wow this looks amazing your a talent, wow your hubby was in Chennai we so need to meet sometime,
what about Lunch in Childress one day?
now we all know the mileage driven is deductible in full for those trips, but
what about the lunch cost?
Not exact matches
When they just tell me how big the market is, I'm glad, because I can tune out and think
about what I'm going to have for
lunch.
Case in point: Birch Coffee's «ignition initiative» in which customers can take a sign from the wall of the store (samples include: «Ask Me
What I Ate for
Lunch Today» and «Ask Me
About the Most Embarrassing Thing in My iTunes Library»), and place it in front of their table if they'd like to encourage random conversations with strangers.
Go to
lunch remembering very little
about what was presented.
«Why should I argue with him
about who is or isn't a terrorist, if I can argue with him
about what we're going to eat for
lunch?»
Even at breakfast they were already looking forward to
lunch and dinner, they wanted to talk
about what they would eat and drink... and that was a major turning point for me.
[E.g., «I am aware that I'm thinking
about what to eat for
lunch» or «I am aware that I'm drafting an email responding to a complaint.»]
We also have regular «
lunch and learns» and «passion
lunches» when staffers talk
about what they're working on and things outside of work that inspire their passion.
«They talk
about what they had for
lunch.
As a suggestion, you can host «
lunch and learns» to train different groups within your organization on the buyer personas and how
what you've learned
about your buyers specifically relates to them and
what they do.
What about the kid who lined up at noon
lunch break to get tickets to the Leafs, only to be beat by a bunch of thugs who lined up at 9 am, who later flips them to some investment banker?
«We love to talk
about the over-the-top work cultures, fancy catered
lunches, yoga classes, paid sabbaticals, work from home and open bars that so many of the tech titans provide, but
what isn't talked
about is the work ethic required by their founders to achieve the level of success that afforded those very amenities to be possible today.»
I am recalling dozens of coffees,
lunch dates among a faith community who's invested in one another just to say, «I'm worried
about what I feel and I'm worried
about how your heart is.
After
lunch, Father Ed settles down to talk to me
about his remarkable spiritual journey to the Ordinariate — the structure set up by Pope Benedict to allow former Anglicans to become Catholics, bringing with them some of their Anglican traditions — and
about what he sees as its particular mission, to revive authentic, English spirituality in the Catholic Church.
But
what about the young woman on her
lunch break?
Because for years people would ask me to go for
lunch or coffee and here's
what I would get once we were there for
about 15 minutes talking:
I once tried to illustrate a sermon
about the fragility of memory by asking the men if they remembered
what they had for
lunch.
I sat there on the bed for a while, and then I did seek out my brother and apologize to him, and we all sat down quietly for
lunch, and nothing else was ever said
about this, until now, in this small essay; but the thought occurs to me that in a lot of ways I have been sitting on that bed ever since, pondering the way lies come so easily to our lips and spin so easily out of our ostensible control, and stab the innocent, and dilute respect, and poison love, and tear at
what we so much wish to be, which is honest and gracious and reverent.
The other plus side: Even while I was sick and had just gotten back home a few days before, I didn't have to worry at all
about what Draz was going to take for
lunch or anything like that!
Mix that vacation with a HOLIDAY vacation, and basically all I think
about is
what I'll have for breakfast, where we are going for
lunch, is there a dessert place near by, how
about a holiday dinner, and will there be a chocolate fountain that I can lay under before I go to bed?
Each morning I don't even have to think
about what to make for
lunch.
I always pack a bag
lunch on flights and deliberate carefully
about what to bring to snack on, knowing that I will thank myself later.
When I asked
what that was
about, he said he traded his sandwich at
lunch and it was disgusting.
OK, so I debated a while
about what to name this recipe, which was inspired by a lovely
lunch I got from a food cart last week!
I love hearing
about your kids, seeing
what's in Bug's
lunch, and everything.
When he returned home a few hours later, shopping bags in hand, I wanted to hear ALL the details of his outing, but he only wanted to talk
about what he ate for
lunch.
Its now not only
about noticing
what happens to the food as I prepare it, but also an opportunity for me to observe my own thoughts, which can often be rushed as I'm trying to prepare food for friends and family and get
lunch or dinner at the table on time.
But it's been
about 3 weeks since I've had salads for
lunch,
what with all the leftovers we've had.
«Every Monday, we have
lunch with the CEO to talk
about new items,
what's working and
what's not.
But
what about once you've made it, and you want to use it to make your family's back - to - school
lunches — How do you store that homemade gluten free bread?
These will get my kids excited
about what's in their
lunch box!
What I like most
about this recipe is that you get a whole lot of
lunches out of a relatively modest amount of work.
What I love
about salads is that they are easy to make, can be made - ahead of time to pack in a
lunch or wait in the fridge until I get done running.
I know exactly
what you mean
about lunch time, something soothing
about enjoying a meal with no distractions.
What I love
about quiche is that it is one of the only foods that you can eat for breakfast,
lunch or dinner.
Also
what about those days when you just don't fancy having the same thing for dinner and then for
lunch the next day?
And, ultimately,
what each of these models — from school
lunch food trucks to give -
what - you can restaurants and a technology - based food share platform — proves is that the future of food access is
about both thinking outside of the box and
about understanding the needs within your community to deliver something healthy and meaningful.
You can support MFM by preparing a meat free packed
lunch for your child, by having your household go meat free on Mondays and by discussing
what it's all
about with the whole family.
Quick & easy meat - free
lunch box ideas, nutrition information and delicious recipes — here's
what all parents should know
about Meat Free Monday!
I know I talk
about meal planning all the time, but it really does help me to stay accountable, makes for less chaotic mornings when I go to pack my
lunch, saves money each week (since I go on ONE big grocery haul making sure to only get
what I need for that week) and I'm staying healthy in the process.
I will be obsessed with this, and variations, for a while... Made my box
lunch for tomorrow with
what was left of the sauce and I think I will be dreaming
about it...
This soup came
about as a result of literally using
what I had in the house to make a healthy
lunch for the girls.
I whipped this up in
about ten minutes (this doesn't really take into account the five or ten minutes where I stand and stare blankly into my cupboards trying to figure out
what to make)... Delicious the day after (hot or cold) for
lunch.
Can only think
about what's for
lunch, which sounds promising and only 56 minutes away.
That's
what I'm all
about these days, along with easy
lunches and on - the - go snacks and breakfasts - too!
Meeta, my blogger friend from
What's for
lunch honey, had told me
about the hot cross buns she made a couple of days ago, on chat, and she enticed me with a gorgeous photo (that's not a surprise anyway) of the same.
Lunch: My boyfriend's mother gave me a box of heirloom beans for Christmas (
what does it say
about me that I was really, really excited when I opened that box?)