Sentences with phrase «whole perspective on things»

Your kindness changed my whole perspective on things.

Not exact matches

Listen, if your dad was Frank Zappa, you would have a unique perspective on the whole parenting thing, too.
Seeing and experiencing the real thing has given me a whole new perspective on what used to satisfy me.
I love hearing your perspective on the whole thing, not only in terms of my Hashimoto's disease, but simply your thoughts on medically restrictive diets in general.
I never buy celery because I don't like spending money on an item I hardly use, but knowing I can make this out of something I usually throw away gives a whole new perspective, and I'm sure I'll find lots of new things to sprinkle it on; thanks for the suggestions and the recipe!
Puts some perspective on the whole thing, allot of talent sidelined.
Reading about the attack on Pearl Harbor is one thing, but visiting the memorial in person gives teens a whole different perspective on this major event in U.S. history.
I think it's always good to — to be on here and just — my whole thing is data - driven health and using having access to your numbers and learning how to figure out what works for you and it's also great to speak with you and get the clinical perspective on how to interpret these numbers as well.
Also, because Helen is as much the focus of the film as Bobby, it probably didn't hurt to have a female perspective on the whole thing.
No attendance figures have been released at this writing, but as diminished and quiet as this year's BookExpo appeared to be at the Javits on Thursday and Friday (June 1 and 2), several industry pros told Publishing Perspectives that they wonder if Expo is worth doing at all: maybe the public - facing BookCon should be the whole thing, they said.
It's like, when you're on the nose of the giant you don't see the whole thing anymore — sometimes you lose that perspective.
It also departs from the biennial's value system as rooted in the empire building world's fairs of the 19th and 20th centuries — many call London's Great Exhibition of 1951 held in a dramatic crystal palace the «first» biennial — designed to give viewers a deeply overwhelming «great mass and jumble of things» (commodities, mostly) as «a challenge to make sense of... unimaginable diversity; to find or invert a «perspective» on the whole so that objects could be made to «stay and lie orderly.»
I'm really interested in hybridity from a cultural perspective, but I chose to focus on inter-species hybridization because I didn't want it to be merely about the fusion and mixture of culture, but also about the transparency of boundaries between things we identify as whole in and of themselves.
My perspective on this whole AGW thing is kinda broad.
It's like, when you're on the nose of the giant you don't see the whole thing anymore — sometimes you lose that perspective.
Review what happened so far and go back to the planning stage and that's not a bad thing necessarily because while sometimes we lose a lot of knowledge from a KidsMatter perspective because we lose a lot of knowledge when a team member leaves, it also can be a really good process of getting a new team member on board because we get a whole new range of skills sets, ideas and enthusiasm to keep that momentum going.
«I think what is harder to capture is the anecdotal things that teachers told us, like «This changed my whole perspective on teaching.»»
Although inflation isn't entirely bad from a home owner's perspective — it would help stop the drop in home values for one thing, at least at a nominal level — on the whole, inflation is a specter we want to avoid.
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