But this line may
promote guilty feelings in the worshipper as we ask ourselves, «Am I the only one who has failed to attain this higher level of commitment?»
Not exact matches
In sum, our reporter friend and those like him should not
feel guilty about agreeing with Steele, Loury, Crouch, and other writers who are waking us up to the disastrous consequences of policies
promoted under the banner of «civil rights.»
Faked out everyone in the church I was in, to the point of the leaders believing his (later proved fake) out - of - this - world credentials and hiring him right away as an assistant pastor (he never did any work, and appropriated church resources to
promote himself at the expense of the church — when people brought those nagging facts up, he would persuade people to cut him slack and «forgive him», making them
feel guilty if they didn't).
If we repeatedly tell ourselves not to eat certain things, things we enjoy, then we are setting ourselves up to
feel guilty and
promote unhealthy thoughts around food and eating.
I
felt guilty that I was
promoting this as healthy food!
In one oddly worded article, Dr. Jack Newman, author of The Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers, writes that the concept of mother guilt is just another ploy of breastfeeding detractors; that we should not stop
promoting breastfeeding just because it makes women
feel guilty.
by Jack Newman, MD, FRCPC One of the most powerful arguments many health professionals, government agencies and formula company manufacturers make for not
promoting and supporting breastfeeding is that we should «not make the mother
feel guilty for not breastfeeding».
No matter what the cause, new mothers who are struggling to breastfeed often
feel guilty opting for formula, even when they have done everything possible to
promote a healthy breastfeeding relationship.
I actually do
feel that some extreme voices in the attachment community
promote the only - child - led approach, which is what left me
feeling guilty.
As for
promoting guilt, when we pussyfoot around about making women
feel guilty, we are patronising them — how can anyone make an informed choice if information is deliberately withheld?
We have to find balance between
promoting breastmilk as the healthiest food option for babies, and making women
feel guilty about being unable to breastfeed.
The market's unresponsiveness to the winsome New York story Two Family House, in particular, generates the following theory: American moviegoers now
feel guilty for seeing The Mummy Returns twice instead of something less
promoted once; they take the least painful route of cultural redemption by buying tickets to the most domestic thing with accents available, thus developing a distrust of or distaste for the genuine article.
While attention was being focused on Senator Joseph McCarthy and his finger pointing of anyone he
felt might be
guilty of
promoting communism, Clooney asks us to step back for a moment and recognize how that «focus» was accomplished.