Not exact matches
One
of my favorite and
simplest things to do to increase my speaker credentials and create social proof is to capture
live testimonials.
Instead, keep
things simple and reduce stress by focusing on the daily process and sticking to your schedule instead
of worrying about big,
life - changing goals.
They're devising new, unimaginably brilliant gadgets, gizmos and apps that do two
things: Make our
lives easier and make us wonder why we never thought
of such a
simple idea in the first place (remember the Chia Pet?).
The
simplest way to think about it is, as consumers, each
of us accesses
things we need for our personal
lives through the internet.
Those and four dozen more sordid facts
of 9 - to - 5
life have been collected in 50
Simple Things Your Business Can Do to Save the Earth (EarthWorks Press, Berkeley, Calif., 1991), a slender paperback enumerating the number
of trees, gallons
of oil, cubic yards
of ozone, and so on, that industry squanders.
«The objective
of the Internet
of Things is where
life gets
simpler — people get more but do less.»
I've written about financial checklists before, and the concept is
simple: a checklist is a list
of dumb, obvious
things that you know you're supposed to do, but in the hustle and bustle
of real
life, you will forget one or more
of them.
Once you get started on this journey
of self - education, you'll be amazed at what you learn and how
simple things can have a powerful impact on your overall success in
life.
Based on the
simplest measures that people calculate care,
life expectancy, those kind
of things, there's no demonstrable difference, and people can certainly argue on the margin.
When you see a lot
of theory, you end up discovering that everything good is generally
simpler than the more complicated
things, and this also affected me for the rest
of my
life» Jorge Paulo Lemann
I just mentioned tonight to my apartment mate, that it seems bizaar that any number
of simple things, like «love one another», «do no harm», «material riches seldom bring fufillment», «a
life of moderation is usually the healthy choice»....
And when you mention the topic
of being real or being on a journey you get a response, «I think we all find in the message
of Jesus the most beautiful, most compelling way to
live and the endless challenge is all the
things that get attached to this beautiful,
simple, revolutionary message and you have to just strip it away.
I think I'm too
simple in my thinking that; if you don't like it, DO N'T WATCH... if you don't agree with it, DO N'T CHOOSE TO
LIVE YOUR LIFE THAT WAY... Seems like a very simplistic way of thinking, but I have personal opinions on EVERYTHING, but I don't force others to live their lives according to my moral fiber... i don't judge people for living their lives the way that makes them happy... And i believe that IGNORANCE is the basis for INTOLERANCE... people are famous for HATING things that they don't understand... again, if it MORALLY offends you, don't read stories on things that you don't agree with, don't watch shows that portray choices that you don't agree with... The Brown family seems close knit, almost like extended family living under one roof... the kids work together and get along much better than a lot of «mainstream» households i se
LIVE YOUR
LIFE THAT WAY... Seems like a very simplistic way
of thinking, but I have personal opinions on EVERYTHING, but I don't force others to
live their lives according to my moral fiber... i don't judge people for living their lives the way that makes them happy... And i believe that IGNORANCE is the basis for INTOLERANCE... people are famous for HATING things that they don't understand... again, if it MORALLY offends you, don't read stories on things that you don't agree with, don't watch shows that portray choices that you don't agree with... The Brown family seems close knit, almost like extended family living under one roof... the kids work together and get along much better than a lot of «mainstream» households i se
live their
lives according to my moral fiber... i don't judge people for
living their
lives the way that makes them happy... And i believe that IGNORANCE is the basis for INTOLERANCE... people are famous for HATING
things that they don't understand... again, if it MORALLY offends you, don't read stories on
things that you don't agree with, don't watch shows that portray choices that you don't agree with... The Brown family seems close knit, almost like extended family
living under one roof... the kids work together and get along much better than a lot
of «mainstream» households i see...
Lewis spoke frequently and with great fondness about the
simple pleasures
of his academic
life — friends, books, nature — so it's easy to gloss over these
thing as just that:
simple pleasures.
If he can so lose himself in the service
of the spirit that it never occurs to him to take care for meat and drink; if he is certain that want will not distract him, and that distress will not confound for him the structure
of his
life, and teach him to rue that he did not first master the
simple things before he presumed to understand more — then he may indeed venture, and his greatness will be more glorious than the serene security
of the lilies
of the field.
In this journey lies a renewal
of the wonder and sanctity
of everyday experience, a recovery
of that miraculous, uncommon commonplaceness
of things, and a return to the
simple basics
of life.
I'll even offer observations - humans have manipulated existing organisms dna, created new virus and bacteria, clone animals, and attempt to create new animals - yet
simple minded folks still reject the idea that another more intelligent creature might have done the same
thing and created
life on earth in the same fashion while at the same time acknowledging that there is a strong likelihood
of other
life existing in this universe - talk about being dumbed down and arrogant.
The question, therefore, is not whether classification is a good
thing, but whether we are about to return to the
simpler view
of life that existed in the 1930s, when pictures that lowered «moral standards
of those who see them» were forbidden.
If it does not stand up to the questions
of a 6 year old, it is likely not worth much... the rest
of my
life I have studies many different religions, trying to find my own way... it all boils down to one
simple thing.
This is not a way
of acknowledging the
simple fact that we
live among people as well as
things, or that we choose our own associates, or even that much
of the material world is now the product
of human construction.
My prayer
life and church
life us quite
simple and sober, and also free
of all Methodism and Pentecostalism, so I personally may not be able to relate to any
of the
things you mention.
Simple living means a lot
of different
things for them.
But we gathered after a
simple supper
of farmer's sausage and perogies because there are two
things living in Abbotsford has taught us to eat and enjoy: Mennonite food and Indian food.
Christianity is not the
simple religion
of God's Fatherhood and man's brotherhood, but rather the religion which finds God come to men for their wholeness
of life in the person
of Jesus Christ; and therefore finds in Him, in who He was, in what He did, in who He is, and in what He does, and in the consequences
of those
things, the whole substance.
We should then expect either a condition
of «no change» beyond
simple elements, surviving very nicely as principles
of intense energy, or else a riot
of physical «mutations» having neither «survival value» nor any principle
of control by «survival value», a Universe in which so stable and inelastic a
thing as complex
life could not survive.
Hobbits were creatures
of simple tastes who liked the good
things in
life, food, drink and pipe - weed.
The child does not proceed from the
simplest, rudimentary notion
of «
thing»
of the real, which the child would then enrich in further steps by the addition
of other conditions like «
life,» «feeling,» and «will,» so that the conception also fits the more complex areas
of reality.
Notice, then, that in the prayer Jesus taught the order
of things is this: first, identification with God, his will, his kingdom
of sovereign love; next, asking for daily bread or what is needed to make
life possible; then, deliverance from evil and from the test that will be too much for us; and all
of it, as Matthew's gospel recognizes when it adds the doxology to the
simpler Lukan version, to God's glory — so that the divine will may be done, and be seen done, «in earth as in heaven.»
Even a professed atheist like Jean - Paul Sartre, despite his protests and despite his insistence that the only meaning is what we ourselves put into
things, evidently still finds sufficient sense in the
simple fact
of living so that he does not take his own
life.
The first
of the Thirty - Nine Articles is a comparatively
simple assertion: «There is but one
living and true God, everlasting, without body, parts or passions;
of infinite power, wisdom and goodness; the Maker and Preserver
of all
things both visible and invisible.
In the light
of this discussion, the evolution
of mind appears as a transition from the instructional traffic involved in the very
simplest living things, or even in the pre-biotic systems such as clays, to the much more complex traffic
of instructions involved in our own occasions
of experience.
There are, however, indications that go far back
of any
of the pyramids, in the
simple burials found in the desert sands, that there was a hope
of an after
life, and that one would evidently need there very much the same kind
of things he needed here.
Gil you have asked some very good questions why does bad
things happen in the world i personally do nt know God did nt explain to Job either why he had to suffer.What i do know is that God desires that none
of us should perish but that all would have eternal
life in him through Jesus Christ.This world will one day pass away and the real world will be reborn so our focus as christians is on whats to come and being a witness in the here and now.Both good and bad happens to either the righteous or the sinner so what are we to make
of that.What we do know is that God will set all
things right at the appointed time the wicked will be judged and the righteous will be rewarded for there faith isnt that enough reason for us to believe.Free will is only a reality if we can choose between good and bad but our hearts are deceitfully wicked we naturally are inclined toward sin that is another reason whyt we need to be saved from ourselves so what are we to do.For me Christ died and rose again that is a fact witnessed by over 500 people that were alive at the time and was recorded by historians how many other religious leaders do you know that did that or did the miracles that Jesus did.As far as the bible is concerned much
of the archelogical evidence has proven to be correct and many
of prophetic words spoken many hundreds
of years ago have come to pass including both the birth and the death
of Jesus.Interested in what philosophy you are believing in if other than a faith in Jesus Christ so how does that philosophy give you the assurance that you are saved.Its really
simple with christianity we just have to believe in Jesus Christ.brentnz
«He loved the mountains, the flowers, the animals, the greatest and
simplest things of life.
Its teachings are very, very
simple: There really are free and natural markets where the optimum value
of things is assigned to them; everyone must compete with everyone; the worthy will prosper and the unworthy fail; those who succeed while others fail will be made deeply and justly happy by this experience, having had no other object in
life; each
of us is poorer for every cent that is used toward the wealth
of all
of us; governments are instituted among people chiefly to interfere with the working out
of these splendid principles.
And she explains the
life of St. Francis very well - revealing, for example, that the process
of change was a gradual
thing and that it began with
simple gifts to the poor and a real commitment to prayer, and the more dramatic events such as the encounter with the Crucifix at San Damiano came only after this preparation.
You also said «
Life is just one
simple thing after another, built up over time, statistically certain given the right combination
of environmental factors.»
Life is just one
simple thing after another, built up over time, statistically certain given the right combination
of environmental factors.
But I also
live in the part
of the world with the most denominations — churches dividing on one another over some very
simple things.
I'd really rather you didn't build multi million - dollar synagogues / churches / temples / mosques / shrines to my noodly goodness when the money could be better spent (take your pick): Ending poverty Curing diseases
Living in peace, loving with passion, and lowering the cost
of cable I might be a complex - carbohydrate omniscient being, but I enjoy the
simple things in
life.
My favourite cooking is Indian and Italian (
living together my partner who is Italian has taught me so many great and
simple things, and about the «sacredness»
of pasta and the right timings...).
The
simple thing is, and I will let you folks not
of Faith, in on a little secret,... Many or most
of us Christians
live each day knowing that it could be our last day.
Finally, lest there be any confusion on the audience's part, he makes explicit toward the end
of the text, just as the other narrator did at the beginning, that
things are really quite,
simple: «Does
life ever seem mysterious?»
There are
simple things in
life that have the power
of lighting up our day — like arriving home and finding a package or your favorite magazine waiting for you in the mailbox.
As a vegetarian
living in Paris now for a good few years i thought that i'd warn you that they're really big meat eaters over here and tend to hide meat in
things that you kinda wouldn't expect which always annoys me, saying this there are some great finds to be had, one
of mine and my (French and meat eating) boyfriend's favs is Galerie 88 just behind to the Hotel de Ville - 88, quai de l'Hôtel de Ville, 75004 Paris, the gazpacho and split pea soup (which i want so desperately to recreate but can't seem to...) are both musts, lovely bohemian style and
simple great tasting food.
As with all good
things in
life, it is a very
simple soup made with carrots, coconut milk and curry powder with a little ginger thrown in and takes just 10 minutes
of effort.
Val — More Than Burnt Toast, Taryn — Have Kitchen Will Feed, Susan — The Spice Garden Heather — girlichef, Miranda — Mangoes and Chutney, Amrita — Beetles Kitchen Escapades Mary — One Perfect Bite, Sue — The View from Great Island, Barbara — Movable Feasts Linda A — There and Back Again, Nancy — Picadillo, Mireya — My Healthy Eating Habits Veronica — My Catholic Kitchen, Annie — Most Lovely
Things, Jeanette — Healthy
Living Claudia — Journey
of an Italian Cook, Alyce — More Time at the Table Kathy — Bakeaway with Me, Martha —
Simple Nourished
Living, Jill — Saucy Cooks ~ ~ ~
Amy
of Real Food Whole Health Beth
of Red and Honey Carol
of Studio Botanica Carolyn
of Real Food Carolyn Christy
of Whole Foods on a Budget Colleen
of Five Little Homesteaders Dina - Marie
of Cultured Palate Emily
of The Urban EcoLife Heather
of The Homesteading Hippy Iris
of De Voedzame Keuken (The Nutritious Kitchen) Jackie
of Deductive Seasoning Jan
of Healthy Notions Jennifer
of Hybrid Rasta Mama Jill
of Real Food Forager Jo
of Nourishing Time Joe
of Wellness Punks Joelle
of jarOhoney Karen
of ecokaren Karen
of Nourish with Karen Karen
of Sustainable Fitness Katie
of Kitchen Stewardship Kris
of Attainable Sustainable Kristen
of Rethink
Simple Kristine
of Real Food Girl: Unmodified Lauren
of Healing and Eating Laurie
of Common Sense Homesteading Libby
of eat.play.love... more Libby
of Libby Louer Linda
of The Organic Kitchen Lydia
of Divine Health From The Inside Out Natalie
of Honey, Ghee, & Me Pamela
of Paleo Table Sandi
of Sandi's Allergy Free Recipes Sarah
of Real Food Outlaws Shannon
of All
Things Health Shanti
of Life Made Full Shelley
of A Harmony Healing Sjanett
of Paleolland Stacy
of A Delightful Home Stacy
of Paleo Gone Sassy Starlene
of GAPS Diet Journey Susan
of Grow In Grace Farm Susan
of Learning and Yearning Suzanne
of Strands
of my
Life Sylvie
of Hollywood Homestead Tracy
of Oh, The
Things We'll Make!
Take notes on fast and easy paleo ideas to keep
things simple as you are first starting out on this new way
of living and eating.
I am a
life - long lover
of cooking and all kinds
of cuisine and appreciate the
simple things in
life.