As Robert Sollard wrote recently in the Chronicle of Hiqher Education (as cited by Roth), «Much has been
written about the loss of ethics, a sense of decency, moderation and fair play in American society.
For all these reasons, I love to encourage other bereaved parents to
write about their losses.
«Only Ian McEwan could
write about loss with such telling honesty.
In these eloquent and surprising essays, twenty writers face this fact, among them Geoff Dyer, who describes the ghost bikes memorializing those who die in biking accidents; Jonathan Safran Foer, proposing a new way of punctuating dialogue in the face of a family history of heart attacks and decimation by the Holocaust; Mark Doty, whose reflections on the art - porn movie Bijou lead to a meditation on the intersection of sex and death epitomized by the AIDS epidemic; and Joyce Carol Oates, who
writes about the loss of her husband and faces her own mortality.
In all her novels,
she writes about loss — loss of loved ones and loss of personal control.
We've
written about the loss of this feature before, and there's still hope that Microsoft may allow the pinning of Live Tiles on the desktop, but that feature will probably not ship with the first version of Windows 10.
There is a great deal
written about the loss of fathers in the lives of children of divorce.
Not exact matches
Marks arrived at more or less the same definition of liquidity as Hooper,
writing that the way to think
about liquidity isn't to ask if there is a market for an asset, but whether you can quickly sell that an asset without taking a huge
loss on it.
Using bitcoin or other virtual currency to purchase goods and services is considered exchanging property, and all the transactions must be tracked for gains and
losses, said Bryan Skarlatos, a tax attorney at Kostelanetz & Fink LLP who has lectured and
written about bitcoin.
5 weeks ago, Jason Zweig of the Wall Street Journal
wrote a great article
about the
loss of trust in the market by retail investors.
«According to the studies [the Government Accountability Office] reviewed, climate change may substantially increase
losses by 2040 and increase
losses from
about 50 to 100 percent by 2100,» GAO
wrote in a 2014 study.
Write a business plan that includes details
about your venture — expenses, profits and possible
losses (hey, it's a business!
Today I
write about love and
loss and faith and renewal at VividLiving.org and NancySharp.net.
she
wrote about the social ostracization of orphans and the impact of drunkenness on families, she wrestled with themes of
loss and betrayal and innocence, with sex and longing in her way and in her time.
Indeed, as the Cardinals were preparing to be locked in, I somewhat naively
wrote an article headlined «Now the conclave is
about to begin, we can look forward with relief, not only to having a pope again, but to the secular media's sudden
loss of interest.»
I remembered Brennan Manning — the man who has translated the love of God in a way that I could receive it more than probably any other writer — was addicted to alcohol and I re-read up one of his last books before he died: «All is Grace: A Ragamuffin Memoir» where he vulnerably
writes about what this battle has cost him, even as he experienced the unending and unconditional love of God in the midst of it, how he experienced regret and pain and
loss alongside of the love and tenderness of God in this dependency.
I'll even
write about miscarriages and
loss,
about how it feels to labour only to end up with death and longing, sorrow staining backwards and forwards, changing everything.
Mary Lawson
writes about love and redemption,
loss and death, set in the northern Ontario.
Intrepid readers of SHS will recall that I
wrote about a study — based on interviews with family members — showing that some patients received lethal prescriptions before experiencing serious symptoms — out of worry
about future potential pain or
loss of dignity.
I
wrote up a post that evolved into a poem... a very special, personal poem
about my Porom, and
loss, and love.
We didn't cook with many sweets at culinary school (I
wrote about it here: «Culinary School: Three Semesters of Life, Learning, and
Loss of Blood» http://amzn.to/eOKJWw), but reading this, I wish we had.
So forget
about the chocolate you ate as a kid and check out these smaller producers, because, as Simran Sethi
writes in her book * Bread, Wine, Chocolate: The Slow
Loss of Foods We Love *, the cacao you're accustomed to has led to a marked decrease in biodiversity in cacao - growing regions.
Well
written, but I think it will fall on deaf ears, my fear is as follows, it will take a
loss in money for the manager and board to change, this will only come if we finish out of the top 4, but knowing the board they would still give home a season to try again, I feel very sorry for Sanchez, he is total quality and deserves better, most of the other players look settled, turn up give70 % and get paid, no matter what level you play at you should come off the pitch thinking I gave everything, how many of our players could say that, they lack motivation, player for player we are as good if not better than athletico Madrid but they have a manger that gets 100 % out of every player, Klopp is the same, but why would they leave their clubs to come here with a boar that cares
about money not entertainment, Wenger was a lucky manager he inherited a top defence now his luck has run out
But the worst thing
about this kind of
writing, is to try and justify a lack lustre performance and the
loss, on that penalty.
The Falcons are coming off four straight ATS
losses and seem to be following the Super Bowl hangover narrative that PJ recently
wrote about.
We have also
written at length
about how it is profitable to bet against ranked College Football teams, fade NFL teams in «must - win» situations, take NBA underdogs after a blowout
loss and pound the over in bad weather NFL games.
That isn't all that surprising considering Oklahoma City had the home crowd behind them, but Pounding the Rock's Fred Silva
wrote about the San Antonio
loss in excruciating detail.
Last season, I
wrote about how the first 5 - 1
loss to Bayern Munich was my low point in 45 years as an Arsenal supporter.
It might be a bit too early to
write the current season off for Arsenal, especially as we knew that it was going to be a tough start, with the Gunners having played just two Premier League games so far, but after following up the narrowest of victories at home to Leicester City with another
loss at Stoke I doubt there are too many Arsenal fans feeling confident
about our title chances right now.
No point
writing about the effect a draw /
loss would have upon our CL future, we all know the situation.
Well, Bolton are on a slide of four straight
losses in the Premier League and their home form has not exactly been much to
write home
about, as the Trotters have won more on their travels this season.
That rainbow is my five - year - old, Eden, who's pregnancy I
write about in my memoir, Expecting Sunshine: A Journey of Grief, Healing and Pregnancy After
Loss.
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.
Getting prepped for my 3rd c - section Since this month is Cesarean Awareness Month, I thought it was a perfect time to
write about c - section mamas and how they are full of beauty and courage, especially those mamas in our pregnancy after
loss community.
She creates memorial sketches of babies lost to stillbirth and infant death and
writes about life after
loss at Little Winged Ones.
Posting
about my weight
loss is entirely my choice and I have NOT received compensation for
writing about the diet!
Yet time and time again I have read and
written about homebirth
loss mothers praising deadly midwives, praising the «experience» of a vaginal birth of a dead child, refusing to cooperate in disciplining the midwife responsible, advocating for more «freedom» for homebirth midwives, and, most grotesque of all, choosing to risk their next child's life by having a homebirth.
For those of you asking
about how we are getting one with our pregnancy, I thought I'd share my most recent Bump Day Blogs that's I've
written for «Pregnancy After
Loss Support» here.
I
write about my experience of surviving those pregnancies in my memoir, Expecting Sunshine: A Journey of Grief, Healing and Pregnancy After
Loss, now available for pre-order on my website for a signed copy or through Amazon.
All week I've been participating in Pregancy After
Loss Awareness Week and the final prompt is to
write down what I want people to know
about Pregnancy After
Loss (PAL).
I had a hard time expressing my mixture of joy and doubt to anyone except the ladies in my pregnancy after
loss support group, and I hadn't yet felt daring enough to
write about it on my blog.
In the next few months, I'll be
writing a series of posts
about labor, birth, the immediate postpartum, and the uniqueness to the phases and stage that present when pregnant after
loss.
I
wrote this last year when our PALS team participated in our «What I want you to know
about pregnancy after
loss» campaign to raise PAL Awareness:
I thought I wanted to
write about getting through the holidays while pregnant after
loss or the first holiday season with our subsequent baby.
I want to be able to
write some hugely profound piece to mark Baby
Loss Awareness Week, that conveys everything that I want the world to know
about Baby
Loss... but the words have failed me so much that I've barely heard the urge to start
writing something just to delete it again.
I was reading through some of my past articles at Pregnancy After
Loss Support last night to remind myself what I've already
written about the holiday season.
Death,
Loss and Grieving: There are two mothers who have experienced significant loss and write about t
Loss and Grieving: There are two mothers who have experienced significant
loss and write about t
loss and
write about this.
Written especially for parents who have lost a child, Trying Again lessens the uncertainties
about pregnancy after miscarriage, stillbirth, or infant
loss by providing the facts to help you determine if you and your partner are emotionally ready for another pregnancy.
She
writes about her journey through pregnancy
loss, as well as discussions on faith, chaplaincy, and vintage sewing on her blog, Restless Weaver.
Increasingly recognized as an expert in the field, Lori has spoken at BlogHer conferences
about Adoption /
Loss / Infertility (ALI) issues
about authenticity in
writing.