Sentences with phrase «sense out of that moment»

Then the audience goes on and completes it, they create a forestory and an afterstory to try to make sense out of that moment

Not exact matches

Hundreds of students at the school, just over the county line from the site of last week's school shooting, came together Tuesday morning for a moment of silence and to make sense of the deadly assault carried out by a former Marjory Stoneman Douglas student.
I had my moments of disconnect: sitting out the Eucharist because I'm not Catholic, hearing the gospel reduced to salvation from hell, welcomes that felt patronizing from people who have been praying that I come to my senses and go back to believing, behaving, and voting just like them.
We need only recall those moments in time of war when, wrested out of ourselves by the force of a collective passion, we have a sense of rising to a higher level of human existence.
Tommy God has already forgiven you for your sin the moment you asked Jesus into your life and confessed him as Lord.From that point he paid for your sin in full past present future.It is not sin that stops us from being with the Lord so you are saved.The problem you are experiencing is the battle for your life in the here and now satan is out to destroy you and he knows our weaknesses.If you are honest there were already issues in your life that you struggled with and never got the victory over.So where do you go from here as i found myself in the same situation i was a christian but walking according to the flesh.God does nt change his mind he always loves us but because of our choices we distance ourselves from God.The issue is that we like sin thats our wicked hearts and to be fair we cant change our nature only Christ can do that our old nature must be crucified with Christ.The stumbling block is our pride we have to admit that we cant do it For me that was terribly difficult i was so independent thinking i could do anything but the truth was a made a real mess of things.I sense you are at a crossroads and are feeling desperate and confused.So as a brother in the Lord you need to confess your sin to God and tell him that you are weak -LCB- we all are -RCB- and that you cant do it in your strength -LCB- None of us can -RCB- but ask him to send the holy spirit to help you deal with the temptations and the sin that you struggle with and he will help you to change your life he will empower you as he did me.Rather than look at who you are look to Christ and walk in him and he will make you a new man and sin will not have dominion over you.Jesus came to set us free from bondage.Having once been a slave to sin i know what it is like to have been set free by the power of God and that is what Christ is offering you today.All it takes is a desire to change or repent and admit we cant do it and trust him to give you the strength to walk in him regards brentnz
Both of the teams behind the films handled the moment with graciousness and good senses of humor, despite all of the awkwardness and confusion playing out on live TV.
Nor do I intend merely to refer to the temporal fact that Christ's appearing marks the moment when Christianity emerged out of Judaism, Jesus Christ is the center in a more profound and thoroughgoing sense.
So in view of this fact it is a contradiction to require him to speak, unless one would have him out of the paradox again, in such a sense that at the last moment he suspends it, whereby he ceases to be Abraham and annuls all that went before.
What is briefly suggested here has to be sure no application to Abraham in case one might think it possible to find out by analogy an appropriate word for Abraham to end with, but it does apply to this extent, that one thereby perceives how necessary it is that Abraham at the last moment must carry himself through, must not silently draw the knife, but must have a word to say, since as the father of faith he has absolute significance in a spiritual sense.
Each one has its own meaning in a brief and ephemeral sense, but meaning in the ordinary sense is built up out of patterns of sense which emerge moment by moment in the course of a myriad of microevents happening and vanishing and passing on the meaning they briefly achieve.
You get a sense EcoLogic Solutions Inc. is a different type of chemical company the moment you walk into its Brooklyn Navy Yard headquarters and see walls made out of plants and furniture fashioned from old doors and reclaimed materials.
This is very interesting.I look at the number of striking options in our team and i wonder how Wenger will be signing a cf.However as i keep saying a cf is a need not a want.And needs are more important than wants.We have needed a World class cf since Robin Van P. Left.Just look at the feeling you get when you have a world class goalkeeper e.g Cech in the team.You feel relieved you know why?Its because the goalkeeper is very reliable, very talented and consistent.Imagine the feeling you would have when having a world class cf in the team.You feel very relieved you know why?its because the cf is very consistent, is super talented, will at most times finish off chances and will mostly create moments of magic.Arsenal need a world class cf so as to have that sense of reliability and to not put too much pressure on the midfield to always create chances for them.We neeed that consistency infront of goal to excel.Right now arsenal's centre forwards are very inconsistent, unreliable at most times and are not very clinical.We need a world class striker so that at least if the team is not performing he can take control and do something out of nothing.You need to understand the benefits of having a world class cf its not just about goals or talent but about being a leader of the attack, a strong scoring mentality and also the will to be consistent.World class cf's give your attack the ish factor.
Exciting game to watch, obviously some great moments and it's hard to critique too much when the 3 points are achieved because common sense is oftentimes thrown out the window, as witnessed by the vast majority of posts
After reading the following on apple news, I like the boys sense of occasion and focus on what is important — TENNIS STAR»S BIZARRE LACAZETTE CELEBRATION Moments after being knocked out of Wimbledon, James Ward» smind was focused on the latest Arsenal transfer news during his press conference.
There was greater sense of fluency to their thinking, their feet and their movement as they brought the best out of themselves and each other in the first half and the final moments of the game.
«This legislation will help refocus our priorities in this important moment where they should be — common sense efforts to keep guns out of schools and out of dangerous hands.»
One of the things that we need to get out of this system in order to really get a sense of what [will] work is that incredibly distorting set of subsidies that at the moment send all kinds of bad signals about what we should be doing.
Here's an exercise from Morgenstern that still gets you in the moment and out of your head: As you stroll, engage your senses.
We were flying from London to Amsterdam and as I was sitting there in my seat, I had a moment where I completely zoned out with a deep sense of gratitude.
When the answer is shopping, it means you can go out, pick something up and bring it home, «it gives you sort of a false sense of control in the moment,» she adds.
Fights tend to bring out all sorts of powerful emotions that can short out your sense of «right and wrong» and make it feel like you're locked in a moment of life - or - death verbal combat.
Check it out if only to get a sense of what these beautiful transitory moments are like and how they can go, so that you'll know what you'll want to do when you're in the middle of one.
There were some times I thought characters were out of character, but thinking about it more, some of these moments make sense.
It's a larky hoot in its best moments, and it has a refreshingly unforced sense of fun that buoys the scenes that are straight out of Lame Movie Laffs 101.
Seemingly out of their elements, Cliff and Cydney make the classic mistake of befriending the wrong people, a thriller staple, but the filmmaker never goes on automatic pilot; he composes with soft focus photography to give a sense of ambiguity at key moments whenever both couples are within the same frame.
At crucial moments, long lenses narrow the spectator's focus to both breathtaking and unsettling effect, and near the end all sense of focus is thrown out of the window.
One that stands out involves Susan looking for an escaped bug under a table, and, as she gets up, she passes a poster of a giant spider, framed so that it looks like it's dropped down behind her — despite that description, it's a subtle moment that isn't even played as a jump scare, but is effective nonetheless and indicative of a dark sense of humour.
Where other rom - coms would settle for over-the-top antics, that moment is just one of the examples of the movie's ability to create fully fleshed - out characters with a real sense of agency.
But just like Shatner himself, its sense of humour and fact that it doesn't take itself remotely seriously make for a lot of kitsch entertainment value and a few genuinely laugh out loud moments.
Mullick and Tariq use a wide range of cinematic techniques to convey the tenuous environment in which their subjects find themselves: the uneasy sense of oasis the runaways feel at one of the Edhi Foundation's clinics and those occasional moments where youths such as Omar lash out, puncturing the establishment's haven - like feeling.
But I'd love to believe that the L.A. critics were less impressed by those histrionics than by her lovely rapport with Bridges in moments of comparative repose, when the two of them are just hanging out together and trying to make sense of the fact that they're still alive.
Ultimately, The Nice Guys gets by on the strength of the two leads and a handful of laugh - out - loud moments that are unfortunately few and far between, although a little bit of editing and re-working of the script could have made all the difference, making it tighter where it gets a bit flabby and keeping the momentum going because, unlike Lethal Weapon, there is the sense that Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling have had to work a little bit harder than Mel Gibson and Danny Glover to get that spark going between them.
There's an almost childlike sense of discovery to these moments — the spark of temptation, the surprised joy of figuring out or getting something, the need to keep feeling these sensations.
Certainly when one comes out of the film, it's with a renewed sense of living and a longing to make the most of every moment.
I know what Capcom has done for the game, I've tried out what Ultra now offers players, and I have a sense for how a number of its elements sit as of this moment.
Presumably this is to create a sense of in - the - moment urgency, but it feels like something ripped out of a»90s movie about the Internet (or the latest Katy Perry video).
Be on the lookout for a comically out - of - nowhere moment of forced «animosity» between Johnny and Ben at the very end, which makes absolutely no sense because there's been absolutely no animosity between them throughout the entirety of the film.
There's no real sense in having big, action - packed moments that can't be outdone in the next entry, so Yates and Kloves are able to get the smaller stuff out of the way.
As with Lanthimos» previous films, the story playing out in The Killing of a Sacred Deer takes its time even if the overall sense of discomfort can be felt from the film's initial opening moments.
(We sense all of this the first moment we meet him, pulling staples out of his head against his doctor's wishes.)
Additionally, much of the structure of the film focusses our attention on one moment, and without wanting to spoil things, one can only say, well, sure... There is also one scene when all common sense is thrown out the window, and one can only wonder how it got past the many people who would have had to have signed off on its inclusion.
But K keeps arguing with his accusers, protesting his innocence (which is clearly irrelevant) and trying to make sense out of a situation that is defiantly senseless from first moment to last.
The only real sense of danger is when carrying an egg out of a nest, as you will lose it if defeated at that moment.
His girlfriend (Kathryn Hahn) kicks him out of his home (That she winds up with a guy (T.J. Miller) who's almost as nice as Ned only makes sense, and the two men's interactions — polite duels of the naïve — provide some of the film's funnier moments).
Editor Christopher Tellefsen (Assassin's Creed) further trims any fat in the narrative to maintain a steady sense of pacing throughout the movie's short runtime, thus ensuring that the slower moments never drag and that the movie's plot contrivances (naturally, there are some) don't stick out too much along the way.
The lack of physical evidence of Christine's life may begin as a source of frustration for Kate on a purely professional level, but as she learns more, interviewing friends and coworkers, getting even a tangential sense of what might have driven Christine to her decision (with many of those moments eventually acted out in wonderfully campy excerpts from this nonexistent film), she learns that the exploitation of media and its desire to show the worst of society, offering the most broken aspects of the world to the altar of ratings (this of course being the aspect of the story that helped birth Network) hasn't changed much from the 70's to the modern day.
The comments come from current Teachers, Teaching Assistants, SEND co-ordinators, heads of house, inclusion managers and Form Group Tutors...: We used this in small groups in our new class every morning for a week, what a great start, everyone is still buzzing... Builds a strong sense of belonging to something special... your class... Encourages differences and similarities to recognised and valued... Hugely improves our efforts at inclusion... The students quickly came out of their shells and are blossoming... Reveals much of the nature of the students... Gets us buzzing as a group... Encourages participants to take part in their own game and go and find things out from others... brilliant ice breaker game... Helped to resolve a huge problem we had in getting students to gel... Switches the students brains on from the moment go... Helps to break down various barriers... Gives a big boost to developing important life skills... This gives a great insight and a fantastic array of examples, clues and hints as to the characters of each individual in the group... Helps participants learn some things about themselves... Helps participants learn some things about others... Helps you learn about the participants (you can be a player as well on some occasions)... Makes it easy to develop class rules of fairness and cooperation... Builds a sense of purpose... Creates a sense of community and togetherness... Brilliant, just brilliant... our school is buzzing...
Instead of creating the awe - inspiring moments, Andrea seems to stick to the sense of practicality to roll out the features that will be useful for their consumers.
And a bit of a head - slap moment for me — when you laid out how the success of a traditionally - published book must depend upon multiple uncoordinated publishers and divisions who are each separately pursuing their own distinct print - first marketing strategy in each territory, the rarity of traditionally - published international bestsellers makes perfect sense.
Would you like to love with a dog that has a fair sense of humor and can be appropriately sheepish when caught out in embarrassing moments?
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