Sentences with phrase «often fret»

Educators, policy makers and business leaders often fret about the state of math education, particularly in comparison with other countries.
I often fret and worry about what others think of me.
Scientists often fret that releasing data early will make it difficult to publish them in top - notch journals, which prize exclusivity.
A scientist doesn't often fret that his research subjects might clog the ventilation system of his office.
New parents often fret over the perfect nursery.
As with any move abroad, expats often fret that the healthcare they receive will be poor.

Not exact matches

It argues that the motivational strategies that work for optimists (who expect positive outcomes) are very different from those that are effective for defensive pessimists (who fret about negative ones)-- and you often gain nothing from trying to nudge an anxious employee (or yourself) into a happier mindset.
Our stress is often the process of fretting as to whether things will turn out as others think they should.
Friendly critics of Novak have also fretted that he seems often to reach too quickly from the cultural - economic - political to the explicitly theological.
It's not something you think about very often: well - known actors fretting about where the next paycheck is going to come from.
I don't thing we have to worry about Gabriel attitude wise and pretty sure he is one tough hombre who won't fret about the often over-hyped physicality of the PL.
Often times the school supply lists are long and I fret about kids who can't afford the required items.
The physical recovery from a stillbirth or neonatal death, and the steps of emotional recovery after pregnancy loss often leave little room for yet another topic to fret over.
This nutrition and weight conscious generation can often spend lots of time fretting and battling with their children at mealtimes.
Many moms fret over their tiny angels, often bending over backwards to do «everything right,» and don't consider that t...
Whether you want to make a foolproof Hollandaise or stop fretting about how often to flip your burger, James Beard Award - nominated columnist Lopez - Alt serves up nearly a thousand pages of practical advice and information with a side of snark.
But environmentalists have fretted that fish farms also breed toxins, and in January the largest study of its kind revealed that farmed salmon often have dangerous levels of poisons like PCBs and dioxins.
This happens often though so don't fret.
More difficult is the tedium that often accompanies the addiction / recovery / relapse narrative — a problem currently up for deconstruction in Leslie Jamison's new memoir, «The Recovering,» in which the author frets that stories of sobriety get the literary equivalent of short shrift, unable to compel us the same way that stories of addiction do, with their manic highs and grand tales of misbehavior.
WASHINGTON — In middle school, Junior Alvarado often struggled with multiplication and earned poor grades in math, so when he started his freshman year at Washington Leadership Academy, a charter high school in the nation's capital, he fretted that he would lag behind.
I don't MS and don't travel often, so flexible cash is better than bank points that I fret over due to devaluations.
This provision was added at the behest of environmental - justice advocates who have long fretted that big refineries and other polluters (often situated in low - income areas) could simply evade making cuts under cap and trade by buying up permits instead.
Students fret when they hear the phrase, employees get scared when they receive such notices, and property owners don't often imagine that they can get a warning from their clients.
And they are often, even those in the industry, the first ones to fret and fuss and fume over how the industry treated them.
I often lie in bed, unable to sleep, fretting over a project that I can't find the start point for.
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