Sentences with phrase «not very life»

We know that man produces CO2 in providing for your livelihood, if not your very life.
As my yoga mentor once said about a difficult day that she was having, «The situation was not very life affirming».

Not exact matches

As Peter puts it, «I don't know a farmer who wouldn't be happier growing a very good crop, getting a decent price for it, and making his living that way.»
«We remain very confident, not only in the value of our business, but also in the value Yahoo products bring to our users» lives.
It's not impossible to do so, but, according to Expatica, permission to have a wedding in France without being a citizen or having a parent live there is very rarely granted.
So you learn very quickly that there is no such thing as a person you can't live without.
They should remain something that complements your existing strategy or indeed allows growth, but you should not be reliant upon them as they have the power to change the very rules you live by... They could increase commission or block sellers in your category and even undercut you on your best - selling product.
«There's so much wisdom in very dynamic active people who are absolutely not ready to kick back and relax and play in life,» Leary - Joyce said.
An alternative approach would be to ensure better living standards and more affordability for renters, but there aren't very many people talking about that, except for a few lone bloggers like Slate «s Matthew Yglesias.
While I didn't know Joan Rivers personally, she was a very big part of my life.
Like it or not, the state of your business books may very well determine whether your business lives or dies.
I don't have any hard data to back this up, but I'm increasingly getting the feeling that if you were to inform yourself of what's going on in the world solely by using Twitter, you'd probably go through life as a very angry individual.
Under those laws, «stepchildren, even if you've been living with them for a very long time, do not get anything,» he said.
«There's something very uncomfortable about distorting the decision to tax the house you live in versus the one you don't,» Todd Sinai, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business's real - estate department, told Business Insider.
So again, the book struck me as being fairly vague about the very concept of «inequality» because it does not provide a very insightful perspective into the meaning of «wealth» and how it really relates to our living standards.
Here are 13 microbes that are very likely living on or inside of you at this very moment, and whether or not each can cause illness.
Students might not be swimming in cash or connections, but the very fact that they aren't established yet in full lives with mortgages, kids and car payments is actually a huge advantage, according to Feld, who reflected on the sandbox analogy in his post:
Some pulp mills are switching to grades of paper that still show some life, but doing that is very expensive, and «because almost everything is declining, you can't have a great deal of success,» says Sutton.
As the editor of Cracked put it in a very perceptive essay: «If you don't live in one of these small towns, you can't understand the hopelessness.
«City officials may not understand that they will get access to very little of what Google learns from their citizens... Meanwhile, Google will be gaining insights about urban life — including energy use, transit effectiveness, climate mitigation strategies, and social service delivery patterns — that it will then be able to resell to cities around the world.
Not everything is critical at this very moment; not all things are urgent or important in the scheme of our lives; and in a lot of cases if we're offered a reasonable choice and some (financial) incentives, we're perfectly willing to wait for stuff as long as (a) the choice is ours and (b) the choice isn't irrevocabNot everything is critical at this very moment; not all things are urgent or important in the scheme of our lives; and in a lot of cases if we're offered a reasonable choice and some (financial) incentives, we're perfectly willing to wait for stuff as long as (a) the choice is ours and (b) the choice isn't irrevocabnot all things are urgent or important in the scheme of our lives; and in a lot of cases if we're offered a reasonable choice and some (financial) incentives, we're perfectly willing to wait for stuff as long as (a) the choice is ours and (b) the choice isn't irrevocable.
This mountainous region of Indonesia wouldn't seem like a very hospitable place to live.
«Suddenly they get caught living on very expensive property and can't pay the taxes,» says Cross.
«A client in her early 60s may have not yet begun to receive Social Security and is living off a portfolio which is providing her income which generates very little in taxes,» said certified financial planner Chad Hamilton with Mariner Wealth Advisors in Denver.
While my marriage didn't last, Carolyne and I are very close friends to this day and talk often about this defusing process and the way it continues to make our lives and our relationships better.
For those of us building and managing a community we need to stay very tightly connected with people (yes real live people) so that they don't outgrow us.
Lyne: A suburban life was very comfortable, lots of great clubs around, lots of good schools for kids, but for somebody who grew up thinking, «I want to do something, I want to have an impact on the world,» it was not necessarily the place you could do that.
If you are not changing or adding extreme value to your customers» lives, your business will hit «stall mode» very quickly.
Whereas the very name Singapore once conveyed the promise of exotic pleasures, the present reality is so antiseptic that one current novel about the city, Paul Theroux's Saint Jack, recounts the misfortunes of a pimp who can't make a living there.
I think it's really cool to be able to include my audience, especially for this trip because it's not just this constant stream of my entire life — there is [a] very clear start when we took off and a very clear end where we land back in the same location in California.
«Millennials have a reputation — obviously not earned, or deserved — that they «live in the now,» and that they're very focused on having a good time,» says Williams, «and I think these results prove that they are just as worried about their retirement as every other demographic.»
It's not glamourous, rewarding or even very interesting, but that's a lot of what living abroad is — looking stupid, trying to look less stupid, terrible loneliness, fleeting successes, and insights that seemed difficult to wrest.
If you only have one product or service, your business is almost certainly not a viable business, but more like a hobby or avocation: You may make sales and get paid, but you will never grow very large or become very profitable, much less make a living off selling that one product or service.
Ferriss told us that he used to read passages about compassion by Buddhist writers and think, «OK, if you're sitting in a monastery, where your schedule is set and you have very few uncontrolled variables, that's fantastic that you can do loving / kindness meditation, but that's not the world I live in.»
One thing that people don't understand is that they have no common sense and very little context about the world that we live in,» Gil said.
As long as worry isn't crippling your life or driving you to despair, your capacity to imagine the worst is probably providing you with very real benefits.
Indeed, the CNBC Millionaire Survey, which was conducted by market research firm Spectrem Group, found 19 percent of high - net - worth respondents wish to leave enough for their kids to be comfortable and maintain their standard of living, but not all they have, while 17 percent indicated they will be «very cautious» in how much they leave, because they want their children to learn self - reliance.
Don't live stream on a very trivial subject.
2) the stair counter doesn't work well — gets very confused when I get on an elevator (I live on the 30th floor of my building and sometimes just taking the elevator up in the morning after a run gives me my full 10 story step goal) 3) the heart rate monitor doesn't seem particularly accurate 4) the sleep tracker doesn't do a good job of figuring out when I go to sleep and when I wake up.
«I think the self - driving car has the opportunity to not only improve productivity for the people in the car, which will be a huge economic boost for those people; Not only has the opportunity to save lives — over a million people die worldwide in road deaths today caused by human drivers, and I think we can take that very close to zero, which is very good for both human welfare and for economic productivity — it's a very serious dent in productivity when people get killed; And then all the ancillary industries that end up getting built out.&raqnot only improve productivity for the people in the car, which will be a huge economic boost for those people; Not only has the opportunity to save lives — over a million people die worldwide in road deaths today caused by human drivers, and I think we can take that very close to zero, which is very good for both human welfare and for economic productivity — it's a very serious dent in productivity when people get killed; And then all the ancillary industries that end up getting built out.&raqNot only has the opportunity to save lives — over a million people die worldwide in road deaths today caused by human drivers, and I think we can take that very close to zero, which is very good for both human welfare and for economic productivity — it's a very serious dent in productivity when people get killed; And then all the ancillary industries that end up getting built out.»
Elon explained that «It will still be very cheap, and far cheaper than gasoline, to drive long - distance with the Model 3, but it will not be free long distance for life unless you purchase that package.
That doesn't include rent, but even if it did, you can see that in Panama, you can live very comfortably.
I like your examples Sam, but why not just live very low key?
thanks, and yes, a pittance of a pension and regular checkups keep us on budget and head off any problems — best decision i ever made (financial or otherwise) was serving our country doing search - and - rescue, oil and chemical spill remediation, etc. (you can guess the branch of service)-- along the way, frugal living, along with dollar - cost averaging, asset allocation, and diversification allowed us to retire early — Vanguard has been very good over the years, despite the Dot Bomb, 2002, and the recession (where we actually came out better with a modest but bargain retirement home purchase)... it's not easy building additional «legs» on a retirement platform, but now that we're here, cash, real estate, investments and insurance products, along with a small pension all help to avoid any real dependence on social security (we won't even need it at full retirement age)-- however, like nearly everybody, we're headed for Medicare in several years, albeit with a nice supplemental and pharmacy benefits — but our main concern is staying fit, active, and healthy!
[16:00] Pain + reflection = progress [16:30] Creating a meritocracy to draw the best out of everybody [18:30] How to raise your probability of being right [18:50] Why we are conditioned to need to be right [19:30] The neuroscience factor [19:50] The habitual and environmental factor [20:20] How to get to the other side [21:20] Great collective decision - making [21:50] The 5 things you need to be successful [21:55] Create audacious goals [22:15] Why you need problems [22:25] Diagnose the problems to determine the root causes [22:50] Determine the design for what you will do about the root causes [23:00] Decide to work with people who are strong where you are weak [23:15] Push through to results [23:20] The loop of success [24:15] Ray's new instinctual approach to failure [24:40] Tony's ritual after every event [25:30] The review that changed Ray's outlook on leadership [27:30] Creating new policies based on fairness and truth [28:00] What people are missing about Ray's culture [29:30] Creating meaningful work and meaningful relationships [30:15] The importance of radical honesty [30:50] Thoughtful disagreement [32:10] Why it was the relationships that changed Ray's life [33:10] Ray's biggest weakness and how he overcame it [34:30] The jungle metaphor [36:00] The dot collector — deciding what to listen to [40:15] The wanting of meritocratic decision - making [41:40] How to see bubbles and busts [42:40] Productivity [43:00] Where we are in the cycle [43:40] What the Fed will do [44:05] We are late in the long - term debt cycle [44:30] Long - term debt is going to be squeezing us [45:00] We have 2 economies [45:30] This year is very similar to 1937 [46:10] The top tenth of the top 1 % of wealth = bottom 90 % combined [46:25] How this creates populism [47:00] The economy for the bottom 60 % isn't growing [48:20] If you look at averages, the country is in a bind [49:10] What are the overarching principles that bind us together?
One of the things I've done in my work is kind of show the hypocrisy of progressive people who say they believe in inequality, but when it comes to their individual choices about where they're going to live and where they're going to send their children, they make very different decisions, and I just didn't want to do that.
One question / concern I always have with these charts is that even at 2 - 3 million you are not looking at a very «comfortable» life post retirement.
«The issue of cross-border financial activity, or cross-border activity, is a very real and live one and IOSCO and other international forums is absolutely crucial to try and resolve it, and it's not just in relation to short - selling activity, it's in relation to cyber activity, it's in relation to offering financial products.
I am not saving my entire life to die with millions in the banks and this is very bad advise.
And, due to the high cost of living, it won't last very long in Nevada.
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