It may be a necessary component of democracy, unfortunately, but we shouldn't pay
too much mind to those who suggest that that's all there is to it.
James Cameron declared Genisys the satisfying sequel his franchise has lacked since he turned over the writing and directing reins on 2003's Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, but don't pay that endorsement
too much mind, even if box office king of the world Cameron, who receives a characters credit and nothing more here, has little to gain from it (until 2019, when rights to the series return to him).
Don't put
too much mind to the bunter, this blog acts as a rehab for most of us when Arsenal has one of those days like the Southampton away game or Chelsea games.
But for all its tension, Melancholia is a divine work of art that will leave you haunted for days in a way you don't
too much mind.
Not exact matches
Keep in
mind, any type of heat styling can be damaging to your strands, so you want to take care not to use
too much high heat, especially if you're styling daily.
Right about now, you start to get a little niggling feeling starting to grow in the back of your
mind suggesting that you might have made a really big mistake - but you aren't going to stop now because you've got
too much to prove to yourself and to everyone else, so you roll up your sleeves and go for it.
Pocket Pond: When you have
too much on your
mind, take a break and watch colorful fish swim through crystal clear water while soft nature sounds play in the background.
«His business was being adversely affected, there was discontent among his employees — and this group actually takes a lot of time — and he basically said «I'm encountering
too much in the way of headwinds and would you
mind if I stepped down.»»
Keep their recommendations and tips in
mind wherever you go, don't spend
too much lying on your mistakes.
However, keep in
mind that like excess caffeine,
too much of anxiety can ruin things.
To ease U.K. regulators»
minds over the Murdoch clan having
too much influence, Fox has proposed splitting Sky News off from Sky, and Disney has even said it might step in to buy Sky News, whether or not its wider Fox takeover goes ahead.
Bad location, a marginal niche, having no specific user in
mind, raising
too much or
too little money — all of these issues can be prevented or at least mitigated with good planning.
Will governments, investors and green -
minded consumers, who put their faith in the sun's power to help wean us off our fossil - fuel addiction, back away from another technology that promised
too much — in jobs and profits as
much as in renewable energy — and failed to deliver?
Men, on the other hand, don't
mind it
too much, according to the survey.
With endless options and choices hurled into people's
minds every day, there's simply
too much noise.
While I was thinking about my eventual succession plan, the French proverb «Enough is better than
too much» came to
mind.
Because we are in it for the long haul, we don't
mind too much.
While this book is written with women in
mind, I found
much of the insights and actions relevant to men,
too.
That might be why even America's friends of the Keystone don't seem to
mind too much.
This might be
too much of a sacrifice for the true - blue coffee lover, but if you could go either way, keep in
mind that a cup of tea brewed at home can cost as little as four cents per cup, compared to 12 - 43 cents for less - than - fancy home - brewed coffee, according to Living Stingy.
This is where angels can be so
much better than VCs: they're willing to listen, can act quickly, there's less pressure to be a «me -
too» investor, they don't
mind contrarian stances, and there are no LPs, fund lifetime or thesis mandates they're beholden to.
The fear of the great nothing is
too much for my
mind to bear, and I can sleep at night by convincing myself that the absolute nothing we all face one day will instead be full of happy choirs of angels, reward for any suffering I've endured, punishment of the wicked and evil (it pains me to think those who cause so
much evil will not suffer for eternity, so hell is a great comfort
too), and that I'll get to see all those I currently miss since the death of friends and family are so painful.
Here are a couple of sources, though (and I don't want to overload your little
mind too much) there's this amazing thing called google, you can plug in questions and it feeds you answers like some sort of magic machine!
Philip Larkin's «Church Going» comes to
mind: Yet stop I did: in fact I often do, And always end
much at a loss like this, Wondering what to look for; wondering,
too, When churches fall completely out of use What we shall turn them into, if we shall keep A few cathedrals chronically on show, Their parchment, plate, and pyx in locked cases, And let the rest rent - free to rain and sheep.
The p ** n is hurting relationship, need try to educate people this is giving
too much corrput on people's
mind.
Nobody thought
much of religions other than Christianity; as was obvious by our public school pledge — which admonished us all to be good Christian citizens... Sure, I had questions
too, but our church was pretty low - key so I was safe from some of the more radically -
minded (read: brainwashed) of my peers.
One should not perhaps make
too much of this, but it does seem to imply that the pastoral dimension of the Church extends to teaching as well, that is, to the feeding of our
minds with sound doctrine.
I don't
mind religious people
too much really.
This is not to say that marriage isn't wonderful, it's simply to say that maybe we've gotten
too single -
minded (pardon the pun) about marriage, and we need to stop caring quite so
much about someone's «relationship status.»
I had crammed
too much of my very real self into these inadequate compartments in my
mind.
This broad, liberal creed supported by a set of idealistic categories that never questioned seriously the progressive revelation of the
mind of God in the existing personal and social relationships of man has been
too much at home in this prosperous world to need to call out a rebellious Danish religious prophet who challenged the very categories of its thought.
And the action of walking occupies part of our conscious
mind so that prayer can flow more freely without us worrying
too much about the exact words we use.
I
too, have dealt with blasphemous thoughts against the Holy Spirit, so
much, in fact, that I actually began to resent the Holy Spirit for even existing, because the very mention of him in the Bible would fill my
mind with terror over blaspheming Him and thereby fearing unforgiveness and eternal punishment in hell.
THERE ARE
TOO MANY AND
TOO MUCH SICK
MIND ARE OUT THERE IN THIS CRAZY TWENTY - FIRST CENTURY ERA OF ANIMAL TIMING NOW, AMEN.
«No one
minds Nativity plays and Bible stories but considering most of the parents at the school aren't practising Christians I think the feeling is that it's all
too much.»
I haven't changed my
mind completely about all of that, but I have to admit that the thought of
too much of an active afterlife makes me a feel a bit weary these days.
Too much for your young
mind to handle.
too much focus on religion is only spreading more hatred and is poisoning
minds.
With this in
mind, I began to search for a new way of translating theopneustos to more accurately reflect this, and since pneustos can be translated as «wind, breath, or spirit» thought of «wind of God» (very similar to what Jesus said in John 3:8), «God - spirited» (which was
too vague for me,
much like «inspiration»), or even «breath of God» or «God's breath.»
They are that, of course, but they are
much else
too, and I suspect that one of the reasons for the revolt against religion is that
too often religiously
minded people, lay or ordained, have talked of humankind in altogether
too «spiritual» a fashion, forgetting so
much else that is true of every person who has ever lived.
well just thinking about these wars in the muslim / mid-east world over religious differences (which may reflect mental states in many ways) in a world where most realize that living in the present moment is best way to happiness and being in the moment in non-strife and awareness through the teachings of masters such as found in the buddhist, taoist, zen, etc., etc., etc. spriritually based practices of religious like thought and teachings, etc. that to ask these scientifically educated populace whom have access to vast amounts of knowledges and understandings on the internet, etc. to believe in past beliefs that perhaps gave basis and inspiration to that which followed — but is not the end all of all times or knowledges — and is thus — non self - sustaining in a belief that does not encompass growth of knowledge and understanding of all truths and being as it is or could be — is to not respect the intelligence and
minds and personage of even themselves — not to be disrespected nor disrespectful in any way — only to point out that perhaps
too much is asked to put others into the cloak of blind faith and adherance to the past that disregards the realities of the present and the potential of the future... so you try to live in the past — and destroy your present and your future — where is the intelligence in that — and why do people continually fear monger or allow to be fear — mongered into this destructive vision of the future based upon the past?
Keep this in
mind,
too: if you'd been born thousands of years ago in pagan Europe, you'd believe in Odin and Thor and Loki or some other set of pagan gods just as
much as you believe in the Judeo - Christian God.
We look for support, but others are
too busy looking for it themselves to pay us
much mind.
While such an approach does
much to satisfy the internal demands of reason and logic, it also tends to assign
too great a role to the place of
mind or reason in the general scheme of things.
I figure that if he invites us to argue with God about the Bible, he will not
mind too much if my wife and I argue with him...
Some commentators warn against making
too much of this meaning in this context, yet it remains true that the simple act of turning usually and logically follows upon a change of
mind.
Religious people seem to sense that, but spend
too much effort tying their
minds in an endless loop of symbolism and ritual, and atheists appear to be happy to tie their
minds in an endless loop of pseudo-intellectual empirical nonsense.
Unfortunately, for most Christians who are members of one of the Christian «sects», Christianity has become an «exclusive» club of like
minded thinkers,
much too tribal for me.
People born with birth defects so they can't choose, people who are psychotic or sociopaths and incapable of controlling their
minds, people who are born in fundamentalist Muslim areas who never had the opportunity to choose or who would be murdered on the spot if they so «chose», people who God gave
too much intelligence
too to believe such an inane demand without more evidence, people who die in natural disasters before they were quite willing to convert etc. etc..
Much as most English Catholics love Her Majesty the Queen, many of us felt just a little uneasywhen it became known that she referred to the late Cardinal Hume as «my Cardinal», and not entirely enthused by television images of Her Majesty attending Vespers at Westminster Cathedral, for all the world as if it was Choral Evensong at Westminster Abbey: not because such ecumenical gestures are in themselves a bad thing, but because this one seemed all too likely to be have been a reward to the English Church for no longer making so much of a nuisance of itself, as it could have done, for instance, by criticising the supposedly Catholic - minded Tony Blair for his wholehearted support for abortion (including abortion up to term)- a stance which, north of the border, had led the late Cardinal Winning to utter a series of blistering denunciations of the Prime Minister even during NewLabour's honeymoon ye
Much as most English Catholics love Her Majesty the Queen, many of us felt just a little uneasywhen it became known that she referred to the late Cardinal Hume as «my Cardinal», and not entirely enthused by television images of Her Majesty attending Vespers at Westminster Cathedral, for all the world as if it was Choral Evensong at Westminster Abbey: not because such ecumenical gestures are in themselves a bad thing, but because this one seemed all
too likely to be have been a reward to the English Church for no longer making so
much of a nuisance of itself, as it could have done, for instance, by criticising the supposedly Catholic - minded Tony Blair for his wholehearted support for abortion (including abortion up to term)- a stance which, north of the border, had led the late Cardinal Winning to utter a series of blistering denunciations of the Prime Minister even during NewLabour's honeymoon ye
much of a nuisance of itself, as it could have done, for instance, by criticising the supposedly Catholic -
minded Tony Blair for his wholehearted support for abortion (including abortion up to term)- a stance which, north of the border, had led the late Cardinal Winning to utter a series of blistering denunciations of the Prime Minister even during NewLabour's honeymoon years.