He was
so emotional beaten down thinking it was him and that he wasn't marketable.
Not exact matches
So if you drew a horizontal line and call that fair value like Ben Graham said, and then you draw a wavy line around that horizontal line and call that stock prices, the market is pitching us opportunities all the time between stocks that are way below fair value and way above fair value, the reason investors don't
beat the market has nothing to do with the market is not throwing us pitches in that it's not still
emotional, they are behavioral problem, there's agency problems, there is a lot of other issues going on but it's not because we're not getting really great pictures all the time.
Everyone expected an
emotional letdown to follow, but the Flyers won their 12th straight game that Saturday in Hartford,
beating the Whalers 5 - 2, and on the flight home Keenan,
so proud of his young team that his eyes misted over when talking about it, helped the stewardesses serve meals.
I'll say more NO to: doing things which I don't want to but usually say yes to
so I wouldn't disappoint others, feeling down or
beat myself up over every little thing which didn't go right or as planned, being a perfectionist every single moment of every single day, going places or meeting people just because of FOMO, eating foods that physically don't make me feel good, no matter how big the cravings might be, buying new stuff unless I really, really need them or can't stop thinking about them,
emotional vampires who suck the life out of me and never bring anything good or positive along with them...
So far as it goes, this sort of
emotional beat is serviceable enough.
Castle was never an award - winning, hard - hitting drama, but it hit
so many
emotional beats and showed characters with true resonance and growth.
While Avengers: Infinity War attempts to balance
so many characters and give them compelling narratives, very few of the
emotional beats stick their landing.
The Program (2015): A by - the - book story about Lance Armstrong's doping scandal that suffers from the problem that plagues many biopics: namely, it operates with the understanding that we already know the real story (or most of it),
so it doesn't work that hard to make the characters seem real or to make the
emotional beats land with any sense.
«These movies, besides carrying
so much action and special effects, wouldn't be what they are if it wasn't for those
emotional beats these inter-relationships carry.
And while his many
beatings are taxing, they are much more punishing than they are moving, and
so their
emotional resonance retreats as the picture carries on.
The novel itself is rather slim,
so it can't have been the hardest thing for screenwriter David Magee to adapt, but I'm happy to report that all of the most important
emotional beats from the novel are included here.
Wreck - It Ralph hits all the
emotional and narrative
beats from Screenwriting 101, but it does it
so skilfully that the film never feels predictable.
For all its obvious jokes (Viagra: check; sagging boobs: check) and broad character sketches (bohemian Biff is bisexual and doesn't understand technology), it's
so well played that all its characters fill out and all its
emotional beats land.
It's a fantasy musical
so it's actually his songs used to express important
beats in his life at
emotional moments.
As a side - effect,
so many potential
emotional beats are lost among the desire to provide plot momentum, or head to the adventures of the next set of characters, and those who don't show up at all are simply name checked in order to appease social media ire.
«By relying
so heavily on rote memorization, and by testing me only on the things that were easy to test, my teachers came up with a wholly erroneous picture of my capacityâ $» and gave me a fairly serious
emotional beating in the process.»
«By relying
so heavily on rote memorization, and by testing me only on the things that were easy to test, my teachers came up with a wholly erroneous picture of my capacity — and gave me a fairly serious
emotional beating in the process.»
Interacting with Ignis, Prompto and Gladio over the course of several dozen hours — whether it be camping out in the wilderness or driving through the countryside in the Regalia — has a way of endearing each character to the player
so that when the game's key
emotional beats start to fall in Final Fantasy XV's second half, they manage to hit home in spite of everything.
At the same time, it's unfortunate the column doesn't comment on the fact that many in poverty may have been
so devastated by institutional forces allied against them that their «
emotional granularity» may have been «beaten out of them,» and that Social Emotional Learning Isn'
emotional granularity» may have been «
beaten out of them,» and that Social
Emotional Learning Isn'
Emotional Learning Isn't Enough.