Research shows that four out of five Australian teenagers
think people their age may not seek support for depression or anxiety because they're afraid of what others will think of them.
Not exact matches
«The more we can get
people doing resistance training like weight lifting, the more likely we are to have a healthier
aging population,» Big
Think quotes him as saying.
That report drew a somewhat unpleasant conclusion about
aging: We gravitate toward
people like us, and
think more negatively about other cultures.
«Do you know that one of the great problems of our
age is that we are governed by
people who care more about feelings than they do about
thoughts and ideas?»
When
people think of the Internet of Things (IoT) and its impact on business, it conjures up images of space -
age workplaces overrun with robots.
«We
think that the dilemma of our time is whether this is an
age of the markets or this is an
age of the
people,» Fernandez said.
I don't really
think that this is just an
age thing or purely the province of
people who are fundamentally resistant to change.
«I don't
think we should be providing special deals or perks to
people simply based on their
age,» he says.
During a conversation with reporters at the Justice Department, according to Politico, Sessions reiterated his longtime views: «Most of you probably know I don't
think America is going to be a better place when more
people of all
ages and particularly young
people start smoking pot,» Sessions said.
«So it definitely wasn't as big of a transition as I
thought it might be, because we get to take classes with and study with
people and live in the dorm with
people who are all your
age, but then still get to be on a regular -
aged college campus and be involved with all of the regular campus events,» Corinne said.
As
people age, they tend to get stuck in traditional modes of operation and
thinking.
If you don't
think you're in line to win a Nobel, the study authors say the concept still holds for other great achievements —
people tend to do their most outstanding work in middle
age.
«Because the chance of death is really quite small at the
ages where
people would begin to
think about buying life insurance, delaying from
age 25 to 30 wouldn't raise the rate a lot,» he said.
«If you
think back to years ago before the digital
age,
people had to walk into the hotel for their experience to start.
In the beginning we
thought it would be a great way for our friends and
people our
age to feel like a part of the campaign.
You might
think that the average
age of the
people you're speaking to is 45 - 54, only to look at your analytics and uncover that 25 - 34 is the most dominant
age group.
Caring for
aging boomers will be a big business, and there's an opportunity to create a subscription business whereby kids and grandkids send older relatives a surprise box of goodies to let them know
people are
thinking of them.
Type the phrases «information overload» into Google and you'll get nearly four million hits offering endless tips on dealing with the problem, first
person accounts of brains fried by a deluge of data, even articles and
think pieces declaring us in the midst of «the
age of information overload.»
I don't
think it's a generational thing from a behavioral standpoint;
people our
age just happen to talk to
people our
age more often and openly.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal
peoples, Balanced budgets, child benefits, Child Care, corporate income tax, CPP, debt, deficits, early learning, economic
thought, federal budget, fiscal federalism, fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income distribution, income support, income tax, Indigenous
people, inequality, labour market, macroeconomics, OECD, Old
Age Security, poverty, privatization, public infrastructure, public services, Role of government, social policy, taxation, women.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal
peoples, Austerity, budgets, Child Care, corporate income tax, debt, deficits, economic growth, economic models, economic
thought, employment, fiscal policy, health care, income, income distribution, income support, income tax, Indigenous
people, inequality, NEO-LIBERAL POLICIES, population
aging, post-secondary education, poverty, public infrastructure, public services, Saskatchewan, social policy, taxation, unemployment.
Apple Ask someone about what they
think of when they
think of Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and the answer may well say a lot about that
person's
age.
A poll I saw the other day indicated that 25 % of
people on the verge of retirement
think they are in such bad financial shape that they will have to work until
age 80.
Younger
people already chafe at the
thought that they will not be able to retire at the same
age and with the same benefits as boomers and pre-boomers.
More than half of
people in a MassMutual survey wrongly
thought they could continue working at any
age while also collecting full Social Security retirement benefits.
People defer their taxes thinking that they will be in a lower tax bracket at age 65, but for some people, income doesn't come down, income com
People defer their taxes
thinking that they will be in a lower tax bracket at
age 65, but for some
people, income doesn't come down, income com
people, income doesn't come down, income comes up.
I
think a lot of
people at all
ages are struggling right now to find their places in religion.
When I
think about it, I see more of a split between
people with different levels of education than I do of
age.
How can
people still embrace Bronze
Age thinking?
At least the USA is doing something worthy in this world - they are attempting to ensure that
people like you don't rule the country and take them any further back into the bronze
age of
thinking.
And just what is the root of most of the violence and chaos today... RELIGION... backward
thinking people with bronze
age gods and symbols.
The leaders hide church history from its members, when we find it, we take it to them, and of course are called aposates, there are so many mental systems in place at every level to control the
people and there
thoughts and actions, at a very young
age.
Once they begin to see
people of their own backgrounds or their own
age, then they begin to
think whether this is something they can do.»
For crying out loud — why would ANYONE bother following the ideas of bronze -
age people who all
thought multiple gods created a small, flat Earth sitting at the center of a tiny universe rotating around it... daily.
It is YOUR
people who are indoctrinating children in at an
age where they can't
think for themselves.
You can also poke around on your Nook or Kindle — there are e-books there written for the faithful that give a detailed insight into the cult - like
thinking (well, poor choice of words, a favorite LDS saying is, «the
thinking is done», but you catch my drift) that's used to control their
people from a very young
age to find «the world» unbearable and the church to be a haven, etc..
Reality doesn't have to ever kick in... to know this is simple... just count the percentages of
people that
think there are such things as gods throughout the
ages that have come and gone.
I wish I could be as optimistic as you, but I feel like we are living Mark Twain's A Conn Yankee in King A's Court, where the main character
thinks he has the religious
people beaten but they come back and go right back into the stone
age.
We then
think that the parent with experience or
age has wisdom — but I have known many older
people who clearly have gained little wisdom — as they have remained int he parent / child way of pereiving self and the world.
When I
thought about how I would pay for my sins, I finally went to a church on a dare at
age 33 and was introduced to the
person of Christ.
He added: «I don't
think it's unreasonable to say that
people who come and live in our country should reject those dark
age ideologies which some of them bring with them.»
First, since process
thought concerns itself with the totality of human experience, it must necessarily take very seriously the fact of the religious vision and the claim of countless millions of
people of every race and nation and
age to have enjoyed some kind of contact with a reality greater than humankind or nature, through which refreshment and companionship have been given.
Fluffy the Gerbil of Doom... Oh, because he is 97 years old, he can't
think for himself and express his own opinons???? There are LOTS of
people that
age that still have a brain.
did you
people know that satan as the creature is known today wasn't even a
thought untill the middle
ages.
It's pathetic that in today's day and
age so many
people still are so willing to give over their right of independent
thought.
Try following this again, it's not about education level it's about belief, the secular argument is that
people of that
age were not skeptical and that is just not true to
think otherwise is «chronological snobbery» > Just cause it's written doesn't mean it's true.
When
people are trained at an early
age not to
think for themselves but follow a path of «tradition» this is what you get.
> Try following this again, it's not about education level it's about belief, the secular argument is that
people of that
age were not skeptical and that is just not true to
think otherwise is «chronological snobbery»
This is the negative end of the
age of modern technology / Internet — the airing of
people's hateful, meanspirited, closeted
thoughts against others who don't
think / believe / live like they do.
This abstract
thinking applies at many levels — I am not singling out faith - based aspects, but I find myself agreeing with Nye that building a
person up from a young
age based on non-fact-based anything is a bad idea.