Sentences with phrase «time reading and writing»

That way, my husband doesn't feel deserted if I decide to spend lots of time reading and writing
Your personal brand is about who you are, so think about the topics that truly inspire you — the subjects you would happily spend hours at a time reading and writing about.
Like I said, you are going to be spending most of your time reading and writing?
I play lots of different types of games but also spend my free time reading and writing.
Steve is a father of three and spends his spare time reading and writing fiction.
If you are like many people who spend time reading and writing articles on the internet, you have often thought about writing a book.
Ms. Rosenberg spends her time reading and writing.
She spends her free time reading and writing romance novels and investigating haunted houses.
In her spare time, Emily enjoys spending her spare time reading and writing about famed author, Agatha Christie.
Like many social conservatives, especially Christian ones, I spend a lot of my time reading and writing about religious freedom, especially how it might be affected by the legalization of same - sex marriage and the campaign for «gay rights» more generally.Yet at the same time, I harbor doubts about the position we are staking out.You see, I sometimes think that Justice Scalia's majority opinion in Employment Division v. Smith may have been correct.
Daily I find myself slipping into those same old habits of judging people based on their theological positions and spending more time reading and writing about Jesus than actually building relationship with Him and loving «the least of these.»

Not exact matches

I am not kidding here, I'm probably forced to turn off my laptop and read a book (or write a blog like this one) at least 50 percent of the time.
I've tried over the years to write many times about the realism of the downsides of being an entrepreneur because there is a complete cognitive dissidence between what you read about yourself in the press and what you feel internally about where you're at in the journey.
It's sort of interesting how much time everyone spends reading and writing about the habits of really successful people when I can tell you the one thing that sets them apart in one little phrase: They're not slackers.
The takeaway here — as much as it pains someone who writes for the Web to say it — is that the best sort of reading is probably the most old - fashioned: just you, a book, and a quiet room for an extended period of time.
For me that means: get up early, write, run, a time of quiet reading and thinking, and completing a major task before I head to the office.»
Take time to read books for pleasure, not just for work, and while you're at it, do some writing, too.
For a business school's admissions staff, the use of video also can save time because it's often used as a replacement for written essays, which take longer to read and assess.
You're onto the next thing immediately, you're getting feedback from the people you write for all the time, and that makes you better and it makes you understand what they want to read about or listen to or watch.
«This highlights the value of spending some time alone, reading, writing and thinking about things that we find intrinsically interesting.»
At nine he goes to the office & continues there till dinner time — he will be occupied partly in the writing and partly in reading law.
I also haven't read, and we didn't write about, The Billionaire's Apprentice, which made both the NY Times and FT lists.
And so when I read Ben Graham, sort of a light bulb went off just this little article and I started reading everything I could about what he had written, both security analysis and the intelligent investor, and eventually led my way to Warren Buffett and you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my liAnd so when I read Ben Graham, sort of a light bulb went off just this little article and I started reading everything I could about what he had written, both security analysis and the intelligent investor, and eventually led my way to Warren Buffett and you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my liand I started reading everything I could about what he had written, both security analysis and the intelligent investor, and eventually led my way to Warren Buffett and you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my liand the intelligent investor, and eventually led my way to Warren Buffett and you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my liand eventually led my way to Warren Buffett and you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my liand you know, sort of the rest is history, it's a very good age, you know I was younger than 21 at the time you know junior year of college to recognize that this was what I was going to be doing the rest my life.
I think Buffett wrote a bunch of letters that were compiled by Lawrence Cunningham that get (ph) into topics, and that was laid out and I always assign that in my class which I just think is a great, great book and you mention my three books three times and so you have to read those too.
I did not, but spend some time reading some other posts I've written and subscribe to keep in touch!
I have read lots of Rubin's writing — I think he's too perfectly hedged most of the time (oil is going to 200, unless it doesn't) and his predictions about a smaller world have ignored productivity issues which are making the world, in his parlance, larger.
Read this well - written, comprehensive book, and you'll be attracting and converting leads into paying customers in no time!
Value Investing has it roots with Benjamin Graham (1894 - 1976, that's a long time ago), he wrote two great books about value investing: «Security Analysis» and «The Intelligent Investor» (I read the latter, it has some nice anecdotes and is REALLY boring).
'' I've read [the Iran deal] now three times... and I will say that it is written almost with an assumption that Iran would try to cheat,» Mattis said in April 14 Senate testimony.
Last year I wrote on Suven Life Sciences, also I did some secondary level maths to get a sense of returns an investor could get buying the business at then market cap (~ 2000 INR Crores or 400 Million USD) and exiting in 2024 See Snap shot below The base case CAGR didn't excite but reading management commentary compelled me to take a tracking position in model portfolio Over to this year One thing in AR gave me a Jeff Bezos moment For the first time management was sounding optimistic (this is coming from a management which is very conservative on record) Emphasis mine Management views on past Despite having grown the business every single year across the last five years, our business sustainability has been consistently questioned.
Canadian and Alberta voters need to understand that every time you get annoyed at Justin Trudeau and the way he manages the country all you need to do is listen to the radio and Charles Adler rant about him or read articles by Lorne Gunter and Rick Bell from the Edmonton Sun (who formerly worked at the Alberta Report, and helped Ted Byfield run the Alberta Report into the ditch, or read anything written by Colby Cosh or Ezra Levant and soon you will realize the propaganda and hate these clowns spread about their own political / religious views trying to scare the general population to their side or views.
Every time I get annoyed at Justin Trudeau and the way he manages the country all I do is listen to the radio and Charles Adler rant about him or read articles by Lorne Gunter and Rick Bell from the Edmonton Sun (who formerly worked at the Alberta Report, and helped Ted Byfield run the Alberta Report into the ditch, or read anything written by Colby Cosh or Ezra Levant and soon I realize the propaganda and hate these clowns try and spread about their own political / religious views I revert back to supporting the more liberal viewpoint).
I read some of Michael Burry's writing before the housing crash, and I saw that he consistently referenced the misdeeds of mortgage lenders as a way to clue him in to the real estate bubble at that time.
I don't follow many newsletters anymore, but Jonny's writing is always so on point and such a good pick me up that it's one of my must - reads every time it flows through my inbox.
An instance of Richelieu's nice distinction between the secular and ecclesiastical is that, at the same time he was gathering armies to wage war against the pope, he wrote the pope humbly asking for a dispensation from reading his daily office because of the pressing duties of military command.
Back during the (George W.) Bush Administration, I spent (or rather wasted) some time reading books and articles written by journalists who were suspicious (I hesitate to say paranoid) about those suspicious and paranoid fringe religious kooks (theonomists and theocrats) who threatened to take over....
Secondly, nothing can just materialize, however if you actually read what I (and many others write) we don't know what the universe was like before the big bang, and with the warp of time, space and all natural laws, the big bang becomes a special case where the impossible can become possible.
Religeous Books mainly write solutions and advices for the time they were announced.If you find / read something clearly not suitable for the curent time, it doesn't means that it lost its legitimacy completely.If it announce that a Prophet will come then you'll have to wait on this Prophet to have it altered to the curent time.
As someone born in the early 50s, that read Lord of the Rings in my teens, I found that the Dark Tower series took LOTR place as a series I could read over and over and each time I find some Christian themes but also beautifully written passages that I simply want to stop and re-read again.
«but to take the time to read articles about things you do not believe and then to take the time to write comments that would alienate those who do believe for the purpose of somehow making them not believe seems pretty deluded to me»
Writing in the L.A. Times, Frances Kissling and Kate Michelman (former president of Catholics for a Free Choice and former president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, respectively) read the writing on thWriting in the L.A. Times, Frances Kissling and Kate Michelman (former president of Catholics for a Free Choice and former president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, respectively) read the writing on thwriting on the wall.
Spend time reading through the Bible and writing down how you can implement what you read.
Many of you said those of us of faith are deluded, but to take the time to read articles about things you do not believe and then to take the time to write comments that would alienate those who do believe for the purpose of somehow making them not believe seems pretty deluded to me.
Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written in it; for the time is near.
It's written the way i like to write, in ways that can be read into and taken a billion different ways at any given time in history.
You need to both do a little more research on Jefferson, whom I've read many books on and written research papers on, as well as be a little more understanding of the time in which he lived.
But if I were told that what I am writing will be read in twenty years time by the children of today, and that those children will laugh, weep, and learn to love life as they read, why then I would devote the whole of my life and energy to it.
Most have difficulty finding the time to study, pray, read, meditate, think and write.
From writers who are creatively exhausted from managing a constant stream of online feedback, to readers who can't seem to pull themselves away from their smartphones, to activists who are burned out from responding to yet another crisis with a social media campaign, to foodies who can't enjoy a meal without snapping a photo for Instagram, our writing, reading, and sharing habits consume more of our time and mental energy than ever.
In that same sense, he wasn't writing for me, either, when I was a teenager in California and read him for the first time.
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