Sentences with phrase «sad world where»

You live in a sad, sad world where a question can not be a question without an ulterior motive.

Not exact matches

We saw something similar as the corrections of the English translations of the Mass were adopted over a year ago, when bringing the American Church into prayerful unity with the rest of the Catholic world (where «and with your spirit» had never been dropped) was an occasion for high drama and sad, heavy sighs among American Catholics in habitual tension with Rome.
It will be sad for you if the world hears the pope trying to take the discussion to a place where these issues are less inflammatory and you can't follow the dialogue.
This world is flawed and it's terribly sad, but assign blame where blame is due — not on God.
But let me ask you this, what kind of sad world do you live in where you only serve one kind of pie on the biggest of food holidays?!
But that makes me sad and I don't want to live in a world where dinner is a duty, not a blessing.
Regardless of what he said his intention is not to enable the club to compete at the higher levels as he takes cash from the club but adds nothing by way of real investment, He's NOT the only culprit though the rest of the baord are as complicate in this as Silent stan The idea that the author is prpomoting is a great idea if there was any cohesion between the fans groups and someone who had enough capitol to back it up into some action, sadly we live in a world where 80 % of the worlds wealth is controlled by 20 % of the worlds population and silent stan is one of those 20 % he ai nt going anywhere any time soon and thats the sad fact.
In examining postings with hastags of #sadwife, #happywife, #sadhusband and #happyhusband, they discovered that — happy or sad — they represent the same thing: the «performance of an ideal spouse where the inconvenience of everyday chores (laundry, dishes, childcare) and stresses (fiances, marital disputes, familial relationships, resentments) are absent from the rose - tinted world of marital performance on Facebook.»
Most moms do what «sbest for their kids.And yes, there are women out there who legitimately can not bf, so formula is a WONDERFUL choice for them.I exclusively bf both of mine, but think it's okay to ff if you don't have enough milk.there are other situations where i think it's selfish.As for drugs during pregnancy and birth, I had to take 3 doses of medication while pregnant so that I could eat.my morning sickness was so bad I couldn't even keep water down.I made the choice to do that so I didn't starve my unborn child, but I only took what was neccessary to keep something down, and then had no other drugs and plan not to until my son is done bf.And as for the «natural» baby, carcinogens are EVERYWHERE, even in your organic food.in this industrialized world you can not get away from them, and to attack other moms for their choices is a sad statement of your morality and on how your child's persoality is going to turn out.also, having multiple kids is definately more demanding than one.
I am a 45 yr man and it makes me so sad to live in a world where the natural act of rearing a child is so feared.
How sad we live in a world where we have to fear what people think about the most natural thing on earth.
The chancellor said it would be «very sad if we turned our back on world» as he reviewed the Parliamentary vote where MPs declined to back military action in Syria.
It is sad to think that we live in a world where it is important to teach our kids how to defend themselves, but we do.
World where everything is possible, even when everybody says that something is impossible... World where I always run to for salvation when feeling sad or lonely... World where believing in the magic and power of dreams is the only option.
I'm sad we live in a world where this is something we have to worry about.
But what if one day you woke up in a world where you could not be sad?
, Eli Roth to Produce Horror Movie Based on Fake Trailer, Oscar Shortlist for Best Documentary Feature Announced 19:50 — Review: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 52:40 — Trailer Trash: Green Lantern, The Green Hornet, Your Highness, Cowboys & Aliens 1:06:36 — Other Stuff We Watched: Catfish, We Live in Public, Kisses, The Losers, Conan, Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things, The Night of the Hunter, Toy Story 3, The Larry Sanders Show 1:34:00 — Junk Mail: Quidditch World Cup, Movies Overshadowed by Publicity Stunts, My Winnipeg, Movies Too Sad to Watch a Second Time, Spielberg and Tintin, Where is Chian?
This is all funny but predictable in rom com world, when suddenly the action takes a sad, wild left turn and I had no idea where we were headed.
Dawn Patrol takes a hard look at the sad world of bad parenting, a surfing community where parents encourage their sons to sell drugs, seek revenge, and revel in the same misery they find themselves in.
Anchored by Charlize Theron's emotionally raw performance as the fearless Imperator Furiosa, the movie flips the grim «one sad bro - dude wanders the scorched landscape» script of most apocalyptic narratives, instead presenting a vision of a fallen world where equality is still achievable through collaboration, trust, and heaps of scrap metal.
This, coupled with the film's meditations on aging and the simple, sad truth that time passes and people die and cherished worlds decay, is where we get to, leaving behind the Lubitschian hijinks of earlier.
It is indeed a strange thing to feel a little sad at the absence of something that you never had, but where on earth in the real world might we ever encounter such craft, such dedication to beauty, such attention to detail?
But, as Jessica Kiang said in her review from Berlin, «It is indeed a strange thing to feel a little sad at the absence of something that you never had, but where on earth in the real world might we ever encounter such craft, such dedication to beauty, such attention to detail?
I would love to live in a world where teens were naturally as witty as Hazel and Augustus, but after sixteen years of teaching experience I'm sad to say: they're not.
Finally, it is sad that stray dogs ever have to be killed, but to attempt to apply American no - kill philosophy to parts of the world where dogs are suffering as well as threatening human life is unrealistic and harmful.
We live in a world where the next main stream FPS easily sells 1 million copy in the first 24 hours (see: http://www.businessinsider.com/destiny-day-one-sales-500-million-2014-9), it's a sad truth it will need a couple of steam sales to get DOS to the magical 1 million barrier, if it will even ever get there (i think so it will eventually).
I don't argue with focusing on the game; I'm sad that the game appears to be dominating the idea of also creating a world where you can participate and make a contribution, not just ride the rides.
It's sad that as gamers we live in a world where on disc dlc and even simple pre-order bonuses actually look better than what we have now.
First identified in 1984, SAD affects people in various regions of the world where, especially during the winter months, a lack of sunlight can cause depression, loss of energy and sleep deprivation.
Two summers back, here within view of Colorado Springs» Waldo Canyon conflagration, I vividly recall some details: a) a hoisted ember astonishingly re-igniting things across a mile wide mountain lake, breaching the NE perimeter; b) our relative humidity, the day of the blaze, was so low the am weatherman uttering «you night as well say we have none;» c) the flown - in Commander, on camera and perhaps the best mind in all the world on matters such, describing never before witnessed probabilities for live ember re-ignitions, as «perhaps two out of three;» & d) that sad day's all - time record setting mark of 101 F., here @ 6,500 feet + elevations, in that astonishing summer where lower - 48 averages jumped by more than a single degree Fahrenheit in one realm - altering excursion.
Now here is where it gets really interesting (to me, at least, because I've always worked with «discarded» textiles) and actually quite sad — especially for those who consider the ramifications of our actions on the world around us.
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