Sentences with phrase «of different stories with»

I really like that these are anthologies, giving us not just a lot of different stories with our favorite characters, but a lot of different looks as well.

Not exact matches

Each news story is labeled with an identifying tag, like «opinion» or «local source,» which Google pitches is a way to «explore different perspectives to gain a well - rounded understanding of an issue.»
IA Architects used different kinds of moss to create a living wall with more depth and texture than your average patch of grass in LinkedIn's 26 - story San Francisco offices
In between the brags and tall tales of his glorious youth, the subtext of his story reads a little different: «I don't know why, but I didn't stick with it.
Only a love story with a different ending than either one of us had expected.»
Salsbury also questions the Wilsons» claims of a rapturous sales response, saying her own inquiries with staff members tell a different story.
Mary Pilon — New York Times: Pilon is a different type of sports reporter, one whose stories often touch on the intersection of sports with business, politics and corruption.
If Microsoft does the same, we could wind up writing this story again with different names — or maybe some of the same ones — a few years from now.
To begin with, the Secret Journals of Congress, that were eventually made public in 1821 paint a different story.
CEOs who are master storytellers interweave these three key types of stories with slightly different versions for each audience - customers, team, investors and advisors — while looking to both the past and the future.
DC Comics does a lot of different things with their own characters under the Elseworld titles which tell alternative universe stories using familiar characters.
Second, there are estimated to be over 1.5 billion Android users out there in the world, all of whom have phones that could theoretically get upgraded with Google Assistant (whether they will or not is a different story).
New projects are a bit of a different story but, as always with economists, there are multiple factors to consider.
Televisions are a different story — once someone has paid thousands of dollars for one, they're generally stuck with it.
While consumer - centric companies dominated the fundraising, M&A was a different story with 46 of the 55 transactions involving practice - focused companies, accounting for all of the disclosed $ 4.7 billion.
We're taking a different approach with Facebook for Business as a central hub going forward for all of our updates, success stories, product information, all together in one place.
[01:10] Introduction [02:45] James welcomes Tony to the podcast [03:35] Tony's leap year birthday [04:15] Unshakeable delivers the specific facts you need to know [04:45] What James learned from Unshakeable [05:25] Most people panic when the stock market drops [05:45] Getting rid of your fear of investing [06:15] Last January was the worst opening, but it was a correction [06:45] You are losing money when you sell on corrections [06:55] Bear markets come every 5 years on average [07:10] The greatest opportunity for a millennial [07:40] Waiting for corrections to invest [08:05] Warren Buffet's advice for investors [08:55] If you miss the top 10 trading days a year... [09:25] Three different investor scenarios over a 20 year period [10:40] The best trading days come after the worst [11:45] Investing in the current world [12:05] What Clinton and Bush think of the current situation [12:45] The office is far bigger than the occupant [13:35] Information helps reduce fear [14:25] James's story of the billionaire upset over another's wealth [14:45] What money really is [15:05] The story of Adolphe Merkle [16:05] The story of Chuck Feeney [16:55] The importance of the right mindset [17:15] What fuels Tony [19:15] Find something you care about more than yourself [20:25] Make your mission to surround yourself with the right people [21:25] Suffering made Tony hungry for more [23:25] By feeding his mind, Tony found strength [24:15] Great ideas don't interrupt you, you have to pursue them [25:05] Never - ending hunger is what matters [25:25] Richard Branson is the epitome of hunger and drive [25:40] Hunger is the common denominator [26:30] What you can do starting right now [26:55] Success leaves clues [28:10] What it means to take massive action [28:30] Taking action commits you to following through [29:40] If you do nothing you'll learn nothing [30:20] There must be an emotional purpose behind what you're doing [30:40] How does Tony ignite creativity in his own life [32:00] «How is not as important as «why» [32:40] What and why unleash the psyche [33:25] Breaking the habit of focusing on «how» [35:50] Deep Practice [35:10] Your desired outcome will determine your action [36:00] The difference between «what» and «why» [37:00] Learning how to chunk and group [37:40] Don't mistake movement for achievement [38:30] Tony doesn't negotiate with his mind [39:30] Change your thoughts and change your biochemistry [40:00] The bad habit of being stressed [40:40] Beautiful and suffering states [41:50] The most important decision is to live in a beautiful state no matter what [42:40] Consciously decide to take yourself out of suffering [43:40] Focus on appreciation, joy and love [44:30] Step out of suffering and find the solution [45:00] Dealing with mercury poisoning [45:40] Tony's process for stepping out of suffering [46:10] Stop identifying with thoughts — they aren't yours [47:40] Trade your expectations for appreciation [50:00] The key to life — gratitude [51:40] What is freedom for you?
Mr. Weilinger said most of Mr. Hill's work with the company - which began almost two months before Ms. Clark's leadership victory - has to do with «getting the natural gas story out in B.C. from a whole bunch of different perspectives.»
Premier Clark promised thousands of jobs for British Columbians, but the agreement she got with Petronas tells a different story.
However, it's often even more about other things: being part of a community, being surrounded by inspiring people, and to broaden your horizon with different cultures and stories.
I think one of the great contributions of the Bible is that it challenges the mind — with stories, parables, examples, and instruction — to try different mental filters.
As Pinfold explains, each cover tells a different story, with the artist using traditional heraldry from historic coat of arms imagery to delve deep into each house.
Missouri Synod theologians had traditionally affirmed the inerrancy of the Bible, and, although such a term can mean many things, in practice it meant certain rather specific things: harmonizing of the various biblical narratives; a somewhat ahistorical reading of the Bible in which there was little room for growth or development of theological understanding; a tendency to hold that God would not have used within the Bible literary forms such as myth, legend, or saga; an unwillingness to reckon with possible creativity on the part of the evangelists who tell the story of Jesus in the Gospels or to consider what it might mean that they write that story from a post-Easter perspective; a general reluctance to consider that the canons of historical exactitude which we take as givens might have been different for the biblical authors.
The reason why I (and potentially many other non-believers) react with cynicism and hostility to stories like this is that they demonstrate how very different the actions of the church are from the claims it makes about itself: infallibility, benevolence, selflessness, and godliness.
Most of them are perfectly aware that the stories of the Bible was written in historically ancient time with very different customs than our own that are not applicable to today's society.
I am outside of the emergent scene, but it has helped me put a few things to rest in my own story, a different scenario with similar underlying destructiveness.
She wrote a story out of her heart — a story about three women with different experiences and backgrounds — a story that could start a profoundly needed and healing conversation.
It wasn't the summer that brought an end to my doubt, but it was the summer I encountered a different Jesus, a Jesus who requires more from me than intellectual assent and emotional allegiance; a Jesus who associated with sinners and infuriated the religious; a Jesus who broke the rules and refused to cast the first stone; a Jesus who gravitated toward sick people and crazy people, homeless people and hopeless people; a Jesus who preferred story to exposition and metaphor to syllogism; a Jesus who answered questions with more questions, and demands for proof with demands for faith... a Jesus who healed each person differently and saved each person differently; a Jesus who had no list of beliefs to check off, no doctrinal statements to sign, no surefire way to tell who was «in» and who was «out»; a Jesus who loved after being betrayed, healed after being hurt, and forgave while being nailed to a tree; a Jesus who asked his disciples to do the same...
By executing murderers, we are trying to tell a different story: a story with poetic closure, a tale of punishment that fits the crime.
Familiarity with stories of cures by similar methods in Jewish and pagan literature may have influenced the tradition of this miracle, so different from Jesus» usual practice in the Synoptic narratives.
But with an epic fairy tale, Pixar is working in a different medium that just isn't close enough to the familiar and everyday to inspire the sort of deep laughs and tearful moments we've come to expect, thanks to Toy Story, WALL - E, and Up.
We find ourselves within the story, even more than with poetry — or at least in a different way — in the realm of indirection.
My story is different from yours, I have not an issue with sexuality, but I know that there is something very wrong with the church and there are so many things in it that contradict the words of Yeshua.
It wasn't just about the subject matter — although it's tricky to write about such a tender and intimate time in a person's life, to tell your own story while still holding space for stories that are so different than your own, to attempt to shepherd people well in the liminal spaces of their faith journeys — but it was also just the season of life with being pregnant with our fourth and then giving birth and suddenly having four tinies between the ages of 9 and newborn meant I had a lot less time with a lot less energy (and even less sleep!)
But I would suggest that the context of South Africa with the «land redistribution» be proposed by the government there not unlike that carried out by Mugabe might tell a different story.
Those conscious of the operation of the Spirit in their lives might practice telling their faith stories with a slightly different emphasis.
make a long story short, he fought the little Prix with the dean of the school and while he left that job was given another in a different department.
In any event, those who during most of the twentieth century were weaving statistics and theories into a grand and confidently told story of the secularization of the world are now having to cope with a quite different story that seems to be writing itself.
They all have different stories of course, but all are filled with incredible grief and pain.
They were created and inspired by men of all major cultures and if you really look, you will see the same story told with a different GOD's name and a different location.
Science however tells us a different story, one with facts and data and research that shows that we are born gay and no amount of prayer will change what gender we are attracted to.
Jeremy thanks for your comments alot of this i never really thought about before until you provoked me to seek the truth in the word it is what we all should be doing finding the truth for ourselves God wants to reveal mysterys if we are open to hear.If we have been christians awhile we just take the word of whoevers preaching or whichever clip we see on god tube its knowledge but not revelation.Because the story sounds plausible we tag that on to our belief for example for many years i believed that the rich young rulers problem was money so the way to deal with that problem is to give it away and be a follower of Jesus sounds plausible.Till you realise every believers situation is different so the message has to be universal.So the reason its not about money because it excludes those that do nt have it and does nt make room for those that do have it but do nt worship it.The rich young ruler was not a bad person he lived by a good moral code but he made money his idol he put that before God.The word says we shall not have any idols thats a sin and a wicked one.In fact there wasnt any room in his heart for Jesus that is a tragedy.So when we see the message is about Idolatry we all have areas that we chose not to submit to God thats universal everyone of us whether we are rich or poor.I believe we are unaware that we have these idols what are some of them that was revealed to me our partners our children our work our church our family i can sense some of you are getting fidgetty.
Can it be that the two cycles of stories come to their final form with two different historical epochs in mind?
The modern crisis of narrative is very different from the ancient one in that we are here dealing with artful stories, with «literature.»
Luke, placing the story in an earlier context, says that this «bad woman» washed Jesus» feet with her tears, dried them with her hair, kissed them and anointed them with perfume; but it is probably the same story, for though it is said to have happened long before Judas» betrayal and in a slightly different manner, it did happen in the home of a publican named Simon.
Both headlines were a part of the story, and both provided a part of the story different people with different agendas could capitalize on.
Like the creation mythology of Genesis, it too reflects the work of two writers, or groups of writers, the Yahwist and Priestly Source, with different views and different versions of the story.
«The Cathedral enables many to engage with different dimensions of this complex story.
Otherwise, I'll assume that no one here has even a mildly curious hypothesis about how and why different prehistoric people all came up with creation stories that are crude and primitive narratives of the multi-billion year creation theories that we bandy about today.
In the case of the empty tomb story, it can be shown with some degree of probability that Matthew and Luke have used Mark's story as the basis of their own, and have elaborated it at different points in their own way.
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