Sentences with phrase «much emotion over»

Not exact matches

You don't have much control over the emotion you experience in a given moment.
The study shows that understanding the source and relevance of emotions influences how much sway they have over individuals» decision - making and can affect the willingness to take risks.
After 10 years of trying to catch the guy, I can see some emotion taking over after a team of skilled American assassins have just killed the world's most wanted man who caused so much turmoil to so many Americans.
I try to support the club and be positive as much as I can always, am depressed, sad and angry but one should have control over his emotions esepcially on issues you can't really influence.
The only problem I might have with tycoons like him or Usmanov, for that matter, is letting their emotions take over them (like many fans do) & putting too much pressure on management for instantaneous results.
Afterwards, the manager welcomed the sense of elation that has swept over everybody connected to the club in recent weeks but insisted that the players have to park any such emotions with so much still to play for.
My husband and I recently reached out to Carrie for advice on our 3 1/2 year - old and her frequent intense emotions over the last few months which have felt like too much for her age to my husband.
Disentangling emotions and expectations to a more platonic relationship can be tricky yet not having to fight over who keeps the house or how much time each parent gets with the kids, combined with keeping the household intact for something larger than yourself (your kids) can make the experience much more manageable than divorce.
In over a third of schools, there was again too much focus on the «mechanics» of sex and not enough on the emotions surrounding it.
Meditation allows you to understand, at the deepest of levels, how your thoughts, mind, and emotions intertwine, and just how much control we have over the thinking process.
But over the holiday season something has to be said for updating and improving old habits especially when is comes to how much emotion is tied up in keeping traditions alive.
In other words, when your meals are all over the place, itâ $ ™ s much easier to feel hungry all the time or confuse true hunger with boredom or other emotions.
However, you can probably think of a time when you let someone have too much control over your emotions.
Very few films have ever delivered as much emotion and heart as this sweet, simple tale of a young elephant triumphing over circumstance.
McAdams is incapable of being anything but adorable onscreen, Krasinski doesn't say much and does it well, and this might have been a cut - rate version of «The Descendants» (without the genuine emotion) if only Crowe hadn't slopped a belly flop of a subplot about national security and military privatization over the top.
Spec» ing a Porsche is very much an exercise in emotion triumphing over common sense.
Half the book takes place over a two day car ride that Ward manages to make riveting by giving so much life to the nuanced emotions between the characters.
Part One: Useless Emotion One: Mom Two: Divorce Three: Dad Four: Dad and Dede Five: Dede Six: Every Other Week Seven: Peace Eight: Dad's House Part Two: Useless Education Nine: St. Mark's Ten: Woodhall Eleven: Skateboarding Twelve: Sex Thirteen: Cascade Part Three: Repetition Fourteen: Destruction Fifteen: Corruption Sixteen: Redemption Part Four: Resolution Seventeen: Butter Eighteen: Scraped Over Too Much Bread
In this much - needed book, Judith and Bob Wright — two married counselors and coaches with over thirty years of experience helping couples learn how to fight well — present their tried - and - true methods for exploring the emotions that underlie many relationship fights.
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) affects around 0.7 — 1 % of the British population.1 Although there is much controversy over its definition and diagnosis, it is generally agreed to be characterised by difficulties in emotion regulation, and interpersonal relationships.
High expressed emotion (EE) refers to affective attitudes and behaviors toward patients characterized by critical comments, hostility, and emotional over involvement (EOI).3 The construct has traditionally been applied to the study of familial relationships, and it is well established that levels of familial EE are significant predictors of outcome across a range of psychiatric and physical health conditions.4 A substantial body of this research has been carried out with people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, and there is strong evidence that those living in high EE environments have a much higher risk of relapse than those living in low EE environments.5 The success of family intervention studies aiming to reduce high EE and relapses add to the support for a causal relationship.6, 7
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