Sentences with phrase «really feeling down»

She really loves cakes and pastries and I really feel down because I don't have any idea about gluten - free foods.
But the guys did their best and they must really feel down right now, but I just could not avoid the above gripes.

Not exact matches

If you're a really close - knit company where people love working for you, and then you sell it to a company that doesn't have the same culture, I feel that you're letting people down.
It's my job to lift up what's really amazing and, not completely neglect, but downsize or turn down the negative stuff, regardless of how I feel.
Because the app automatically adjusts the bike trainer depending on the incline, you feel like you're really pedaling up a mountain, and then you get a nice reward when the trainer eases back and you cruise down to the ocean.
My brother and I can feel the risk we're taking — it's our money we're putting down, and we're doing some really heavy entrepreneurial lifting.
«I always find that whenever something really good is around the corner, that's the time where I feel the most beat down, where I think, This is not going to work.
«It really comes down to personal choice, and what you feel comfortable being surrounded with,» he adds.
It feels amazing to be at a company where I can let my guard down and really be myself.»
Do you feel confident that the banks are being careful in how they are — if they are getting enough down payment, it doesn't really matter.
If employees come down with a cold, have a family emergency or are just feeling stressed in the office, they may take a sick day when it's not really necessary.
That feels to me like where the technology might really make a big difference and both drive down costs and drive up quality pretty dramatically.
Other than the added weight, there really isn't much to separate the 33C and 34C, so it will come down to whichever one feels better in your hand.
Meanwhile, Yusupov had a strange feeling, and went down to check if Rasputin was really dead.
I've been feeling really down, hopeless and somewhat depressed lately.
If someone wants to learn about God, really learn about God, lets spend some time sitting down together in a mature and peaceful setting where we can both chill, not feel threatened and discuss the whole concept.
Speaking during News Hour she said: «Really listen to what your child is saying, whether they're talking about the reason they feel so down and it might be hard to listen to but I think it's really important that we keep listening to our young pReally listen to what your child is saying, whether they're talking about the reason they feel so down and it might be hard to listen to but I think it's really important that we keep listening to our young preally important that we keep listening to our young people.
I know what I believe, I just don't feel like I have to explain most of it to anyone, since really, love is what it all boils down to, and not the romantic or mushy love... love the verb, love the committment, love the question and the answer, love the embodiment.
It is because their clergy really had been given an apparently well - founded hope that they would be able to «cross the Tiber» with their people (possibly under provisions made by Pope John Paul for the reception of whole Anglican parishes in America): and because of the sense of massive betrayal they felt when some of our bishops confronted Cardinal Hume, who had originally been inclined to respond positively, and forced him to back down.
It takes me a while to get in touch with what I'm really feeling deep down inside.
Hey jeff, I have definitely been down a similar road of having conflicting thoughts to what I really feel.
When I feel down about his diagnosis, he always lifts me up and reminds me that we have the present and that is all we really need.
I try to coin words that don't exist and craft sentences to explain how it feels when I look at the curve of my daughter's cheek while she nurses at my breast or how I learned to pray by doing laundry or how dignity is overrated and how the Holy Spirit feels like a bracing cold wind to me and how you only really learn that when you have nothing left or how I believe in a God who climbs down into the obscurity and calls us beloved but I keep coming up with nothing much.
It throws down the gauntlet to people who feel like they believe in something, but don't really know what that is.
And for those who feel bogged down by the seemingly endless debates about women in the Church, it offers a fresh, grace - filled take on what the Bible really says about women.
«I'm a speech and language therapist and I'd done some work in a special needs school and I felt really drawn to children with Down's syndrome.
It feels as if the world is burning down and we feel powerless to help and so we grieve and we get angry and we post things on Facebook, we march and we protest and we gather and we tell politicians what the problem really is, we watch the news and we cry and yell about things and then we look around our daily lives and wonder, am I doing enough to fix it?
I really do feel kind of bad for being a downer... I tend to see things through depression - colored lenses much of the time, comes with my condition.
Highlights for me included Chapter 2 («Turtles All the Way Down»), in which Jason manages to use a strange blend of Stephen Hawking and Dr. Suess to engage readers in a really helpful dissection of presuppositional apologetics, Chapter 4 («The Weight of Absence»), which beautifully illustrates the fear and emptiness that comes from not feeling God's presence as often or as keenly as other people seem to, and Chapter 5 («Reverse Bricklaying»), which describes Jason's struggles with prayer and the comfort he finds in traditional liturgy.
The point at which communication frequently breaks down is not in the speaking or the listening, per se, but in failing to check frequently to see if one really hears and understands what the other means, feels, and intends.
«I think what it really came down to was, I felt that what I was doing was right,» said MacDonald, who said he wasn't expecting the backlash.
As woman you subconsiously feel guilty for not fitting that role and it can really wear a soul down.
When that happens to me I typically want to hunt the person down and punch them in the throat... not the most Christ - like way to go about conflict resolution, I know... your approach is definately better... but punching them in the throat feels really good.
Have you ever started to scroll through your feed only to feel really crappy about yourself once you set your phone down?
I'm making this tonight, but I really hate all things licorice - tasting (seriously, I even hate fennel), so I plan to omit the star anise since I don't want to waste time hunting down something that I have a feeling I'm not going to like... so I guess it'll be a little less authentic, but oh well.
In fact, I'm even having flashbacks to the Crab Hushpuppies in Down South Paleo and feeling really solid about this commitment.
Even though I grew up in Boston, I've always felt like I'm a Southern girl at heart due to my mom's Texas roots and all the time I've spent down there, so I'm really excited that we're moving to Tennessee next month.
I have really low blood pressure and have often felt uncontrollably weak, where I begin seeing stars and am forced to sit down and avoid the next posture.
It really fits the bill for breakfast in that you have that full, nourished feeling but, just like a cold smoothie, you don't feel weighted down starting your day!
On the down side, I can NEVER find huckleberries around here and I really feel like I am missing out.
I really feel for those women who are suffering so badly that they can't keep anything down.
Since my elimination diet, I haven't really had sugar and I've felt better because of it - less drowsy, my cravings have gone way down, and haven't had any headaches or that «foggy» feeling I would experience after having sugar.
But for those of us who really feel our best when some raw veg makes it's way down our gullet, I offer the following suggestions: Add a warm, cooked vegetable to your raw veg salad.
They were really thin and they didn't look super fresh... But we ate them, and felt very unimpressed and let down.
Mellissa — My BFF got me started 2 years ago on LC - i've been up and down — my weakness is good beer and Rye — SO to stay strong I started really looking for easy things — I had tried the Keto, but found myself just feeling always yucky - so I'm doing 30g — a few weeks ago I found this smoothie and i am in LOVE I actually bag up all my ingredients and freeze them (no greens) so all I have to do is pull and blend I put about 10oz in a shaker bottle with protein powder and Chia seeds.
I literally woke up feeling really weird and almost went down just to check we still had an oven.
I feel like those really good chili recipes, passed down from family members are pretty vague, and a lot of it is just adding to taste.
I mean, hell, if you are really feeling muy autentico you could go ahead and make guacamole, Spanish rice, and maybe even a margarita or two — you will need something to wash this all down with after all.
I used 6 chipotle peppers in this recipe, but I enjoy really spicy food, so feel free to tone it down a bit to your liking.
You will feel like nothing is really happening but be patient, and if your food processor is overheating turn it off for a few minutes and let it cool down.
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