Sentences with phrase «mean more rejections»

Not exact matches

So if you know, as a woman, that it's going to be a little tougher for you that means you'll have a thicker skin going in there and you have to be ready for a little bit more rejection than your male counterparts.
I mean, if we sort of psych ourselves (and perhaps our audience) up for the possibility of rejection, then we find more courage to speak.
I wonder if this twisted view of what it means to be proclaimers of Good News is more about our fear of rejection than anything else?
Montgomery brings us to Percy's eventual realization that ordinary experience can reveal profound truths» can actually be holy» no less than some more spectacular epiphany, despite modern man's rejection of all but scientific meaning in natural events.
[28] Celibacy is far from a rejection of the deep meaning of sexuality, but a living of human sexuality which is even fuller, more profound and complimentary to the extent that it explains the married vocation.
But the term «postmodernism» became current outside this general discourse, within artistic and literary criticism, and in this other more specialized discourse, the «modernism» to which «post -» was prefixed has meant the sensibility that emerged in the arts around the turn of the present century, in deliberate rejection of the world shaped by Enlightenment and Romanticism, i.e., of the world otherwise called «modern.»
I don't think I could write a more sweeping rejection of the beliefs of the world's principal theistic religions (by which I mean Christianity, Judaism, and Islam).
Unfortunately, the ups and downs of interracial dating can actually mean that online rejection hurts a little more because it tends to happen more often.
This brings us to a discussion about what this means for Marvel's future, a rejection of auteurs in favor of a more homogenized vision, studio influence, and more.
For more on The Rejection Table, what «Writing» and «Premise» really mean, and what you can do to move forward from rejection, take a look at The Science of Rejection Letters by Jeff Kleinman and RyaRejection Table, what «Writing» and «Premise» really mean, and what you can do to move forward from rejection, take a look at The Science of Rejection Letters by Jeff Kleinman and Ryarejection, take a look at The Science of Rejection Letters by Jeff Kleinman and RyaRejection Letters by Jeff Kleinman and Ryan Lejarde
For more on rejections, read Ruth Harris's great post on exactly what they mean: nothing
Leaving aside for the moment that a substantial number of bestsellers are not the work of first - time authors submitted over the transom, but are instead commissioned before they are even written — meaning that there wasn't ever any real opportunity for a «rejection» in the first place, or at least not a comparable one — one must recognize that there's more than one kind of «bestseller» out there.
«Non-Declarative Art» explores ambiguity and the rejection of overt meaning in... read more... «The Drawing Center's Fall Selections»
The LSUC's 2011 statistic of a 12 % non-placement rate for articling, which has been steadily increasing over the years, means that more and more of us will face this rejection.
A recent study8 examining peer status in clinically - diagnosed 7 — 9 year old children with ADHD from the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children With ADHD (MTA) 9,10 found that 52 % fell in the rejected category (when the classification system of Coie et al11 is used) and less than 1 % were of popular status.8 When children who did not fit into any category were excluded in calculating these percentages, the situation was even more bleak, with 80 % of children with ADHD falling in the rejected group.8 These figures are consistent with previous work indicating that 82 % of children with ADHD have peer rejection scores one standard deviation or more above the mean and 60 % are two standard deviations or more above the mean.12
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