I can't speak from experience (luckily) but the first thing I'd do (after taking to a lawyer) is reach out to the subs and talk to them.
We have never had any tea cup Yorkies that look like that so we can't speak from experience.
I don't speak from experience, but once you start a family, you'll probably have higher medical insurance premiums, possibly a mortgage payment and the associated costs (maybe mortgage insurance, appliance repairs, etc.), savings for your childrens» education, and higher expenses in every other category (food, clothing, etc.) too.
As I said before I am not there yet, I don't consider myself an author, so I don't speak from experience.
The game runs much slower than it does on the New 3DS, and while I can't speak from experience, I can just imagine how frustrated owners of the original 3DS were when they finally loaded up the demo, only to realize it was much harder to play and much less appealing than what they'd been shown by Nintendo.
I can't speak from experience, only a bit of longing.
I can't speak from experience but the Yelp reviews claim the restaurant is very authentic.
Here you go: http://www.ocaseys.nl/pages/sports.php Can't speak from experience though, but what could possibly be wrong with an Irish pub that shows lots of footie?
so I can't speak from my experience but do they really keep you full to lunchtime or do you ever need a mid morning snack?
I've never tried it, so I can't speak from experience, but it * should * work.
Obviously I don't speak from experience, but I'm thinking granola should be ranked up there with crack as far as how addictive it is.
I've never been a woman, so I can't speak from experience, but when I was younger the women I knew seemed to fear aging, which they claimed was worse for them.
Not speaking from experience or anything.
We have an appt to see them on Tuesday, so can
not speak from experience.
(
Not speaking from experience or anything * ahem *)
(oh no, I'm definitely
not speaking from experience or anything) They make the ultimate on - the go meal.
Not speaking from experience LOL, but from a friend who did «higher end clients» for about 5 - 6 years in college and during graduate school.
Not exact matches
While the research has applications for marketers (highlight the ordinary to reach an older demographic and the extraordinary for younger people), it may also come as a comfort to bewildered folks in their mid-30s who are shocked by exactly how much they're enjoying routine
experiences that would have bored their younger selves to tears (
not to
speak too much
from personal
experience).
Cardew, of Pixc, echoed these sentiments,
speaking from the
experience of someone who didn't get on the «process» bandwagon quite as quickly.
I
speak from experience here as Australia faced this problem in the early 1970s and did
not handle it successfully.
Rosales has never filed a claim against a worker who violated a non-disparagement clause with an online post, and in his
experience, he said, those clauses don't prevent workers
from exercising their rights to
speak about workplace conditions.
MD I
speak from personal
experience that life does
not end after we die.
Can say that I believe in every thing that you disbelief of when it comes to the Creator and the Creation of universe, life and guidance, God has given me hearing, seeing, thinking and heart feelings to see and
experience signs and small miracles to have faith in him and continue with good deeds I was told of in his Holy Book although am
not perfect at that but nothing to lose but contrary to that there are more to gain in life and life after... For those disbelievers they lose their senses by being locked and blocked
from such
experiences... It is all about souls as verses
speak for them selves;
Gary, I was
not speaking of YOUR personal journey; but
from the perspective of my own transitional
experience and the
experiences of others who have informally shared the stories of their pilgrimages of faith with me — and they have been many.
I am looking for authenticity, relevancy, no ovewhelming bands that take away
from the
experience of worship, clergy who are willing to answer my hard questions, who understand doubt is a stepping stone to deepening my belief, who accept everyone as Jesus did (and we know Jesus was a rebel who accepted and led all sorts of people), who don't feel the need to try to be hip, who
speak about things without inserting politics, who are wiling to trash the temple to bring us back to the truth, who will step out of the box of comfort and be real.
So to have someone who can finally
speak from experience and explain to me that most of them don't understand their own doctrine, but it's still
not an excuse because it's a damaging and false doctrine that the Bible clearly contradicts — is incredibly helpful and healing to my soul.
Steve, as you didn't get this
from the bible, can I presume you are
speaking from personal
experience?
Jeffery's
not just musing over hypotheticals here — he's
speaking from personal
experience.
Speaking from experience, I completely agree that sex before marriage is
not a good idea —
not to mention unbiblical — but I think we're approaching it the wrong way.
Berger wishes to
speak of «a God who is
not made by man, who is outside and
not within ourselves,» but he limits his act of faith in such a God to projections outward
from common human
experience, i.e., to signals of transcendence70 The result is that Berger is left finally with his own
experience alone, a consequence that weakens his understanding
not only of Christian theology but ultimately of play as well.
It has said that the whole
experience of man in its every phase —
from the genius of the artist and scientist and poet and thinker, to the commonplace life of the family and the daily round of the office and shop and school,
not to
speak of nature and its beauty, its regularity, its predictability, its reliability — is all in its way and in its degree a means for the divine self - revelation.
Although he does
not speak specifically of prototaxic, parataxic, and syntaxic modes of
experience, the same sequential patterns are reflected in his description of the first cycle of intellectual progress, which runs «
from the achievement of perception to the acquirement of language, and
from the acquirement of language to classified thought and keener perception» (AE 31).
The stories of Abraham take their pattern
from the
experience of Israel, but they also
speak instructively back to that same
experience, illustrating
not only the way of faith — but the way also of unfaith.
Yes, some people pray incoherently out of habit or because they are
not being thoughtful, but sometimes the prayers you criticise result
from spiritual emotion and depth of
experience of God - especially (I think)
speaking in tongues.
i'm
not trying to say this IS THE WAY IT IS i am only
speaking from my understanding and since my wife and i discuss EVERYTHING down to the nitty gritty i can't imagine there is much
from the
experience i am lacking — but again, this was only one persons opinion of something that effects many.
It seems to my perceptions that you might be having a personal identity conundrum...
Speaking from experience; many folks seem unable to cope with individualized rationalizing complexities... Giving up attempting, toward understanding social austerities which encompass individualism, gives people their identification of oneness... Individualisms are set upon the relativities of quaint somberness issues in daily moderations... Religious identities are as emotionalized labels giving people an ability to pause and reflect upon judgmental reasoning... Whether or
not, religious agendas are servicing and served with ever those willing to serve...
Ontologically
speaking, the dominant occasion of
experience is
not different
from the other occasions of
experience with which it jointly constitutes the psychophysical animal organism.
(By the way, I'm an LDS bishop familiar with life in the Church in many parts of the country and the world, so I'm
not just
speaking from experience in my local neighborhood.)
Both men
spoke not as private persons but instead quoted
from our deepest public memories, which are eloquent in the face of death when we, as solitary individuals encased in our personal
experiences of loss, so often are wordless with grief.
I wasn't trying to write a manifesto or
speak for a generation or exhaustively examine the causes of declining church attendance among twenty - something; just
speak from experience with some surveys for support.
One
speaks not from faith but
from experience.
God didn't seem to need them to agree with me in order to
speak to them and tell them he loves them, in a way that they know, deep down, that it's true... Later when I met my father in law I became familiar with a saying of his in his book Authority to Heal and it rang true
from my
experience.
I learned, by hard - earned
experienced that I show people the respect they deserve by
speaking,
not down to them,
not up to them, but across to them and to expect the same
from them.
An Emergent definition of relevance, modulated by resistance, might run something like this; relevance means listening before
speaking; relevance means interpreting the culture to itself by noting the ways in which certain cultural productions gesture toward a transcendent grace and beauty; relevance means being ready to give an account for the hope that we have and being in places where someone might actually ask; relevance means believing that we might learn something
from those who are most unlike us; relevance means
not so much translating the churches language to the culture as translating the culture's language back to the church; relevance means making theological sense of the depth that people discover in the oddest places of ordinary living and then using that
experience to draw them to the source of that depth (Augustine seems to imply such a move in his reflections on beauty and transience in his Confessions).
I have had this
experience three times now, on three different occasions, in admittedly similar circumstances, but
not similar enough to explain the coincidence: I am
speaking from a podium to a fairly large audience on the topics of — to put it broadly — evil, suffering, and God; I have been talking for several minutes about Ivan Karamazov, and about things I have written on Dostoevsky, to what seems general approbation; then, for some reason or other, I happen to remark that, considered purely as an artist, Dostoevsky is immeasurably inferior to Tolstoy; at this, a single pained gasp of incredulity breaks out somewhat to the right of the podium, and I turn my head to see a woman with long brown hair, somewhere in her middle thirties, seated in the third or fourth row, shaking her head in wide - eyed astonishment at my loutish stupidity.
(I do
not speak here about Jews in the South, who lived perpetually between the hammer and the anvil and who must have been so constricted by the
experience that to this day
not a single serious Jewish novelist has risen
from that literature - soaked land to tell us about it.)
It is
not true that liturgical worship entirely fails to
speak to the strictly conscious levels of human
experience; it does indeed
speak to these, but it has richer connotations and implications; and it is these which do most of the «work» in liturgical as distinguished
from didactic or other types of Christian worship.
It resembles poetry — provided that we remember that genuine poetry is
not «a pretty lie» but is much truer than prose precisely because it
speaks from and
speaks to the deepest levels of our
experience and awareness.
I should clarify that what I say comes
from my own
experience, and I certainly can't
speak about others»
experiences - which could be very different.
Tacia you are a prayer warrior and prayer is central to our relationship to God as someone mentioned talking to God it should be natural as
speaking to someone you care about.It does
nt have to be fancy it is
from the heart and he understands.The holy spirit is there to comfort and the empower us when we feel weak or when we
experience a break through.He is always there to encourage us and to support us in what ever we are going through.brentnz