Sentences with phrase «really great life»

Then, we will help you find a really great life insurance policy — one that's right for you!
Further, some of those really great life insurance companies may be better for some people than for others.
In fact, you may get blinded by the whole credit union angle — feeling they are the best for you when they may not be — and miss out on some really great life insurance products offered by other life insurance companies.
«If this was my job,» he says with unblinking resolve, «then that would be a really great life
Portland is such a fun city with so much to offer — there are amazing restaurants in the Pearl District and really great live music downtown (including the best Spanish coffee you've ever tasted at Huber's).
Some of them are making a really great living.

Not exact matches

«I've got to really inspire people to give their lives to something greater that are interested in legacy and making history as one of the greatest world problems is solved,» says Harrison.
You're talking about the fourth - largest NHL market in America, growing like crazy, a very desirable place to live, great climate and really always been the anchor of the NHL's southern market strategy.
It just happens to be that we're great at building software and we're really passionate about improving the lives of the sales professional.
But consider the reality of how much money you'll really need to accumulate to enjoy a decent standard of living in retirement — one equal to or greater than your lifestyle while working.
«I actually go and incorporate a lot of what our guests say into my own life and it really has been, for me, a great practice in fine - tuning my own finances.»
«I'm really excited to start experimenting with it to see if it has the legs to be another great spot for cool stuff to live,» he said.
We want to make amazing things that really have a great impact, even beyond product efficacy, but really in your day, in your life.
Whether you're looking to renovate your entire place or just add a new statement piece to the living room, now is a really great time to take advantage of West Elm's big sale.
«The really great financial advisers work with clients on «What's your life for?»
I think coming back to what your goals are — and saying we could see a 10 - 20 % market drop — if that doesn't change your day - to - day life, and the upside is much greater; I think that's where we have to come back to and focus on what it actually means to you to see some market volatility and if it really is a problem.
«While these are really great points, what we should do is listen to what our clients want out of life and then provide advice that helps them meet their goals,» Lynch said.
• What It's Really Like to Have a Trust Fund (Wall Street Journal) • Russia's greatest Ponzi mastermind is dead, but his legacy lives on in the crypto world (Quartz) • Wall Street Job Exodus Grows as AllianceBernstein Move Leaks (Bloomberg) see also How Bad Is the Labor Shortage?
[01:10] Introduction [02:45] James welcomes Tony to the podcast [03:35] Tony's leap year birthday [04:15] Unshakeable delivers the specific facts you need to know [04:45] What James learned from Unshakeable [05:25] Most people panic when the stock market drops [05:45] Getting rid of your fear of investing [06:15] Last January was the worst opening, but it was a correction [06:45] You are losing money when you sell on corrections [06:55] Bear markets come every 5 years on average [07:10] The greatest opportunity for a millennial [07:40] Waiting for corrections to invest [08:05] Warren Buffet's advice for investors [08:55] If you miss the top 10 trading days a year... [09:25] Three different investor scenarios over a 20 year period [10:40] The best trading days come after the worst [11:45] Investing in the current world [12:05] What Clinton and Bush think of the current situation [12:45] The office is far bigger than the occupant [13:35] Information helps reduce fear [14:25] James's story of the billionaire upset over another's wealth [14:45] What money really is [15:05] The story of Adolphe Merkle [16:05] The story of Chuck Feeney [16:55] The importance of the right mindset [17:15] What fuels Tony [19:15] Find something you care about more than yourself [20:25] Make your mission to surround yourself with the right people [21:25] Suffering made Tony hungry for more [23:25] By feeding his mind, Tony found strength [24:15] Great ideas don't interrupt you, you have to pursue them [25:05] Never - ending hunger is what matters [25:25] Richard Branson is the epitome of hunger and drive [25:40] Hunger is the common denominator [26:30] What you can do starting right now [26:55] Success leaves clues [28:10] What it means to take massive action [28:30] Taking action commits you to following through [29:40] If you do nothing you'll learn nothing [30:20] There must be an emotional purpose behind what you're doing [30:40] How does Tony ignite creativity in his own life [32:00] «How is not as important as «why» [32:40] What and why unleash the psyche [33:25] Breaking the habit of focusing on «how» [35:50] Deep Practice [35:10] Your desired outcome will determine your action [36:00] The difference between «what» and «why» [37:00] Learning how to chunk and group [37:40] Don't mistake movement for achievement [38:30] Tony doesn't negotiate with his mind [39:30] Change your thoughts and change your biochemistry [40:00] The bad habit of being stressed [40:40] Beautiful and suffering states [41:50] The most important decision is to live in a beautiful state no matter what [42:40] Consciously decide to take yourself out of suffering [43:40] Focus on appreciation, joy and love [44:30] Step out of suffering and find the solution [45:00] Dealing with mercury poisoning [45:40] Tony's process for stepping out of suffering [46:10] Stop identifying with thoughts — they aren't yours [47:40] Trade your expectations for appreciation [50:00] The key to life — gratitude [51:40] What is freedom for you?
Choosing a place to retire... or a place to really live — better than you ever expected — shouldn't just be about the low cost of living or the great healthcare or even about the gorgeous scenery and the great climate.
this is a great post.my partner and i [do nt believe in marriage] have lived together for a couple years and are completely open about money, debt & finances.we both have separate personal and business accounts, but share an account and money.we have been open since day 1 and it works really well for us.
Munger is a great investor and a really smart, wise old guy; «I have said that in my whole life, I have known no wise person over a broad subject matter area who didn't read all the time - none, zero.
Maybe so... but either way, those liberals burying all those dinosauer bones, sometimes really really deep (and close to where Satan lives), is one of the great accomplishments (and scams) of all time.
my greatest concern is this «new teaching» on cussing is that I don't see it throughout the life, ministry or teachings of Jesus or any of the disciples or really any man God uses in the word... What I do hear Him say is that we will be «judged by every careless word» and that's not legalism, that's red letter.
I've known some really great people in my life that happen to be Jewish.
If you are still living in Leviticus times, I got news for ya: the world is round, women can do math and own property, slavery is bad and we made this really hard metal called «steel» that's great for all sorts of things.
You however don't see your own hypocrisy in greater depth when you say that the bible was deliberately written to be sacred and holy, without ANY sourcing and you take the word of people who lived a really long time ago who also can not provide you with anything more than «eye - witness accounts» which have undoubtedly been changed, tweaked or even just falsly made up in order to cement their point.
If your church really is true, and I decide after my death that I was in error all my life and that the Flying Spaghetti Monster church was right all along, you will have done me a great service.
It really shouldn't affect all humans any more than something your great, great, great, great, great grandfather did should affect your life, but who ever said that God's sense of «justice» was ever fair, right?
Great post, and the really disproportionate thing about it is this is all done using the «law» demanding the tithe when not one New Testament book endorses this model (The reference in Hebrews was not to establish tithe as it was to establish Jesus in a different order, and his comments in the gospels was to people living under the law)... how is it that no other «law» is preached with the same force and conviction as tithing?
Instead, when they wanted to know my three greatest sins, what they really wanted was three areas of my life in which I constantly struggled with sin.
... and, it's no one person or post or thing, and its not that I have all the answers, or that I live my beliefs the way that I aspire to... I just see lots of really great - hearted people tying themselves in knots, feeling shame and guilt and depression and anger... and at times it seems it is because they are trying to differentiate between seas and lakes and rivers and oceans... instead of just going for a swim.
Meaning no disrespect to any religion, do you really think God created man to simply spend his entire life doing nothing but telling Him how great He is?
While it is manifestly true that there is a great faith which has long been the secret of life in Western man, does not the ordinary church, whether in New York, Middletown, or Gopher Prairie, provide such a caricature of this faith that it is really a joke?
«In the greatest pain and suffering of our life is when we really understand that the joy actually does run out,» my pastor said.
«The citizens conceded willingly: one for the great reverence and esteem that he had [for the friars] because of their virtue and the strictness in which they lived and the rigor of their religion; the other because each one really wanted to hear what it was that... would pertain to them.»
It doesn't change the message he left behind of love and forgiveness, there have been many great wise men throughout the world and history not all of them were perfect and Jesus lived as a man among us I am sure he made mistakes and learned what was important to teach his followers what really mattered.
And, let us be frank: is it really so certain that formerly, when religion and the Church played a greater part in public life, men really had more true faith, hope and charity, which, after all, are more important than anything else?
-- not to neglect all the other great points, but really, this is what's it's all about, living a Godly life with balance.
Even one of the greatest minds to ever live on this planet said religion is childish and if you stop to think about it, you just might realize how stupid and ignorant you really are???
And that's really the sad part... if you just accept them as the stories they are... of humans trying to understand what this life is all about and making answers to fit their environment and circ.umstances, then the contradictions simply confirm just how wonderfully human we are... There are some great stories.
If you really enquire about God, not with mere curiosity, not, as it were, like a spiritual stamp - collector, but as an anxious seeker, distressed in heart, anguished by the possibility that God might not exist and hence all life be vanity and one great madness — if you ask in such a mood as the man who asks the doctor, «Tell me, will my wife live or will she die?»
This is a great chapter for all the pastors and church leaders and Christians out there who like to talk and write and teach a lot about grace, but don't really show grace in their lives, ministries, and churches.
On the one hand, Victor Lowe (who was close by towards the end of Whitehead's life, after all) represents those who held that Bergson and Whitehead really are very different in viewpoint, while F. S. C. Northrop represents those who held that Bergson's influence on Whitehead was so great that it can hardly be exaggerated.29
Obviously one would feel great admiration and love, would really believe that Jesus is the most magnificent person who has ever lived.
More impressively still, most of the papers were animated by the strong possibility that these great thinkers really know what they're talking about and that they have really learned much about who they are and our political life from reading them.
Losing 10 pounds and reading a book a week sound like great goals, but are we really focusing on the things that will make lasting positive change in our lives?
We could be really great stewards of our resources — if we only had a month to live.
But what Jesus meant was that only he who loses himself in devotion to something greater than himself really lives.
Living in tension appears to be an art... or perhaps a «learned taste» (like coffee)... but it is not really a great tension, it is just being willing to live with uncertainty, and to give room for others.
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