Sentences with phrase «women experience these feelings»

Some women experience these feelings, think they are sick, and go to the doctor only to discover they are pregnant.
Tingling extremities is where menopausal women experience the feeling of «creepy - crawlies» walking all over their skin, a burning sensation like an insect sting, or super-sensitivity in their hands, arms, legs, and feet.

Not exact matches

Sure, women and men going through menopause and andropause may experience the odd gap, but there is absolutely no reason why our elders should be considered less valuable than their younger counterparts or feel they have to be shown the retirement door at age 65.
It found when women worked more than 34 hours per week and men spent over 47 hours a week working, they were more likely to experience mental illness and symptoms of distress such as nervousness or feeling low.
But I was just amazed by how everyone, young and old wanted to be involved... and was so deeply enriched and touched by the experience and the laughter and the love I experienced from the people I met and how women would in particular open their hearts to me and tell me the stories of where they've come from, particularly because I have the language and was coming there as a woman and just how touched they were that I was there as a woman from England who's learned the language and who's an artist and running this project and come all the way to see them so they didn't feel forgotten I think that was pretty much what they felt... that their stories were being heard so they don't feel forgotten knowing the tents would be around the world.
We also wish warmly to affirm those sisters and brothers, already in membership with orthodox churches, who — while experiencing same - sex desires and feelings — nevertheless battle with the rest of us, in repentance and faith, for a lifestyle that affirms marriage [between a man and woman] and celibacy as the two given norms for sexual expression.
Fear and hatred of the body and ambiguous beliefs and feelings about sexuality produced negative views of women, another instance of men experiencing «evil» but projecting it elsewhere.
As horrible as my wife and I felt at the time, the pain of what that woman and so many others experienced during the height of the foreclosure crisis still felt distant.
One young woman asked me this question with tears streaming down her face, for she had been made to feel small and worthless by churches like these, and she lived in fear that thousands upon thousands of women were experiencing the same thing and there was nothing she could do to stop it.
If a women comes from a culture and belief that will likely cause her to experience much post-abortion guilt, then she should take care to set up some counseling sessions as she feels are appropriate.
Increasingly, women are getting into consciousness raising groups with other women and discovering that they are not «sick,» that other women have the same experiences and feelings, that they don't need counseling at all but merely a sense of their own identity which will allow them to lead fuller lives.
To guide her protean life style this appealing modern woman relies on common sense, feeling, and experience:
The hybrid physical feeling of God, which is (on the traditional Whiteheadian account) the subjective aim for any particular occasion of the young woman s experience, is also a prehension of the past from which she inherits — it is, after all, a physical feeling.
In my experience it's not unusual to encounter women who are frustrated and feel treated unequally and men who have checked out and all but given up on romantic relationships with women, perceiving that society has given them a raw deal.
Even the books of Esther and Ruth which are written about women, are not the experiences or the feelings of the women themselves.
What is it to feel as a woman feels in pregnancy, childbirth, nurturing and lovemaking, and how do these experiences help us understand the feminine face of God?
I feel incredibly grateful for my high school education and also for my university education — I know that is a privilege that most women in the world do NOT yet experience (but give us time....).
From personal experience i was in a church who has the whole congregation pray for 1/2 hour in tongues.The people in this church were leaders from Africa.A place who sees more supernatural then us because we feel the need to analyze the thing to death.When we did the atmosphere shifted lives were changed.When i was on a mission trip to Mexico i felt lead to go pray with the women who in that culture are outcasts one of ladies who came with me started singing in the spirit as i was we stopped each other in shock when we realized we were sing the same song the needs of the women were met with out an interrupter.
MODERN WOMAN: [Now calmer] Well, I keep having these funny little experiences of... I don't know what to call them... I don't know how to describe them... I just feel unreal.
Some women's experience is that of domination, other feel marginalized, while for some the experience is one of rejection.
Jeremy have been asking the holy spirit for his help with this and in regards to the lame man that Jesus healed I do nt believe that sin was the issue for him just like the blind man was it his parents or did he sin the answer was neither but so that God would be glorified.What was the sin that may have been worse for him.The two situations are related of the woman caught in adultery the key words being go and sin no more only two references in the bible and will explain later the lame man we see at first his dependency on everyone else for his needs he cant do it he is in the best position to receive Gods grace but what does he do with it.Does he follow Jesus no we are told he goes to the temple and Jesus finds him now that he has his strength to do things on his own what his response to follow the way of the pharisees that is what is worse than his condition before so he is warned by go and sin no more.We get confused because we see the word sin but the giver of is speaking to him to go another way means death.Getting back to the two situations of the woman caught in adultery and the lame man here we see a picture of our hearts on the one our love for sin and on the other the desire to work out our salvation on our terms they are the two areas we have to submit to God.My experience was the self righteousness was the harder to deal with because it is linked in to our feelings of self worth and self confidence so we have to be broken so we are humble enough to realise that without God we can do nothing our flesh hates that so it is a struggle at first to change our way of thinking.brentnz
The experience of the first rite of passage for the women clergy I have talked with varies from the male experience in the following ways: The young woman is likely to have a similar inner experience of a mystical «call,» or in some other way feel led to make a conscious decision to train for the ministry.
This experience makes itself felt in the relationships between man and woman.
And if this were not enough, there is additionally the ironic fact that to insist upon an ontological difference between men and women is to award the victory to the very feminists and their allies who insist upon filtering everything through the experiences, feelings, and oppressions of women.
Although these represent small percentages, given that about 70 million Americans qualify as churched adult women, this amounts to millions of women in the U.S. today who feel discouraged by their experiences in churches.»
In a group experience, paper and crayons can be provided and people asked to draw their feelings about women or men.
By contrast, those — and they seem primarily to be women — who approach experience intuitively, grasping feeling tone and insisting that value, emotion, and purpose are experienced within reality are usually patted on the head for contributing such insights and then dismissed as too emotional or intuitive to be trusted with contributing anything important about the «real» world.
This expression of one woman's feelings about the worship experience describes the feelings of a growing number of women in the church, including many who have spent a life - time there.
Being a bit of a food blogger myself, I felt I could relate a bit to these (much more successful, established, experienced) women.
Many women feel anxiety or fear about childbirth because they have never experienced it before.
I felt fortunate that I had a group of friends to bounce these feelings off of and was happy to learn that while all pregnant women don't feel this way, my feelings were certainly not out of the ordinary and others had experienced similar feelings as well.
While I may feel sorry in a way that women become invisible in later years — my experience in younger days was they were chased by guys like me.
If you have been hurt badly, lied to or had significant physical and emotional damage from traditional medical care — being forced back into that environment will cause fear, that will hamper labour due to how women were made (any threat the woman feels causes labour to slow until she no longer experiences that «fight or flight response», and when she feels safe again, labour should resume)-- labour slows and then interventions «have» to be done... and the cycle repeats itself — reenforcing the belief that the hospital is not the place to birth.
Education during pregnancy rarely has anything serious to do with breastfeeding, and since breastfeeding is perceived by most pre-parenthood women to be a natural, instinctive thing instead of a learned behavior (on both mom & baby's part) if it doesn't go absolutely perfectly from the first moments they may feel something is wrong with THEM and clam up about it while quietly giving the baby the hospital - offered bottle along with the bag of formula samples they give out «just in case» even if you explicitly tell them you're breastfeeding (which was my experience with my firstborn in 2004 and one of the many highly informed reasons I chose to birth my next two at home).
With their vast experience in working with women during pregnancy, birth and the early stages of motherhood, know that you can feel safe expressing yourself in this non-judgmental support group.
Having continuous, one - on - one support from a knowledgeable, compassionate and experienced support person has been empirically shown to have significant impacts on how women feel about their births for decades after.
After giving birth to my daughter, I felt called to support and work with other moms and pregnant women as I experienced how much support we truly need in this transformative time in our lives.
Some women will experience the negative effects longer than others, while some women even feel them to some degree throughout their entire pregnancy.
She validates a woman and her partner and they feel free to embrace the experience because she is with them.
Wouldn't it be unusual if a pregnant woman experienced no concern about what was awaiting her — no fears related to sleepless nights, no questioning of what kind of parent she would become, how she would give attention and love to the infant without making her older child (ren) feel rejected, how she would face the financial burdens, and so on?
Hi, I'm Helen, and I work with women to help them feel more comfortable in pregnancy, have easier births they can actually enjoy, and experience a smooth transition into motherhood.
The worst thing to say to a mom who has had a traumatic birth is «at least you have a healthy baby» as it completely belittles the woman and minimizes everything they are feeling and have experienced.
A woman who is well - supported during the birth of her baby, is more likely to feel satisfied with this life transforming experience.
I know the healing journey it has set me upon and I am writing about my experiences for other women that know grief, that in their loss they may feel less alone.
You keep taking her feelings about her own breastfeeding experience and applying it to yourself and other women — THAT is the problem.
Women who are experiencing a mild form of the baby blues may feel uninterested in any type of activity, even the ones that they formerly found pleasurable.
Women experiencing these symptoms may fail to report them to their doctors or their doctors may not twig to them, but will be aware of the other side of the emotional teeter - totter, those feelings of depression and lows.
I also don't put myself into any type of activist stance when it comes to how families decide to bring their babies into the world — as long as women feel empowered, supported, and grateful for their experience, that's all that matters.
But the feelings a woman may experience during the baby blues may still cause her worry.
What I fear is that my clients and all who inquire with me feel I only care about their birthing experience, when that is just a sliver of what I can do and want to do to help women & families transition into motherhood.
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