Sentences with phrase «worry about a death»

Since I am fictional, I don't have to worry about death.
C'm on... speak up... oh wait, you probably won't... you're worried about those death oaths aren't you?
You don't need to divulge every detail, but your sitter does need to know if your son is worried about death a lot, or if your daughter is feeling especially needy.
As a result, the gifted child may begin to worry about death and also question the meaning of life.
In the new study, patients with a higher quality of life during their final days included those who avoided hospitalizations and stays in the intensive care unit (ICU), were not worried about death, prayed or meditated, received care at home, did not use a feeding tube, were visited by a pastor in the hospital or clinic, did not undergo chemotherapy in the final week of life, and felt an alliance with their oncologist regarding therapy.
As a result, the gifted child may begin to worry about death and also question the meaning of life.
Do not worry about death benefits expiration dates.
But don \» t worry about the death, you won \» t waste your time to wait a very boring game over scene.
And * then *, you have to decide to keep trying to do that long enough that you start getting extra lives, and be able to do it consistently enough that you can rack up enough extra lives to not worry about the death during the hoverbike sequence.
Luckily, there is a trick (read: cheese) that players can use to kill all Gorgons in Vault of Glass without worrying about death.
Obamacare went into effect and we were all worried about death panels.
This would be a very traumatic time alone without having to worry about a death benefit being paid.

Not exact matches

In total, those five grocery chains shed about $ 26.7 billion in market capitalization between the market's close Thursday and Friday morning, as investors worried that Amazon deeper push into the industry could be a death knell for some.
They worry more about how their death will affect their loved one, or they tell stories about their families.
It seems to me they have much bigger fish to fry like: The Taliban treating women as less than human, stoning people to death, 60 year old men marrying teenage girls, cutting off an 18 year old girl's nose because she left her abusive husband (see TIME magazine a month ago), destroying over 125 schools because girls attend, suicidal Islamic fanatical cowards on every continent killing thousands of INNOCENT people, and these clowns are worried about their precious Koran being burned by a nutjob.
Those nut cases have kids dying from hunger and freezing to death but all they are worried about is an old book.
My old friend Peter J. Leithart joins Tony Montanaro, Gary Inbinder, and Kelley Vincent to argue» each for different reasons» against my worries about the implicit claims of authority made when modern democratic states employ the death penalty.
Again the trouble may lie in factors harder to cope with — domestic disharmony, friction in one's work, a job one loathes but fears to leave, worry about the future, lack of success in some pivotal enterprise, separation by distance, by marriage, or by death from one who is deeply loved.
I have even heard some worry about being lost by having a passing doubt at the moment of their death.
A similar pattern appeared in response to an extreme anti-Otherworldly view: «It is not as important to worry about life after death as about what one can do in this life.»
Their grief compounded my own, and I worried about how Ruth's death would affect them long - term — particularly as Ruth had died in bed with her same - age sister.
During the year following the death of the Prophet no one worried about the written form because there were innumerable oral witnesses among them as living copies of the Qur» an complete in its final form.
I don't know what happens after death, and I'm not worried about it at all.
We believe that if we accept Christ into our hearts and trust that His death paid for our sins, then we don't have to wonder or worry about going to Hell.
They are also worried about the «high risk of infection... that may lead to death» because the procedure is usually done in homes that have not been sterilised.
Any worrying I do about death is about the responsibilities I leave behind.
If we're upset over some victims of gun violence but not others, grieved by some untimely deaths but not others, worried about some missing children but not others — we aren't concerned with the injustices at hand.
Of all the billions who your god has supposedly killed over time, why is he worried about this one death of a drunk atheist?
The recent death of Zwingli in a local Swiss canton battle of Protestant versus Catholic had reduced the level of worry about maintaining some kind of credible doctrinal unity.
When I imagined what it would be like to give generously without wondering what is in it for me, to give up my grudges and learn to diffuse hatred with love, to stop judging other people once and for all, to care for the poor and seek out the downtrodden, to finally believe that stuff can't make me happy, to give up my urge to gossip and manipulate, to worry less about what other people think, to refuse to retaliate no matter the cost, to be capable of forgiving to the point of death, to live as Jesus lived and love as Jesus loved, one word came to my mind: liberation.
I guess if you're going to take the concept of the mark literally, then you also need to take literally the concept of God providing your needs (Jesus telling us not to worry about what we'll eat etc), or the words in Daniel (and elsewhere) about life being in God's hands, but death not being indicative of God's favour or otherwise.
I also tend to worry about starving to death whenever I leave the house.
safeco is a great venue and really fun place to see a game without worrying about phillies fans who i am terrified to death of after seeing a double - header there.
My reaction was one of sadness, frustration, and worry: sadness that a young athlete simply assumed that he had CTE as a result of a single concussion and considered it to be a death sentence; frustration that, despite concerted efforts by researchers and clinicians, along with some in the media, to set the record straight on CTE, the prevailing media narrative continues to be that concussions or repetitive subconcussive blows «cause» chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), that CTE «causes» former athletes to commit suicide, and that such causal links are proven scientific fact (they're not); and, finally, worry: concern about the consequences of the football = CTE and CTE = suicide memes in the real world.
If you are truly worried about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, there are very advanced baby monitors available.
Taking Steps To Lower SIDS Risk Every parent worries about their baby and SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome).
I just went from a father scared to death for one little boy, to having 25 new sons to worry about.
Narrator: Like many parents, Aisha, mom of 4 - month - old Hayden, worries about sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS.
It can be alarming when your child expresses concerns about mortality, but death worries are common between the ages of 4 and 8.
As i wait for the arrival of a baby conceived after the death of my first baby when he was a month old, i worry about being able to offer him / her a life not completely shadowed by sadness and grief... I hold on to the hope that the love i already feel for this tiny human growing in me will allow me to give him the full life he / she deserves.
I knew this came from the sitter and wasn't really concerned beyond worrying about possible details shared about the death — which I think is too much for a four and six year - old.
A young mother, Wendy, worries about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS, because she has had two cases of it in her extended family.
Common elementary - age anxieties, such as not being invited to a birthday party, worrying about a spelling test, and fear of death or natural disasters, can turn sound sleepers into troubled ones.
SIDS, or Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, is a worry that strikes fear into the hearts of just about every parent.
Symptoms include: worry about losing parents or other attachment figures though illness or death; unreasonable fear of an event that causes separation (getting lost, say, or being kidnapped); reluctance or refusal to leave home for school; undue fear of sleeping or being alone; persistent nightmares about separation; and physical symptoms (headaches, stomachaches) in conjunction with separation or anticipation of separation.
because we co sleep the death thing is just an absurd argument and i don't waste my time even worrying about that... I have one kid, I am a dad and he is a year old.
However, some children have persistent and excessive worry about losing the attachment figure (eg, to illness, kidnapping, or death).
If you're that worried about absolute death rates, the absolute difference in risk between home birth and hospital birth is about the same as the absolute difference in risk between driving your child with a proper, age - appropriate car seat and driving your child without even a seatbelt.
Are you worried about Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, otherwise known as SIDS?
He dehumanises the migrant «swarm» while fretting about the feelings of British holidaymakers having to see their deaths, just as the Nazi high command worried about the emotional impact of carrying out the Holocaust on the German soldiers tasked with conducting it.
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