for nearly 16 months
and I'm ready to meet someone special, to slowly build a
relationship, to share
life experiences
and to be happy
again.
He embraced his new single
life and began to learn everything he could about dating,
relationships and finding love
again.
Because this website is not only for those who are looking for love for the first time, but also for those who went through difficult
relationships in the past or lost their loving partners
and would like to find love
again, In-Love-
Again.com knows that it is very important to meet reliable
and trustworthy
life partners who can start a beautiful family with kids.
i'm a bisexual woman - in a
relationship with a man but would like a friendship or more with a cool attractive woman [totally separate from my
relationship with him,
and he knows i would like a woman in my
life again, friendship or more]- i work in education at a college - i love ceramics,...
Bounce back from such
relationships have failed
and dating
again, now that you're at a point later in your
life can be a difficult process, but it is not necessary.
I just got out of a
relationship of 5 years, we grow apart
and we wanted different things out of
life so now i'm back
again to see if i can finally find the right one.
If I try online dating
again I'll probably go with match.com once more instead as there isn't much value to the Christian part of CM anyway from what I've experienced on the site as most of the women were likely not Christian for most of their
lives and had the corresponding baggage like exes
and multiple kids - not exactly conducive to a healthy
relationship for a single male who hasn't
lived so irresponsibly.
Some people might think that now that they are 5 years old
and they are still single or are single
again, there is no chance of making a new
relationship in the rest of their
life.
After suffering the pain of a
relationship ending due to a divorce or any other reason, it can be hard to get back out there
and try to move on with their
lives, let alone try to date
again.
After spending years
and years
living with one person, you may not be able to imagine yourself loving anyone else
again and it's difficult to look to the future in terms of
relationships.
You've got your whole
life ahead of you to be happy in a
relationship again and this feeling that holds you back from trusting a partner for fear of, yet
again, another romantic disappointment, won't be an issue anymore once you'll understand these 3 simple principles.
Hey there i am mary by name single never married
and no kids
and i am here looking for a serious
relationship and someone i can love
and spend the rest of my
life with who will not cheat on me cuz i have been cheated on before
and do nt want that to happen to me
again so just want to give a try maybe this can workout for me
and find my Mr right
We all know that
relationships are very unique
and that a lot of people are finding love
again later in
life, that's why it is important to be able to educate people on what to expect when dating someone who has children.
Kasdan likes to go for a certain type of realism in his films, it's not always the pretty side of
life and relationships and he did that
again here.
Phoenix plays a philosophy professor troubled by existential crisis until he strikes up a
relationship with one of his students (Stone)
and, as he says in the trailer, «the dark clouds part»
and he begins enjoying
life again.
Films that might have fit this putative strand included the charming but overlong Timeless Stories, co-written
and directed by Vasilis Raisis (
and winner of the Michael Cacoyannis Award for Best Greek Film), a story that follows a couple (played by different actors at different stages of the characters»
lives) across the temporal loop of their will - they, won't - they
relationship from childhood to middle age
and back
again — essentially Julio Medem - lite, or Looper rewritten by Richard Curtis; Michalis Giagkounidis's 4 Days, where the young antiheroine watches reruns of Friends, works in an underpatronized café, freaks out her hairy stalker by coming on to him, takes photographs
and molests invalids as a means of staving off millennial ennui,
and causes ripples in the temporal fold, but the film is as dead as she is, so you hardly notice; Bob Byington's Infinity Baby, which may be a «science - fiction comedy» about a company providing foster parents with infants who never grow up, but is essentially the same kind of lame, unambitious, conformist indie comedy that has characterized U.S. independent cinema for way too long — static, meticulously framed shots in pretentious black
and white, amoral yet supposedly lovable characters played deadpan by the usual suspects (Kieran Culkin, Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally, Kevin Corrigan), reciting apparently nihilistic but essentially soft - center dialogue, jangly indie music at the end,
and a pretty good, if belated, Dick Cheney joke;
and Petter Lennstrand's loveably lo - fi Up in the Sky, shown in the Youth Screen section, about a young girl abandoned by overworked parents at a sinister recycling plant, who is reluctantly adopted by a reconstituted family of misfits
and marginalized (mostly puppets) who are secretly building a rocket — it's for anyone who has ever loved the Tintin moon adventures, books with resourceful heroines, narratives with oddball gangs,
and the legendary episode of Angel where David Boreanaz turned into a Muppet.
He is looking forward to getting his
life back together
again and hopes to have a
relationship with his daughter who is
living with his ex-wife (Greer)
and her fiancé (Cannavale).
The new film shares some thematic concerns with Forty Shades of Blue,
again focusing on a foreign - born character
living in the U.S.
and undergoing a severely confusing
relationship, in which strong sexual connection goes hand in hand with self - destruction.
The central
relationship is between the fortysomething title character, Nira (Sarit Larry), a married mother of two,
and Yoav, a 5 - year - old charge of hers with a curious gift: every now
and again, without warning, he paces back
and forth
and begins declaiming perfectly formed verses on love
and loss that would seem far beyond the scope of his emotional
life.
He chats with them about
life, girls, heartache
and relationships, gives then some kind of toxic moonshine libation
and like a crazy old banshee he's off
again, appearing out of nowhere here
and there throughout the film.
More New Releases: «In the Fade,» starring Diane Kruger as a woman seeking vengeance for the death of her husband
and son after a bomb attack; «Nostalgia,» a mosaic of stories about love
and loss, exploring our
relationship to the objects, artifacts,
and memories that shape our
lives, starring Jon Hamm, Catherine Keener, John Ortiz, Nick Offerman, James Le Gros,
and Bruce Dern;
and «Tremors: A Cold Day in Hell,» with Michael Gross once
again returning as Burt Gummer
and combating Graboids
and Ass - Blasters.
However,
again, just like
life, Sutter
and Aimee's
relationship isn't as simple as that.
She's packed
and unpacked many times in her scant seventeen years of
life...
and she's about to do it
again when her single mom's
relationship with an imperfect man falls apart.
Ocean's Twelve instead concentrates on the love
life of the other hunky team member, Rusty,
and his on
again, off
again relationship with Isabel.
With his latest film, The Salesman, Asghar Farhadi once
again, proves his mastery in presenting complexities of human
relationships within the confounds of his native country Iran, but also demonstrating that even there are political
and cultural differences among us, deep down, certain things in
life are constant
and universal.
John Warburton explains his fruitful pre-WW1
relationship with the Luton factory
and the car's début at Waddington Fell / Auto - biography: Ronald «Steady» Barker — Matthew Bell travels to Wiltshire to meet the incorrigible 93 - year - old motoring journalist
and learn about his
life and career / 10EX: the full - bore Phantom — An experimental car that was the first post-WW1 Rolls - Royce built purely for speed, David Burgess-Wise drives this fascinating machine / Vintage Revival Montlhéry — In a two - part article, Robin Batchelor describes The Automobile's journey to Montlhéry while David Burgess-Wise reports on the action as the banked circuit reverberated
again to the sound of prewar cars
and motorcycles / Back on the Road — Michael Ware reports on the restoration of a 1947 Dellow, one of only two survivors of the four original prototypes for this highly effective trials car
An intelligent, deeply moving,
and remarkably written portrait of a
relationship that reads as a cross between a romance novel
and a literary page turner, A Small Hotel is a masterful story that will remind readers once
again why Robert Olen Butler has been called the «best
living American writer» (Jeff Guinn, Fort Worth Star - Telegram).
Not sure what your blog is about but I find that having experts guest (here on practical advice,
and on my personal author blog RachelintheOC.com sharing real -
life stories which is my branding there), gives me a chance to share my platform with others (
again, building
relationships),
and brings their followings to my blog
and vice versa.
As two of the most prominent characters in the FINAL FANTASY franchises, Tidus
and Yuna come to
life once
again to
live out their dynamic
and romantic
relationship.
The definition of «partner»
again mirrors that for ordinary paternity leave arrangements
and extends to partners
and civil partner of M: a person who
lives with M
and C in an «enduring family
relationship» but is not a relative of M.
Ladies, let me tell you that one of the moment painful moments I have, as a sex
and relationship therapist, is when I hear a woman say, «I'd be ok, if I NEVER had sex
again the rest of my
life!»