The minutes pass, we experience multiple
tiny deaths every day doing the job we're expected to do.
Not exact matches
Here's one more reason to skip the chips in aisle five: A 25 - year study released in October found that upping your salt intake even the
tiniest bit (i.e. by less than a half teaspoon each
day) could increase your risk of premature
death by 12 %.
Sometimes things are so tight that you need to perform an entire
day's work flawlessly, which actually really stressed me out, as one
tiny mistake can quite literally mean the
death of your sick and hungry son back home.
Can the
deaths of the tens of thousands of children who are not like us each
day affect us even a
tiny bit as much as the
deaths of those with whom we can more easily identify?