Sentences with phrase «really talk to these women»

Not exact matches

I was homeschooled, I went to college when I was 16, as a woman I'm really interested in the subjects I talk about, which are video games and things that aren't «traditionally» female.
If most of the people you talked with are 30 - something women, but you really want to work with 40 - something women, that's okay.
However, if Uncle Mike thinks the new Tay Tay album is bad because women are getting too uppity these days and really need to lay off all the talk about equality, that opinion could very well be doing damage to communities, families and even Uncle Mike's own soul.
The lyrics do not really sound like «blurred lines of consent» or «rape culture» to me — he clearly talks about waiting for the woman to take an interest.
They talk about their families because that is what really matters in a person's life... that is thier true legacy and their only real immortality... most people, I am fairly sure, know deep down that god is a fairy tale, a cushion, and that death is truly the end... what this very excellent young woman heard from these dying people makes perfect sense... death is a time to end the bs and look at and reflect upon what was real and important in that individual's life
I wish I could talk to Paul and find out what he really meant by his «women must not teach men» teaching.
For all the talk of justice and of opportunities, it doesn't really help young men and women who want to marry and have families - in other words, to ensure the future of the human race in stability and affection.
I suspected I'd get a little pushback from fellow Christians who hold a complementarian perspective on gender, (a position that requires women to submit to male leadership in the home and church, and often appeals to «biblical womanhood» for support), but I had hoped — perhaps naively — that the book would generate a vigorous, healthy debate about things like the Greco Roman household codes found in the epistles of Peter and Paul, about the meaning of the Hebrew word ezer or the Greek word for deacon, about the Paul's line of argumentation in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 11, about our hermeneutical presuppositions and how they are influenced by our own culture, and about what we really mean when we talk about «biblical womanhood» — all issues I address quite seriously in the book, but which have yet to be engaged by complementarian critics.
I really don't want to talk about church groups that empower women and young girls in this, my seeming multi-faceted rant.
When a woman tries to call her family to meals and they are so bent on their own pursuits that they do not come, or tries to correct a child who pays no attention, or talks into the telephone to discover suddenly that she has been cut off or that the other party has hung up the receiver, she is not really speaking to anyone.
However, Nikki Haley deflected that by saying «what women really want to talk about is the economy.»
I don't remember how, but we started talking, and that's when I found about the really cool concept of Mama Glow — a lifestyle website and movement that educates and inspires women about embracing our own radiant energy through a holistic approach to life, during pregnancy and beyond.
If you actually talk to old American women who're widowed or divorced, they're generally pretty okay with being on their own — because they aren't really on their own.
Knowing that I could find someone to «talk» with when nursing at 3 am was in and of itself invaluable — to feel part of a community of women who not only can relate to me but are so willing to provide up - to - the - minute information and opinions about everything from fevers to poop to teething necklaces, really helped me.
RACHEL JACKSON: I... You know, for me the biggest things that I hear from my... all my customers, and all the women that I talk too, the most effective things are to really watch for those signs of boredom, or attention, you know, wanting attention.
So there aren't a lot of opportunities that women are getting to really talk extensively with their doctors about how they are feeling and handling life after a baby.
No woman really wants to talk to her bosses about her breasts, any more than bosses really want to hear it.
I read a great article by an MD that talks about how doctors are afraid to really educate women on the benefits of breastfeeding because they don't want to make moms feel guilty.
If you sit and talk with any woman that really wanted to breastfeed, you can hear the sadness in her story.
«When I have my son in August, I want more clips of me talking to camera while I'm having contractions — I really want to give other women an insight into what it's like.
Recently, I've talked with several Christian parents who really want their children to grow into godly young men and women.
You'll end up drinking some coffee with some women you realize you don't ever want to talk to again, but if you put yourself out there enough, you'll eventually find a few people you really like.
The fortunate, actually, was that the Flamingo Hilton - she started Tweeting about it - and they actually met with her and were really, really nice about the whole thing and are thinking about bringing her back to do training for their employees - Ya, they stepped it up, a lot more than Hollister did -[Laughter] to talk about the laws and how women are allowed to breast feed in public.
I feel that women and their partners do much better with privacy and intimacy during the birth process and that, my role is to sometimes protect that privacy and intimacy first of all by educating them that that might be really important and to talk about you know the effect both positive and negative about um, support during that time can be or even just letting people know hey, we're in labour, the Facebook kind of thing but you know keep it quiet, keep it down, don't fritter the energy away by drawing other people to it or drawing the expectation that something's happening rather than just letting something evolve... I think guarding the space by keeping the space as calm and quiet and private as possible is key and giving people tools to do that during the prenatal time to deal with over eager family members or friends.
I mean basically I really wanted to find out what was in people's heads and it's not always women are not always able to talk as confidently as your panel are.
And this whole idea that a woman needs peace and tranquility in order to labor successfully... Aside from all of the women who've given birth in the exact opposite circumstances, I'm really curious as to whether we're supposed to be «Birth Warriors» or wilting lilies whose labor could stop if somebody talks too loudly, as if the baby is a souffle that could fall if a door is slammed.
On a couple of occasions, as a young adult, I had the chance to talk with women who had experienced homebirth and without really thinking about it I just always assumed that homebirth would be the natural route for me.
All of these women were talking about cloth diapers and babies and REALLY personal confessions and strange terms that had no meaning to me, and it was scary.
«The whole idea of «male doctor talks to women» is really over,» she said.
Also, you blame the poor OB for talking to the woman instead of to the midwife - hello?!! Doctors really can't win, can they?
«There is an absolute crisis of care in London and it's really amazing to me that the other candidates do not talk more about this, because nothing is a bigger barrier to women being able to work than affordable childcare,» she says.
Davies has previously suggested «feminsist zealots really do want women to have their cake and eat it» and in December he spoke for over an hour in an effort to talk out a backbench bill calling on the government to ratify an international treaty on domestic violence.
«Well I actually got really excited when I heard Speaker Boehner talking about «Plan B» because I thought finally they've made progress on a really important women's health issue that I've been working on,» she said at a press conference with Senate Democrats, referring to the emergency contraceptive, «Plan B.»
H.H.: You know, when I was going around the country, on the Pink Bus, talking specifically to women, so often they would say «We've got one child, we'd really like to have another but we just can't afford it, what with our home's not big enough and the child care is too expensive», and there is then, they're working hard and then feel that is unfair on other people they they feel that they have bigger families that they would love to have if they were in a position to do that.
I really do think we need to be talking about how we can change a culture so more women will feel they can come forward,» she said.
They feel as though they're not really doing either job particularly well;... a lot of women I talk to nowadays feel that.
I'm really excited to talk to you about that, because this isn't just about women, if you're one of the men that listens to Bulletproof Radio, I believe there's a few more women who listen, than men, believe it or not.
What I think is really interesting, is a lot of what you do is you talk to women about how important testosterone is for them.
Thanks Julie, yea I phoned the public health lab and they passed me through three people because they didn't know what I was talking about, in the end the woman I spoke to said it sounds like they're trying to boost sales, I'm shocked really because the person that posted it has always come across as a responsible buisness person.
It seems most women focus just on lotions and potions to treat their stretch marks, but you really need to go at it holistically, which is why I talk about diet and nutrition first.
PCOS is a women's disease, and so there's not a lot of research about it out there, and people don't really want to talk about it.
It's so very true though that women who are right now in their 50's (and 60's — I'm talking to you, Boomer babe) learned certain habits as young adults and it's really hard to let go of things you've thought about in a certain way for so very long.
«Puberty is a really vulnerable time for a young woman, and the fact that it's not talked about enough can make you feel uncomfortable being the one to bring it up in conversation,» she says.
Sometimes it's easy to forget in my often solitary work life that I actually have a huge community of women who love many of the same things I do, and while there's plenty of back - and - forth on social media, I really valued the chance to talk with some of you in greater detail than an Instagram DM lends itself to.
«We've been watching women over the last few years, talking to our consumers, and we've really seen [them] fuelling the sport and fitness lifestyle overall,» said Amy Montagne, vice president and general manager of Nike Wwomen over the last few years, talking to our consumers, and we've really seen [them] fuelling the sport and fitness lifestyle overall,» said Amy Montagne, vice president and general manager of Nike WomenWomen.
In fact, Lara Intimates is really into body - positivity and they started a series called The Boob Diaries to create a platform to allow women to openly talk about their bodies.
Remember, there are some untrustworthy people out there that are hoping to take advantage of young women, making promises they have no intention of keeping and talking the talk but not really «walking the walk».
I'm looking for a bisexual woman to have fun with and be friends with, id really like to find a woman i can have deep talks with, cuddle with, sleep with, spoil, and be spoiled by (i love to be pampered).
I really love talking to a caring and talkative woman and spend time with her.
Most women really like to talk about themselves and best dating aspects in typical so ask where to meet men and women issues that allow them do this.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z