Not exact matches
The empty chair method can also help in working through
feelings about people who are still alive but with whom direct confrontation is either
impossible or
probably unproductive — e.g., a rigid boss on a job you still want to keep, an aged parent with whom an open confrontation would be destructive, or an ex-spouse toward whom one has energy - wasting resentments.
But I suppose it's
probably impossible to not
feel offended when we're transitioning between stages because we are being pulled from both directions.
When studying the strengths of noncategorial dispositions then, introspection, like natural and social science, seems bound to be measuring an amalgam of final and efficient causality, whose relative contributions to a given
feeling are
probably impossible in principle to distinguish, even for omniscience.
«I think every working mom
probably feels the same thing which is you go through big chunks of time where you're just going «This is
impossible — Oh, this is
impossible.»
«I think every working mom
probably feels the same thing: You go through big chunks of time where you're just thinking, «this is
impossible — oh, this is
impossible.»
You
probably know what I'm talking about — that sense that you don't like something in the present moment, like your belly or butt or thighs, or the
feeling that you should be doing more in your career, or that you deserve to be paid more than you are, or you somehow don't measure up to an
impossible standard.
Review I have seen this movie twice,
probably the third romantic movie that compelled me to do that, and the reasons are quite simple: It's
probably impossible that anyone can't relate to young Josh Hutcherson's character, an 11 year old with a normal middle class life and problems (parents initiating divorce); that its surprise by the rediscovery of a young classmate (Charley Ray) initially as an unexpected friend and later as something else... The well crafted work of director Mark Levin is based on the mutual discovery of all these
feelings (mostly new and uncontrolled) that evolved in Josh's character and in another particular viewer: you.
Some people don't like crating but as long as it isn't for long periods the dog will be fine, in fact he will
probably feel more secure as separation anxiety may be the cause of the problem and it will be
impossible to solve if you are not there.
Unless you have already been the target of a theft, it would
probably be
impossible for you to even imagine what it would
feel like to come home one day and find your property stolen.