Sentences with phrase «out of a distressed woman»

Davies's melodrama set in postwar London constantly drifts in and out of a distressed woman's memories and has one of the year's best performances by Rachel Weisz.

Not exact matches

After unexpectedly turning to formula to feed her daughter, she came across The Fed is Best Foundation and was moved and disturbed by the level of psychological distress, depression, anxiety, and trauma which many women reaching out to The Foundation are experiencing.
«I have had dozens and dozens of letters from women who are deeply distressed that because they did what most people would think was the right thing to do - look after their families or an elderly relative - they lose out in retirement,» she told the Daily Mail newspaper.
To find out more, UK - based researchers from the Universities of Leicester and Greenwich reviewed 24 publications reporting breast cancer screening practices in women with mental illness (around 700,000), and five studies investigating screening for those in distress but who had not been diagnosed with a mental illness (nearly 21,500).
I'm in Toronto, and we don't see many cowboy boots up here, so I think I'd really stand out in a pair of Ariat Women's Heritage Western R Toe Cowboy Boots — Distressed Brown — they'd be great with a floral dress and tights this fall!
There is not a lot of joy to be found in watching an old man take care of a dying old woman, spoonfeeding her and changing her diaper, while she cries out in distress that may or may not be real.
Greta Gerwig has matured out of playing the adorable, quirky, self - absorbed with self - invention young women of «Hannah Takes the Stairs» and «Damsels in Distress
Over another stretch of about 10 minutes, we experience brutal rage (when Barry is overwhelmed during a date with Emily Watson's Lena, a woman seemingly out of his league, he steps into the bathroom and kicks in the stall doors, grunting with volatile distress), we experience achingly sincere emotion (when the date ends with Lena unexpectedly calling Barry back up to her apartment for a kiss, he sprints down the hall like a man on fire rushing towards an extinguisher, underscored by strings and accordions straight out of an Audrey Hepburn romance), and we experience stark terror (after the date, Barry is accosted by extortionists and flees on foot as they pursue with hurled invective).
By inhabiting and almost overselling these cultural stereotypes of women — damsel in distress, dotty housewife, bombshell — Sherman effectively undermined the very cliches she set out to reproduce.
The Act's focus on intent to distress is woefully out of touch with the harms to women caused by the online distribution of intimate images, which can be spread around the world instantaneously with little forethought — and with devastating consequences.
1999)(mere adultery, though persistent, can not rise to level of intentional infliction of emotional distress); Weicker v. Weicker, 22 N.Y. 2d 8, 290 N.Y.S. 2d 732 (1968)(strong policy reasons weighed against applying intentional infliction of emotional distress to dispute arising out of matrimonial differences); Wilson v. Still, 819 P. 2d 714 (Okla. 1991)(act of woman stealing plaintiff's husband was not sufficiently outrageous); Rosenthal v. Erven, 172 Or.
In a recent study of fetal scans, researchers found that when mothers are stressed out, their fetuses also show signs of distress.1 And in a separate study of nearly 8,000 pregnant women, researchers noted that moms with high anxiety and depression are at greater risk of adverse birth outcomes, such as low birth weight.2 These studies highlight the importance of identifying and alleviating prenatal maternal stress, a conclusion supported by CFRP data.
Starting out my social work career as a young woman working in a residential school in the West of Scotland in 1990, I quickly learned that the levels of distress in young people being acted out in behaviour, and my interventions attempting to help were not equally matched.
For instance, parental stress seems to be associated to both anxiety and avoidance of attachment, because of the difficulties they imply in coping with distress, but in different ways: more avoidant women attribute negative distress to a characteristic of the baby and not situational factors; more anxious women make more mistakes in recognizing fear and attribute distress to physical factors, then they could show an out of sync response to the babies» distress signs (Leerkes and Siepak, 2006; for a complete review of a social cognition approach to parenting processes and behaviors, see: Jones et al., 2015a, b).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z