Sentences with phrase «often feel things»

Not exact matches

And the bad news is that people often wear their expectations — if they feel that things ahead look bad, they're going to seem grumpy at the office.
Stressful projects often make you feel as if you have no time to sleep, but taking the time to get a decent night's sleep is often the one thing keeping you from getting things under control.
Most new business owners also feel strongly that they need to do things like secure legal resources or an attorney, when often sites like LegalZoom give you access to legal professionals for much less.
Vanity Fair contributing editor Sarah Ellison said that Trump has also talked with advisors often about his ability to drive high traffic numbers for networks such as Fox News and CNN, and feels that he could do the same thing for his own media company even if he is unsuccessful in his presidential bid.
As a result, we can often feel clueless about how to act or compelled to do things we really don't want to do (like share a bed with a co-worker on a business trip!).
Many people agree that clickbait is kind of a bad thing — it's something that often makes us feel duped or stupid seconds after we click.
«It made me realise how the media often distorts things and we can't look at the people in that place through that lens of the media, which can make it feel that extreme, and then that encourages that fear of people in a foreign place,» she told Business Insider.
A 2008 study at the University of South Florida found that criers often experience things that make them feel better as they cry, including more measured breathing and improved mood.
I often feel anxious about all the things I know I need to do at some point.
Instead of feeling more of a part of things, at least in the beginning, entrepreneurs often feel isolated, cut off from everything but the drive to birth their new enterprise.
There are often multiple times each day where I can start to feel overwhelmed, anxious or concerned — usually about things that are outside of my control.
I often feel under pressure to write things that are positive, funny, and encouraging because I know people like it.
«It has been often said, very truly, that religion is the thing that makes the ordinary man feel extraordinary; it is an equally important truth that religion is the thing that makes the extraordinary man feel ordinary.»
The hierarchical, dualistic pattern is so widespread in Western thought that it is often not perceived to be a pattern, but is felt to be simply the way things are.
Far too often, churches feel the need to «do our own thing» and we often end up competing with the community we are trying to serve.
I have noticed in Israel, for example, that there is no such thing as queuing up at a bus stop or a ticket office — one often feels fortunate that bus drivers bother taking the same route each time or that tickets are printed at all.
There's a distinction there that I feel is more clear if we avoid the whole «monkey» thing because human arrogance often tends to blind us.
I ask myself often things like «As a soldier how am I to feel about the situation with ISIS?»
Unsuspectedly from the bottom of every fountain of pleasure, as the old poet said, something bitter rises up: a touch of nausea, a falling dead of the delight, a whiff of melancholy, things that sound a knell, for fugitive as they may be, they bring a feeling of coming from a deeper region and often have an appalling convincingness.
And while I feel good doing those things, I often wondered, «Was this more for them — or for me?»
One great thing about old people is that they can speak their mind without having to care about whether it will be popular or not - I wonder with him whether we have become too politically correct and don't speak about our feelings often enough.
I miss our shared faith when it comes to those seasons and often feel very torn between wanting to create new traditions and celebrating some of the things that still resonate most strongly with me in my faith.
Yet I often am made to feel condemned by others from more evangelical backgrounds, (although some of it is societal attitudes towards the condition, I have non-religious things who still see medication - free life as an aim), because I don't tend to assume... or necessarily even aspire to, ever be completely well in this lifetime.
Often, when it feels like things just aren't going right in your life, stress and frustration can manifest itself as self - pity.
When various forms of idolatry became part of their effort to influence the world, they were merely trying to tie all things together, to make sense out of a world that often proved hostile to human feelings.
Before the devil and all the evil powers.If someone has not forgiven God, their lives are often filled with self - righteousness and a feeling of entitlement — that God owes us an answer for the evil things he allows.
Often we will find ourselves devaluing friendships or neglecting our family because those things start to feel less important than our jobs.
Third, the minister can arrange for him to get acquainted with an experienced and accepting AA member who may serve as a bridge to feeling at home in an AA group [In a study of factors which produce «readiness» for affiliation with AA, Harrison M. Trice discovered that alcoholics with the following characteristics tend to relate effectively to AA: Before contact with AA, they often shared troubles with others, had lost drinking friends, had heard positive things about AA, had no relative or friend who had quit through willpower.
In fact, I've often found myself marveling at the good and wonderful things that people will do for one another, only to suddenly feel guilty for thinking positively about the human spirit.
I often felt as though the only thing people would ever see in me — if they only knew — would be the letters I knew were invisibly attached there.
i know that most of the time i'm messing around on these boards, but i am sincerely sorry to hear about your story... disillusionment — I know, can be a horrible thing and often is rooted in deep pain and disappointment... i have no idea what you must have gone through to get to this dark place but — even now, i'm praying that the God of all comforts would reveal Himself to you... in my dark days and moments I take comfort from Phil 1:6 and Romans 8:28... He has not walked away from you — no matter how you feel, and will complete what He started in you.
People wanted structure, some wanted hand holding, others wanted things that we didn't want or need and often felt was dangerous.
As a child of the American dream, I have often felt society's pressure to «climb the ladder,» nab my dream job (if such a thing even exists) and buy into the white - picket fence dream.
To be the only chaplain in a 170 - bed hospital filled with a great number of people who are quadraplegic; to try to help these people rediscover and / or redefine a life value and quality that they often feel has been lost; to grow to care greatly about these people; to do all these things and yet deep, deep inside, to feel that you would rather be dead than be quadraplegic — that's hard to admit.
The evolution I love the most is the evolution of human thought to better understand these things that have been provided to us, so we can live better lives... and all true believers feel the same, though they are often limited by their own experiences in various ways — culture, education, social groups, life experiences.
We human beings far too often tend to codify God, to feel that we know where he is and where he is not, and this arrogance leads to such things as the Spanish Inquisition, the Salem witch burnings, and has the result of further fragmenting an already broken Christendom.
Father and mother, sisters, brothers, and friends are felt as interfering distractions; for sensitiveness and narrowness, when they occur together, as they often do, require above all things a simplified world to dwell in.
It feels like things are often externalized in religion with Satan being responsible for the bad and God for the good.
The one thing I have noticed — an this is certainly not a knock on you as I respect your beliefs — is that those who do not believe often do not feel very secure in their belief while those who do believe are very comfortable.
«When things feel unrelentingly difficult, there are often questions which hang in the air: Is there any light at all?
i am from india and i am of hindu religion i often think of sucide no am not going through any kind of depression its just that i am scared of leading the life that i am living currently my father died when i was just 7 years old more than 23 have passed i am feeling guilty as i am unable to do something for my family and even for myself this thing really scares me off
Not really, other than when I'm feeling super dry I end up a bit like the father in My Big Fat Greek Wedding and his obsession with putting Windex on everything, and go - «I should probably put some coconut oil on that...» Having said that, I do often burn myself on hobs and getting things out of the oven and I love the Pai Skincare Organic Rosehip Oil — I just soothes the burns and makes them heal really well.
My work was born out of my love for people; it's one of the things I'm most proud of and it often doesn't feel like work, though there certainly are many long, intense hours.
(But darn it all if I don't often feel like your nervous younger self now, enduring wild - eyed bouts of panic over minutiae, over things that have negligible impact on my life as a whole.
Most of my cooking in this style is kind of thrown together, which is why I don't often post it, but I will make an effort to really document what works, why I did this, that, and that other thing, and will keep on making food that tastes great and makes you feel great!
So often we spend our days without meaning, doing things we do not love or even feel good about; and our life trickles on by without us building a legacy to leave behind.
While meatless meals are great for our digestion and can make us feel lighter than other ones, often times, meat - free dishes, like faux soy meats, are full of processed ingredients and chemicals that make the whole vegetarian thing not so good after all!
I know what you mean, I feel the same about Polish cuisine, quite often it's really fatty and full of meat But I also noticed that people do like vegan versions of really traditional dishes, so it must be a thing (technical term)!
but now my dream may come true:) I have been struggling with my digestion for quite some time and often times it feels like a struggle to find the time to cook / eat the things that I know heal and nourishe me.
I feel like I'm missing out on amazing baked goods sometimes, so I definitely need to get myself to do things after instructions more often
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