Sentences with phrase «lose a son seems»

So when viewed from this perspective, the claim that God knows what it is like to lose a son seems rather hollow, does it not?

Not exact matches

While nobody wants to lose a son or daughter (or any family member for that matter), the pain of it would be significantly lessened, it seems, if we knew that we would receive our lost loved ones back within three days, and they would be fully healthy and whole and would never suffer or die again.
real talk, i think this is a great article, in my hometown there is a club which is in the second division of my country and some years ago there was a real possibility that we could promote to the first division but we did nt manage to and now its a bit more difficult but even then the fans who come, come for their entertainment and to be happy with their close friends drinking beers or a dad with his son etc. and we shout if we are winning and discuss every decision (mostly its right one but football fans do nt seem to agree with right decisions against their club) and we shout if we are losing too, because i do nt support a team to be sad..
My son screamed nonstop for the first 8 weeks of his life, beating his stomach, covered in rashes, losing weight, and seemed like he was hurting whenever he ate.
After my son was born, everything seemed to be okay, but as the days went by, he progressively got more and more agitated (Hardly slept, all he would do was scream or nurse), and was rapidly losing weight.
Then came the arrests of Mangano and Venditto, which seemed to have acted as a drag on the campaign of the latter's state senator son, who lost his re-election to Democrat John Brooks by a few dozen votes.
Woods seems to have literally lost the plot because no plot exists bar John McClane travels to Moscow to visit his incarcerated son Jack.
First seen trudging alone along a busy stretch of Montana highway, Dern's Woody Grant is a man who, like his surroundings, seems to have outlived his usefulness, an ornery alcoholic whose bouts of confusion have put a strain on his marriage to Kate («About Schmidt's» June Squibb) and caused sons David (Forte) and Ross (Bob Odenkirk) to worry that he might be losing his mind.
Her son, Conor (a wonderful Lewis MacDougall), can't seem to cope with the idea of losing his mother, so it's up to a giant tree (voiced with ferocity and feeling by Liam Neeson) to help him.
After the setup, in which the Robinson family — father John (William Hurt, looking and sounding as spaced out as he does in interviews), mother Maureen (Rogers, wasted), daughters Judy (Heather Graham, ditto) and Penny (a heavily made - up Chabert, looking like a junior version of Neve Campbell in Wild Things), and son Will (young newcomer Johnson, making the best of it)-- and pilot Don West (LeBlanc, doing a bad Han Solo impression) find themselves lost in space after their ship is sabotaged by evil stowaway Dr. Smith (a watered - down but still - lively Oldman, cashing a paycheck and loving every minute), the script's «stream» of events becomes so fragmented and random that it seems to be made up as it goes along — and Hopkins does little to make what does go on the slightest bit interesting.
He has a son at home who's about to head to college and back in the 2007 - 2008 financial crisis, he and his wife nearly lost all their assets; so $ 100,000 dollars seems very tempting.
What seemed like a litany of tragic events began to take on a narrative arc, as we watched Hecuba lose pieces of her world in ascending levels of horror — first, the loss of a family member, then the loss of the gods, the loss of the hope for justice, and finally, with the murder of Hector's son, the loss of the future.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z