Sentences with phrase «what about girls»

«What about the girls
What about you girls?
Second, what about those girls aged 9 - 18 who were found by the IOM study to be getting insufficient calcium?
I am an old woman now, well almost — but what about girls?
But what about girl lifters.
So then what about that girl who claims to be «eating 800 calories per day and still isn't losing weight?»
What about the girl that just graduated from college?
And what about this girl?
But what about the girl back home?
But what about the girl?

Not exact matches

Girls Who Code founder and CEO Reshma Saujani shares what she has learned about disrupting power in politics and Silicon Valley.
That's less than half the cost Lunapads was paying for the production of pads to distribute through Pads4Girls, and about 20 percent what Uganda girls pay for commercial disposable pads.
According to reports, the woman, Lori Drew, had established a fake MySpace account for a fictitious 18 - year - old boy in hopes of finding out what the girl was saying about her daughter online.
One hypothesis about what's going on with girls is puberty, which tends to hit girls around 11 years old.
During the interview, they spoke about potential baby names, and Khloe said that if she were to have a girl she wouldn't know what to call her.
If you start disrupting books, especially about what little girls can be when they grow up, and if you start putting different characters in those stories, you're able to disrupt power in a very important way.
«If you think about what Canadians like in their brands, it's that sense that they're the boy and girl next door,» says Alan Middleton, assistant professor of marketing at the Schulich School of Business.
These are all things that high school girls are insecure about, and Seventeen channeled what was going on in high school girls» minds to power their content strategy.
Fishon, I'm not sure what to say... except if you were raised a girl the first five years of your life yet you're * not * gay... that says a lot about the role of genetics and development in this whole thing.
To all of you who keep claiming this was about «not wanting to lose to a girl»: Why can't we simply take what this kid said at face value?
But when we are having a dialogue about this stuff, tell me how can I get my point of view across, like, I believe that being gay is a choice, and then use what many, many others use to defend their so - called choice, little girls.
I'm all about Life, and I'm all for abortions, but what's with the interracial agenda they are pushing with that black dude and the white girl with the red bow in her hair??? does anybody really expect that license plate to get approved in North Carolina??? come on...
... that is just a finanical gain for him, or her,... and besides what if the fetus is a girl???... what about her right's??????
As I write, they sit across the kitchen table from me, in all their innocence and little - girl perfection, eating chocolate cake, chatting purposefully about what game they will play next, blissfully unaware of the things that divide their mothers.
A few years back i was being led by god to help some homeless people.I'll tell you about the first homeless lady.my girls and i were driving by a liquor store and i seen a girl a lady sitting next to her cart.god showed me through his eyes the hurt she was living with.he spoke to my heart and said, don't pass her up.i turned around whent back and asked her if she was hungry.she was in shock and said yes.god told me to tell her that she is loved.she started crying and had me call her family so she can go home.anyways after that i joind a church and told them and asked to start a homeless ministry.i was told yes and all of a sudden i started getting pushed aside and they took over the homeless ministry.i feel lost and hurt.now i feel like god is telling me to leave the church.i quit going out with the group because of what happened.i don't know what to do.now i feel lost.
We girls were clad in denim jumpers and we ground our own flour, we had no TV and few friends as our parents were paranoid about what pressure our peers would apply on us.
About what a young boy in his class had said to a cluster of girls, how he referred to the girls» private body parts and what he wanted to do them, in such horrifyingly derogatory terms that this seasoned teacher could not even repeat it — and was at a rare loss as how to handle or move forward — beyond an immediate suspension.
Imagine you are walking in the desert with a bunch of people and you need to make a law about what to do in case a guy raped a girl.
She's started a movement protesting this phoniness and encouraging girls and women to be real, to be themselves, and to not allow the world to dictate how they should look, what products to use, or how to feel about themselves.
If a girl choses to take to bed a guy, then she needs to think about what kind of a guy he is.
Although the fund raising campaign is over, I will continue to make occasional blog posts about rescuing girls from sex slavery and what you can do to get involved.
Why Middle - School Girls Talk Like Babies — And What Teachers Can Do About It by Jessica Lahey for The Atlantic
Perhaps there's a difference between teaching a child (boy or girl) that sex can cause babies and disease, and should be reserved for committed, adult relationships, and telling them that sex outside of marriage is «bad» without explaining what is bad about it.
I have 3 girls, by telling them not to buy the message that their value is tied to how sexy they look, what kind of body they have, and how much they show it off; it opens the door to the conversation about where their value DOES lie then.
I tried harder to be a girl... it wasn't until I was about 16 or 17 that I really encountered [the concept of] being trans and what that meant.
Reading this dummy's posts about s3x always makes me think of the set of Victorian «instructional» texts I found in my grandmother's attic: «What a Young Girl Ought to Know».
One hates to make old arguments, but if this education teaches (as other sections of the report make clear that is must) the familiar doctrines about how very wrong it is to impose any kind of normative standard on the many forms that peoples» desires can take, on what basis does it exclude pornography or the sexualization of young girls as legitimate forms of the varied human sexual appetite?
What about the Iraqi girl who died from a American mortar strike?
Because if God can respond to a prayer about high school football team and at the same time go silent to prayers for the healing of a little girl, what kind of God is He?
So at what length are we talking about that would make a guy look like a girl?
Danielle Mayfield writes a blog for RELEVANT about the princess propaganda our culture promotes and why girls need a better example of what it means to be a woman of God.
A woman in a class on prayer, when asked to remember her first spiritual experience, told the instructor that she could not remember anything about a time of prayer, but what was flooding her mind and heart was a school girl's memory.
Sweetie, she said, that's what I like best about you — you pay attention, and you know how to listen when a girl feels like a little song.
This kind of broad association is of particular value to a society like ours, one in which people are increasingly tribalized and segregated and even a laudable value like diversity can be trivialized, as when a mother brags about how her child attends such a «wonderfully diverse» prep school, what with the boy from Senegal whose dad is a UN diplomat and the girl from Sri Lanka whose mom is an officer with the World Bank.
Maybe you're just one of those guys / girls that sits at the end of the bar and hates everything about their lives and wouldn't know what to do day in and day out if he or she wasn't btching at or about something?
Why is it that these discussions about se - x always come down to «girls» should be careful about what they do cuz it will come back to bite them?
But Greta Gerwig is very good at quirky and that is what Frances Ha is all about, a quirky girl, or rather a young woman of 27 who can not get over being a quirky girl.
I know in my earlier years when I would «align» myself with «white» values, I felt I was different and doing something special, and then I realized what Whoopi Goldberg said in her comedy routine years ago about the little girl who wanted to be white with the long flowing hair, «you still gon be black.»
God makes sense to me under the trees, and God makes sense to me in poetry and prayer, and God makes sense to me in Eucharist and Baptism and community and even creeds... but not in the offering plate, not in the building campaign, not in the pastor - who - shall - not - be-questioned, not in the politics, not in the assumptions about what a good Christian girl ought to be.
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