Today's staggering economy affects everyone and extends its effect in everything associated to us: from work, at home, and even in our everyday
life decisions like which bus to take just to save money.
Making the decision to buy a first home is really exciting; often these decisions come connected to other major
life decisions like getting married or having children, but more and more, people are realizing that investing money into your own property, instead of spending it on rent just makes sense long term.
Student loans and credit card debt prompt many young adults to delay major purchases like buying a home, and major
life decisions like marriage.
The research showed that if we could push their perspective out by even a few weeks, they were significantly less likely to make potentially catastrophic
life decisions like quitting school, doing drugs or risking pregnancy with unsafe sex.
Likely because they're young, and when you're young it feels like you have a million things to take into account before you make a major
life decision like getting married.
Not exact matches
The
decision also weighs in the favor of entrepreneurs and investors who
live outside places
like Silicon Valley, where old - school networking and personal connections are how financing deals typically happen.
We mean that just
like a lot of people simply make
decisions and later
live with the
decision - making guilt, buying property could just be one of those things you could have just gotten yourself into.
If you avoid this action or
decision and others
like it, what might your
life look
like in six months, one year, three years?
«This includes how pay
decisions are arrived at, how they are rated on their performance, how the company treats things
like sick leave and other benefits, how the company views work -
life programs and how they will be treated in a dispute.»
Get a second opinion, just
like you would before making a
life - changing medical or legal
decision.
EI (also referred to as EQ, Emotional Intelligence Quotient) can help prevent emotions from getting in the way of rational thinking — especially helpful regarding a
decision like this, which will greatly affect the course of your
life.
You simply have to choose to let your intuition lead you, so that you will be able to make
decisions that will yield you freedom and love of
life like never before.
When Inc.com asked me how Gary's
decision would affect our
lives, it seemed
like a good opportunity to talk to him about a few issues I'd wanted some clarity on myself.
Like all major
life and financial
decisions, it's up to you and your own individual situation to see if refinancing your student loans is the most viable option.
thanks, and yes, a pittance of a pension and regular checkups keep us on budget and head off any problems — best
decision i ever made (financial or otherwise) was serving our country doing search - and - rescue, oil and chemical spill remediation, etc. (you can guess the branch of service)-- along the way, frugal
living, along with dollar - cost averaging, asset allocation, and diversification allowed us to retire early — Vanguard has been very good over the years, despite the Dot Bomb, 2002, and the recession (where we actually came out better with a modest but bargain retirement home purchase)... it's not easy building additional «legs» on a retirement platform, but now that we're here, cash, real estate, investments and insurance products, along with a small pension all help to avoid any real dependence on social security (we won't even need it at full retirement age)-- however,
like nearly everybody, we're headed for Medicare in several years, albeit with a nice supplemental and pharmacy benefits — but our main concern is staying fit, active, and healthy!
These judgments can ultimately influence meaningful
life decisions;
like who we choose to employ or engage with.
If you'd
like to purchase a permanent
life insurance plan, our advisors can help you make the right
decision for your family.
3) The discussion about scaling vs. keeping it small is a very interesting one: I
liked that the author presented real -
life cases for either scenarios for food for thought instead of advocating one or the other (e.g. presenting a single «formula» as the golden rule that all shall follow)-- I can see how this particular
decision can be case sensitive and there really is no «right» answer as long as it works for the entrepreneur!
The sort of thing I would have thought that no one would really want to argue against in this day and age, yet here you are, calling me a «fear - monger» and talking
like I was against anyone using their
life experiences to make
decisions.
You will never know what brings each woman to make the
decision to terminate a pregnancy, but the simple fact remains: They know the circu.mstances of their
lives better than any politician, priest or stranger
like you.
So far Romney seems
like he had a impeccable personal
life and background which will help influence his
decisions as president.
So, extricating oneself from another couple's failing marriage early on when they've asked us to help them doesn't seem
like the right
decision for someone who I know
lives a Kingdom
life.
Like the part about women - blaming and shaming combined with the pastor digging up offenses from the past, referencing an emotional distance he feels from us as we leave, citing his own pastoral involvement and authority in the
decisions of our
lives up to this point, threatening to talk to the pastor of the church we're visiting to share his «concerns,» and suggesting that I'm just a weak mess of emotions and that's why I can't handle the
life - sucking horror that has become sundays at this church.
No, TomTom wouldn't do that because, just
like we see with many in the African American community, they want to blame everyone else for their
life decisions.
The CNN debate opened with discussions on economic issues, but later veered toward faith - based matters
like the role of religion in candidates»
decision making, abortion, gay marriage — and how the United States ought to treat Muslims
living within its borders.
Religion isn't
like taste in food - once people's minds are set on believing or not believing, type of religion, and how they choose to reflect their spirituality in everyday
life, they are set on that
decision forever.
Given this reality, faith begins to look less
like a system or rational assent to a historical fact, a
decision or even adherence to an ethical standard, and more
like a recognition or awareness or belief or gratitude that our relationship with God is what gives us
life.
Instead of waiting around for another man to starting building into my
life,
like I had the previous years, I asked someone to mentor me — and it is one of the best
decisions I've ever made.
in opposition to me, put so much weight on ethics, sanctification, Christian
life, practical
decision, and the
like, now in part openly affirmed that heresy and in part took up a strangely neutral and tolerant attitude toward it.
He doesn't hate anyone, believes in American freedom, and believes that everyone has the right to make their own personal
decisions in
life whether the religious right
likes it or not.
Exodus is helping him cope with routine
life skills that seem overwhelming to him
like having the power to make daily
decisions over what to eat, when to talk, going outside.
Because we believe in divine presence, power, and authority, we know that we should plan our way, making wise, informed
decisions about every aspect of
life, including voting, but we must also conduct ourselves
like those who believe that their God is faithful and true to his promises for his people and his plans to renew the world.
When normal
life events
like teen - parent alienation, marital stress, mid-
life crises, and
decisions about elderly parents are hidden behind superficial relationships in a congregation, conversations that will encourage families to minister to one another are not likely to happen.
They will know that they are
like brothers and sisters to one another, because there will be few of them any more who have not by their own deliberate
decision staked their own heart and
life on Jesus the Christ, for there will be no earthly advantage in being a Christian.
I don't even care what people believe anymore, its their
life and in the end the
decision rests in their own hands just
like mine is with me.
Following His wisdom is easier and if you aren't up against enormous pressures in
life (fork in the road to make a
decision that only benefits you aka unrighteous versus righteous
decision that benefits all), you can make it through being a decent, Christ
like individual.
In its present manifestation, voluntary simplicity is a middle - class movement of well - educated people «who
like to think and read, who look thoughtfully at every aspect of their
lives and consider the consequences of their
decisions.»
But the
decisions of
life force us to take positions and to act and
live in terms of some faith, whether we
like it or not.
But whether this soul of the universe be a mere quality
like the eye's brilliancy or the skin's softness, or whether it be a self - conscious
life like the eye's seeing or the skin's feeling, is a
decision that never unmistakably appears in Emerson's pages.
I need to see morality
lived out in real people's
lives and the results of
decision as they are mirrored in the
lives of people
like me.
I prefer to
live in reality and make
decisions based on what has been proven, not what I'd
like to think.
Janet i think what you have said is quite insightful and you are right and there is another meaning to Go and sin no more and that speaks to me of repentence making a
decision to Follow Christ the one who saves.The words Go and sin no more is referring to a continual ongoinging process of
living for Christ rather than dying in our sins daily there is no comparison.I thought that was awesome pointing the law back to all of us for we all have sinned and the judgement is death but Jesus came that we might have
life in its fullness.Many people only see the adulterer when she portrays who we are as sinners that he came to save all of us sin is sin and the punishment is death so again you are quite right people use the scriptures to judge and that was never Jesus intention.I hope that helps when someone uses that scripture incorrectly and you can you use it
like Jesus did to point it back at those who judge i hope that helps.brentnz
With important
decisions in
life like what to study, who to marry, if and when to have children, when to look for a new job or how much to spend on a big purchase, it's vital to consider the cost.
Everyone at some time in their
life makes a bad
decision,
like sticking your tongue on a frozen metal object.
You just choose to be atheist when it comes to real
life decisions (
like the fact that you want to eat normal food), and you choose to be Jewish when it comes to community events.
Ours wasn't a monumental
decision, yet our
lives consist of small choices
like these, choices that add up over time.
Such an offended man
lives on
like a shadow; his
life is consumed because in his inmost soul he is constantly preoccupied with this
decision.
Together they signify the complexity of
life — the problems of stress,
decision making, communication, fear, pain, and the
like.
Like many people, I have had a few important
decisions to make in
life, one of which was choosing which school to attend for my undergraduate degree.
Or perhaps a story about the
decisions that
life makes for you while it dances around
like an obnoxious frat boy singing lalalala and holding its fingers in its ears, ignoring your instance that this was not - in - the - plan, even if there was no real plan to speak of.