Sentences with phrase «spending long hours at the office»

The thought of children having to suffer with asthma or diabetes for their entire lifetime motivated us to breastfeed and express breast milk despite traveling for work and spending long hours at the office.
As an analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities, he spent long hours at the office pouring through information and meeting with leaders of publicly traded companies.
Cities are full of young workers, but singletons who spend long hours at the office end up with no time to meet other people, said Wu Xiuping of the Beijing Municipal Women's Federation.
Consumed by the machinations of his daily life — taking a shower, tweezing those eyebrows, spending long hours at the office working for his father - in - law Phil (Chris Cooper)-- Davis is trapped by his financial success.
Perhaps you're spending longer hours at the office and have less time for travel, then you'll need a card that provides more than just airline miles.

Not exact matches

At Mountlake Terrace, Eeva Reeder spends many hours on just the logistics of her six - week - long architecture project, such as organizing field trips to local architects» office and coordinating classroom activities with the mentors» busy work schedules.
Part of the habits that lead to a sedentary lifestyle included things like long car commutes, office jobs that involve hours spent sitting at a desk, followed by too much time watching television.
If you travel a lot, spend long hours away at the office, or have an active social life that means you're rarely home, it would be just as unfair to adopt a puppy that you'll hardly ever see.
But, here's a disturbing fact: many LIC policyholders are often seen spending several hours standing in long queues at LIC Branch Offices to make their LIC policy premium payments.
Long hours spent at the office meeting deadlines, interpersonal conflicts, and keeping up with regularly changing technology is becoming too much to bear.
While her upcoming promotion to manager seemed to fit in the conventional sense of getting ahead, the CPA job meant that she worked long hours, spent more time with her computer than with people, and was stuck in the office for 12 hours at a time.
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