Sentences with phrase «often seen in people»

This is often seen in people with musculoskeletal pain.
Herniated discs or spinal cord damage also are often seen in people who have been rear - ended.
Low levels of vitamin D are often seen in people who are overweight.
This is often seen in people who have an office job where they are frequently looking at their computers or writing.
Bullied mice showed many more bouts of paradoxical sleep, resembling the type of sleep disruptions often seen in people with depression.
This is a problem I tend to often see in people who stress their guts with high amounts of food and also eat before, during or after exercise or in a stressed post-workout state.

Not exact matches

(See How to Deal with Time Wasters) Such sessions rarely accomplish anything except maybe some pseudo-bonding; they don't have a logical and clearly - understood endpoint so they seem both pointless and interminable; and, most often, they sorta drool to a conclusion without agreed - upon action items and / or documented next steps for at least half the people in the room.
«Yesterday, seeing Sonny Boy for the first time in 20 years, it was incredibly overwhelming, and I went to bed last night, just thinking to myself, that often we tell the story that in the last 30 years (that) extreme poverty has halved, but in some ways, I think that masks the present reality of suffering for so many people living in extreme poverty.
Often, we'll see something on a blog post, like [the recently trendy] microwave potato chip maker, and we'll scramble to get it in stock as quickly as popular while people in the blogosphere are still taking about it.»
Too often in mobile paid media, no attention is paid to the landing page a person sees after tapping on an ad.
CBA is seen as a stable part of life in the country of 24 million where most people have had a mortgage, insurance policy or regular savings account with CBA at some point - often starting with its famed «Dollarmites» deposit account for school children.
«There are often situtations where it does make sense for the current CEO or President to step aside completely so they aren't interfering or seen to be interfering in the new person's mandate,» Vanwyck says.
«Most people can see patterns, but highly intelligent people see them more quickly, and they often see patterns in everything,» writes a gifted specialist on Quora.
You might like to try out short - term job swaps as well, as people working in a role that's new to them can often see potential problems or new solutions that those there day in and day out just don't notice.
People get angry — understandably and often justifiably angry — when they see instances in which corporations have too much power.
Commuting, especially in London, can be long and stressful, 9 - 5 shifts are not as common as they used to be, and the ability to work remotely often sees people working longer hours than ever before.
In case you missed it, here's the quick and dirty: TIFF requires people to pay inflated prices to wait in long lines to see movies in venues that often aren't built to show theIn case you missed it, here's the quick and dirty: TIFF requires people to pay inflated prices to wait in long lines to see movies in venues that often aren't built to show thein long lines to see movies in venues that often aren't built to show thein venues that often aren't built to show them.
Here's something you may not know about court cases: There are often people in the public gallery who are paid to closely watch the members of the jury to see how they react to different witnesses.
Which, it turns out, is the Draghi way: people often seem to see what they want to see in him.
Often people don't like to be the only person writing a check so they'll try to find safety in numbers by investing other angels to look at the the deal and «see what they think.»
However, a healthy work culture is often seen as a «nice to have» and not a must have — but our movement's people are its most valuable asset, so investing in a culture that sustains them is critical.
The stock market does not work as efficiently as some would like to think, or indeed hope that it would, otherwise we would not see volatility in the market as much as we do, which is due to human emotion and people often jumping on the «band wagon».
«They're very often wonderful places where people's dignity is protected and if you will invest those and churches get involved in those we'll see even higher levels of end of life palliative care there.
I can see tat a lot of people that don't like that I disagree with the article dismissed my earlier opinion as hate, I certainly don't have as much experience in hate as this people that read about it very often in their sacred books.
I wouldn't call Spenser a greater poet, but he saw the human condition and our often - anguished journey toward God in a richer, more humane way than Milton did, who at the end of the day was more interested in ideas than people.
That would seem to imply that theology for a person of faith is more speculative than dogmatic, certainly not the dogmatic absolutism that closes minds and often hearts that we see in so many who profess faith.
I've seen people pick it up in short discussions, but more often it takes days or weeks of reading and discussion to «get it».
And if you want to know why Christians are often seen as hypocritical and violent, it is because we defend the actions in the Bible as «holy and just» while condemning identical behavior in people of other religions.
He told Premier: «Once people are aware of it they then need to do something about what they've seen because quite often, in this generation that we live in, we are quite moved by what we see but don't do anything.»
Loving people is often the first step in seeing them understand and accept the gospel.
This is not bad, but a missionary will often get a job in the community so he or she can live and work among the people, and be seen as one of them.
«Often when people come for things like weddings and Christmas, they leave in droves, never to be seen again.
Indeed, these are good examples — people are perceiving Islam as some minority — yet harmless ideology that espouses nice values, it doesn't all people need do is look at the UK, France etc today — do the research — the people in these countries are already seeing a decline in their quality of life as Islam grows, why should a person tolerate something that is a threat to them I often ask.
But we can be in it and not of it if we follow your advice (example) and see the people behind the label and the bonds of love that tie them together - of wich the institution that forms as a result it is just a byproduct - often not even a good one.
Also evangelists often see social justice as a gutless way of living out the gospel, whereas people engaged in social action often assume the evangelists are hypocritical Bible bashers, but actually we need both proclamation and demonstration.
On David Hayward's cartoon posts I often see people understanding the cartoons in very different ways — conservatives, liberals and agnostics could all love the same cartoon.
«If people are sort of subliminally saying «those Christians are all barking mad», now we're challenging them saying «here we are, this is what I do, this is what I believe in, let's talk about it, let's see where you differ» and more often than not they'll see the message applies to so many of us and people resonate with that.»
«So often the people they meet have been forced to come to The Salvation Army because they are waiting for their Universal Credit claims to be processed or they've seen their benefit payments reduced or frozen because of changes in the way it's administered.
I want to make people think, and I see that Jesus often stated things in a way that challenged the status quo.
Writing in Premier Youthwork magazine (November 2015) Rev Rachel Mann, a male to female transgender vicar, advised: «Perhaps the single most important thing to remember is that... trans people are, ultimately, people... Trans people of all ages are often seen through a lens that treats us as curiosities, freaks or alien people.
I have seen it in some of the members of every church I have served; and when people with that expectation run into problems, they often abandon «their» church in the (false) hope that the church was the problem, and if they just find one that believes right and believes enough, God will dump $ $ $ $ into their laps.
For many people, this subject is touchy and often emotionally loaded, but many viewers can ultimately find freedom and even have their lives changed by seeing the people in the show wrestle with what is truly important.
too often the only time you see religion in the news it is people trying to deny rights to their fellows.
... we are offended when people, even people like Oprah, make childish statements and claims that because every so often our beliefs about the world and existence happen to overlap means that we Atheists OBVIOUSLY really believe in «god» after all because to the believer those rare similarities in belief don't mean common ground... they mean «SEE, you are one of us no matter what!»
It is also undeniable that a person's closest friends often see him in a new light immediately after his death.
It is not necessary for us to make a detailed examination of the various sorts of ritual associated with these meals; it will suffice if we see that the Jew worshiped God not only in the synagogue and in the Temple, but also in his home, where families or groups of friends met regularly for a holy supper, often held in connection with great festivals of the Jewish religious year, in which bread and wine, eaten and drunk, were believed to have a peculiar significance in establishing anew a sense of the covenant which God had made with his chosen people.
If you read some of the ancient sermon texts, even from the very beginning of institutional Christianity in the fourth century, you can often read between the lines of these sermons and see that the Bishops and Priests had such people in their congregations, and were cajoling them and guilting them back into conformity, and even sometimes persecuting them for «abandoning Jesus and the church.»
In the ongoing cultural disputes that pit a person's sexual «identity» against a person's religious liberty, it's not often that you see eye - popping courage and conviction.
While that sounds great in theory, and many people would tacitly, or even with great show agree to such an idea, I fear that in practice the Bible is often not seen through the lens of Jesus, but rather through the lens of a certain theology or through the lens of the beliefs of groups or even individuals.
Cecilia, it gets even worse when you realize that many of these men are the same people who push the modesty movement — meaning that they believe men are uncontrollable hormone monsters who can't keep themselves in check if they see a woman showing too much skin — and often believe in complimentarism to the point where men are wild and reckless and need wives to «tame» them.
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