Sentences with phrase «make emotional sense»

In both cases, it made practical sense but it didn't make emotional sense.
One used to hear that Vietnam was still awaiting its novelist: meaning that the tangled confused hypertext of millions of disparate defeats and small victories and lies and photo - ops and press conferences make no emotional sense until some Tolstoy can lead us through the emotional and factual jungle to a deeper truth.
Blanchett makes emotional sense of intense adversity in her decidedly unflashy performances; she's simultaneously sympathetic and searing, revealing in instants whole backstories full of pain and tenacity.
Blanchett makes emotional sense of intense adversity in decidedly unflashy performances; she's simultaneously sympathetic and searing, revealing in instants whole backstories full of pain and tenacity.
Lionel is also a species of actor, and even though the film rather too neatly points up the correspondence between these two men, it makes emotional sense.

Not exact matches

It takes a salesperson to sell features and benefits, build value, do a great product demonstration, get emotional and get the customer emotional so they can begin to make sense of the price.
«That justification is achieved by stimulating the senses in purely emotional ways... The location's atmosphere — the way it makes its visitors feel — must justify the higher price tag.»
While it doesn't always make strictly rational financial sense — if you have a 3.5 percent mortgage but can earn 7 or 8 percent from investing, putting extra money towards your mortgage does result in opportunity cost — the emotional impact could more than offset that «loss.»
Cutting off an entire part of life makes little sense and comes about due to DNA (spiritually challenged people actually can not sense anything outside of self) or choice which is often based on pride (even those who hate God because of some physical or emotional abuse overcompensate in a pridefull unforgiving resentment).
The bad part was the sense of shame some Christians made me feel about my emotional struggles, but as I discovered how God views healing, I realized it wasn't my faith that was flawed; it was their views toward mental health and faith.
when i see posts like these — i automatically skip past them — like — if i read them i will somehow be absorbed into the negativity of some evil travesty of comaparison between a vast illusion of delusionary emotional strife over something that makes no sense unless you put yourself into this weird evil feeling trance of blind confusion and negative understand — i don't know — it's a weird a feeling though — tried to read it — just to see if that feeling had changed any on this post — and it hadn't — just thought i'd share that...
At least, our experience of the animals with whom we live is that they exhibit behaviors similar to many of our own; that those behaviors clearly seem to be signs of emotional and mental qualities familiar to us from our own knowledge of ourselves; that animals possess distinctive individual traits, characteristics that are irreducibly personal (even if we feel obliged to recoil from that word on metaphysical principle), their own peculiar affections and aversions, expectations and fears; that many beasts command certain rational skills; and that all of this makes some kind of natural appeal to our moral sense.
As more victims came to their shelters, and as the nuns struggled to make sense of what they were facing, these communities began working through religious, political and commercial channels to stem the flow of slave trafficking and meet the women's physical, emotional and spiritual needs.
This read on defending emotional eating makes a lot of sense to me.
«I wanted my players to be both emotional and smart, if that makes any sense, and they were.»
dude, if you had any claims to knowing a thing about football or any credibility when it comes to talking the game you lose it every time you play article on here... mind you it's not because you are completely clueless, matter of fact I reckon if you actually care t analyse things without been emotional you can make a lot of sense.....
Setting goals and then reaching or failing them affects emotional development and this impacts into making a baby's sense of autonomy and confidence.
The underlying aim of all presentations and courses is to help adults make sense of kids, especially when dealing with emotional, behavioural and / or learning issues.
But it also gave them, sort of, an emotional sense that they matter, that they actually could be good parents, that they could make a real difference in the life of their child.
This time can be frustrating, but also quite exciting as your child starts to develop the emotional, social and thinking skills they need to make sense of the world.
Parenting is demanding and emotional so it makes sense that we need to re-charge our batteries regularly to be the best parents we can.
The emotional affair makes him feel sexy by flirting, alluding to his sexuality combined with engaging his senses, for example by touching his arm as she tells him his wife is lucky to have him.
It can be hard to make the shift in your brain, but breastfeeding can affect your sex life in more than just an emotional or psychological sense; there are also some actual physical changes.
Since the 18 - month mark ushers in some big milestones for baby's physical development and emotional development, The Baby Sleep Site notes, it makes sense that there would be a shift in a baby's sleep as a result of all that change.
If play is the primary means by which children view and make sense of their world, then it follows that play should be beneficial in understanding and processing emotional pain and hindrances (Sweeney, 1997).
Making it through, and, importantly, coming away with a feeling of closure, a sense of fulfillment, and some enthusiasm for the next challenge means dealing with lots of annoying distractions and carefully traversing some uneven emotional ground.
To Hariri, it makes sense that it is easier to connect our genes with brain activity than with emotional experiences.
Through a series of experiments, Keysar and his colleagues explore whether the decision people make in the train dilemma is due to a reduction in the emotional aversion to breaking an ingrained taboo, an increase in deliberation thought to be associated with a utilitarian sense of maximizing the greater good or some combination of the two.
Since music is an emotional medium, it makes sense that our educational memory could be enhanced by it.
«It is likely that some people use their ideas about science to make sense of the world and for emotional compensation in difficult situations in the same way that religious people use their supernatural beliefs,» Farias says.
When you're caught in the ongoing cycle of emotional eating, binge eating, dieting, self - sabotage, negative self - talk, body hate, self - hate, shame, yo - yo dieting, and on top of this when food is your crutch, meaning that food is the unhealthy coping mechanism you use to attempt to deal with your life, then does it make sense that the inability to «stick with it» each Monday and the inability to stop overeating only serves to keep lowering your self - worth?
They make both financial and emotional sense.
GUYS are 60 % emotional and 40 % logical; messages need to feel good and make sense for him!
So it makes sense that without a relationship, many men are missing out on a key emotional experience.»
Here's what you'll need: Microphone (s): Any microphone will work You have to make your argument, it has to make sense and it has to make an emotional connection.
«Django Unchained» is «Blazing Saddles» with a body count, a positively incendiary entertainment about America's greatest shame, the personal and social toll of slavery, and like Tarantino's last film, «Inglourious Basterds,» this is a case of history being remixed in a way that makes more emotional sense to Tarantino as a storyteller.
I can see where you (newbs and paul) are coming from, and it makes sense intellectually, but I felt something missing on an emotional level — it's hard to explain.
It's the stuff that routinely calcifies one's cynicism toward pop filmmaking, but Johnson sets these facets into motion with such a deft and intricate sense of storytelling, such a bold, robust emotional palette, that one is rather reminded of what made these tiresome tropes so successful in the first place.
The resulting temporal choppiness from not being clear from the start not only continuously takes us out of the story to try to catch up with it when we're finally given enough information for it to make sense, but it also reveals just how manipulative the device is in order to try to load up all of the emotional beats for whatever version of a climax the story can muster up.
Tatiana Maslany plays Hurley; she's unerrring, and makes complete emotional sense in every beat.
Perhaps it's too intimate a reading, but I can't help but feel that the director is trying to make sense of her mother's death through her own life's accumulation of experiences from the documentary footage, healing by witnessing the emotional reactions of her subjects and their own struggles in life.
The Program (2015): A by - the - book story about Lance Armstrong's doping scandal that suffers from the problem that plagues many biopics: namely, it operates with the understanding that we already know the real story (or most of it), so it doesn't work that hard to make the characters seem real or to make the emotional beats land with any sense.
The twists that Unknown throws up are mostly surprising in terms how little they make sense, even with Diane Kruger's taxi driver on hand for emotional and intellectual support.
Moretz ends up going on a rampage for the climax like the Dark Phoenix from X-Men: The Last Stand with arms held out and eyes in «looks could kill» mode, but lacks the emotional resonance of Spacek's trance - like turn, in which her powers unleashed came as a shock, but with an overriding sense of tragedy; Moretz is shown practicing her skills extensively during several scenes, which makes her revenge seem much more calculated and evil.
Directed by David Frankel (The Devil Wears Prada, 2006; Marley & Me, 2008; Hope Springs, 2012), and written by the eclectically random Allan Loeb, with a heavy, heavy hand you can see what the filmmakers are trying to do here — make sense of grief by using proxies (in this case Love, Time and Death) to draw out emotional responses.
Furthermore, many of the side missions flesh out the supporting cast in ways that'll make later story developments have more emotional impact — or just make sense in the first place.
The low energy delivery from Farrell makes any moments of emotional outburst all the more explosive and adds to the overall sense of dread that permeates the film.
The subtle and constrained performances of Hemsworth and Wei further the sense of dehumanization, making their relationship all the more compelling as they declare their physical and emotional connection despite the intellectual objections.
That said, not everyone will remain dead, but factoring how high - stakes Infinity War was and the emotional impact of all these deaths, it makes sense that not everyone will get to come back.
Every twist and turn is clear and exciting and always makes logical and emotional sense.
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