Sentences with phrase «really believe in something»

He also gives me the courage to be unconventional, and to be stubborn when I really believe in something.
«If you really believe in something, don't talk about it, do it.
«If you really believe in something, don't talk about it, do it and show that it can be done.
Seriously though, if there is no proof, I can't really believe in something.

Not exact matches

«No one cared about mattress companies before them; that they believed in creating something that was really hard to do was really attractive,» Osborne says.
That's something Henderson really believes in.
This is something that I believe makes all the difference of whether you can stick to a daily routine or not... Finding others who also have an interest in a great and productive routine really is probably 80 - 90 percent of what you can do to set yourself on the right track.»
Early on in our history when things weren't really going well — we had hit a tough patch and a lot of people wanted to buy Facebook — I went and I met with Steve Jobs, and he said that to reconnect with what I believed was the mission of the company, I should go visit this temple in India that he had gone to early in the evolution of Apple, when he was thinking about what he wanted his vision of the future to be... That reinforced to me the importance of what we were doing, and that is something I will always remember.
But pretty quickly we realized, hey, we believe in our concept so much, and really think we've found something broken.
You can't really sell something you don't truly believe in.
He said, «Patrick, I didn't believe when you started bringing this discipline that if the economy got better, or if there was a big initiative we really wanted to fund, that you would actually give us money for something that's not «in budget,» and just let us do it.»
«You really have to think long term and build something you believe in and stay focused on the vision and the plan and know it's ultimately going to pay off.»
I'm living it right now, and I may even write a book about it soon because it's something I really believe in with everything in me, so much so that I'm living and breathing it weekly.
I spend more of my time selling tea, but it's always in the back of my head that I'm doing something that really aligns directly with what I believe in
I noticed something during my investment process is that I really wanted to raise money, I really believed in the idea and when I pitched it, I didn't always get the confirmation from my investors instead I got a lot of questions.
He continued, «I don't believe in hobbies — if you are really passionate about something, it should be your job — but I do like to play poker.»
Something that really hit home for me in the book is you said something like, «Personal finance writers believe that if people would just listen carefully to our advice, everything would be finSomething that really hit home for me in the book is you said something like, «Personal finance writers believe that if people would just listen carefully to our advice, everything would be finsomething like, «Personal finance writers believe that if people would just listen carefully to our advice, everything would be fine.»
It's really tough to sell something you don't believe in.
Well Tom thank you.That is something I actually live by, both here and in real life.I don't really care what one believes but I want each and everyone to really consider it.I don't force Jesus or God onto anyone.I have studied the message of Christ since the start of my reason.It's impossible for one who is forced to believe.
So they can't really understand how people can believe in something that refuses to provide concrete proof of it's existence.
Emerald... in a way though, if you believed something to be true... like really believed... no doubt, for instance, the only way for others to be happy or not suffer eternal damnation (or whatever), wouldn't you feel wrong by not trying to convince others.
The afterlife is just something that, after really thinking about the end - game, I have come to believe is necessary to having any meaning in life.
If a person really believed that God is the one who put sickness on them because He is trying to work something for good in their life, then they should not go to the doctor or take any medicine.
If you really believed in your own God completely and without doubt, you wouldn't have had to attempt to use bad logic to put an answer together, you would have merely answered with a reply something along the lines of «Because God does what the f *** he wants.»
Does it really matter, in any case, whether Mendelssohn's reconciliation of Judaism with liberalism was something in which he truly believed or was merely tactical?
The God is humankind's creation in order to have something to believe in that doesn't really exist that unifies everyone for social acdvantage.
The word which got translated into Latin as «credo» did not really mean «I believe this as actual fact» but something more like «I put my faith in, or I commit myself to, or I follow the teaching of...».
If you really have a need to believe in something, you should try the Loch Ness Monster, or Bigfoot.
In addition, the mere fact that 68 % of Americans believe all of this could be real makes it a topic worth covering, and I commend CNN for trying to shed a little light on something that really can't be understood rationally.
I'm pretty sure I don't even believe in God, though it's something I don't really think about.
In deism, you still have to believe in some supreme creator being, which is something that any genuine skeptic really ought to reject on the basis of there being no evidencIn deism, you still have to believe in some supreme creator being, which is something that any genuine skeptic really ought to reject on the basis of there being no evidencin some supreme creator being, which is something that any genuine skeptic really ought to reject on the basis of there being no evidence.
No one questions the words that Plato wrote, no one says «I doubt Plato really said that,» yet Plato was in existance around 400BC doing his teachings, but the earliest copies of Platos writings that we have in our possesion are from 900AD... that's a 1300 year gap as opposed to the New Testaments 25 - 30 year gap... That speaks for something, I believe.
I don't know about you, but for me, believing in something is not really choice — I just do or I don't, based on the sum of everything I have perceived thus far.
It is not necessary to know something about God in order really to believe in Him: many true believers know how to talk to God but not about Him.
If he really wanted to show his god (s) how much he believed in him and do something for his fellow man... he could start picking up and disarming all the minefields that various «factions» have scattered over the years.
@popcorn, So you are saying that Bill's post caliming that we non-believers are going to burn in hell is not something that he really believes because Bill doesn't believe literally in the bible?
Once you realize it's really just yourself it actually gives you greater strength than believing in something that doesn't exist.
These atheists really do complain a lot about something they say they don't believe in.
I really feel and believe that there is something outside of me that is also in me that embraces me when I cry and lifts me up even higher when I am happy.
If you really want to convert people to your beliefs (or if you're god, if you want everyone to believe in you), I'd think that doing something grand and spectacular like that would be a great way to do it...
«Spiritual but not religious» is just something people call themselves when they don't really believe in God or anything spiritual, but are open to the concept, as long as it doesn't include the commitment and sacrifice associated with organized religion.
It throws down the gauntlet to people who feel like they believe in something, but don't really know what that is.
You claim to be able to choose whether or not to believe in something you know?!?? Really?
Those who don't believe in God, or in Jesus as God, really have no reason to accept «God says it's sin in the Bible» as a reason to not do something.
This really should serve as something of a wake - up call to those who believe in gods.
I was brought up a Catholic and had no problem believing in God — I remember going forward for prayer and thinking: «If this is something good, I really don't want to miss it.»
Kant thought that a thoroughly thoughtful ethical person who disbelieved in God was a fool, because he was believing in something that was not really believable or worthwhile.
When you say something to slander someone that obviously has no validity or merit (like Obama believes in nothing) and it really is just an emotional outburst, it actually demonstrates that you just don't have anything negative to say... and then it actually is a compliment.
i hear you david... i'm currently in a ministry where i love the kids but not the other stuff that comes with it... i connect with people but the capacity i work in has me in a building 8 - 9 hours a day... drained, pissed, angry, and fighting to believe that God makes a damn bit of sense having do something i really do nt wan na do... yep, that about sums it up for me... peace
Really knowing the truth is good «in itself,» therefore, although it does not increase the intrinsic value of an experience of believing something to be true.
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