It's good to come to terms with thanatology as a psychospiritual initiation. |
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Needless to say, they still haven't come to terms with their moral bankruptcy. |
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By the close of the story, it seems that the narrator has only begun to come to terms with the self-deceit he has practiced on himself. |
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Crusader princes, atabeqs, emirs and even Saladin himself had been forced to come to terms with them or suffer the consequences. |
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Although unshackled from the 15 kg iron chains that fettered them for three years, they are yet to come to terms with their freedom. |
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This programme is to help people to come to terms with loss through bereavement or separation. |
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With richly textured dialogue set in the midlands, the play tells the story of Hester Swane as she battles to come to terms with rejection. |
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Johnny is a complex man, working to come to terms with the haunting gift that has been bestowed upon him. |
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The 5ft 6in caretaker ballooned to 25 st 5lb by bingeing on pies, crisps and chocolates as he struggled to come to terms with the tragedy. |
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The young protagonist struggles to come to terms with his own racial and ethnic identity, and to accept and embrace his blackness. |
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You may need to come to terms with a parent who treated you poorly or didn't raise you well. |
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The description of him dancing the twist with his wife in an effort to come to terms with the New World Order is almost too sad to contemplate. |
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In light of this discovery, all three women must come to terms with a time thought forgotten. |
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She never thought she would be able to come to terms with the unbearable grief. |
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It will depend on the ability of Canberra bureaucrats to come to terms with problems that are totally unfamiliar to them. |
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A young man looks back over his unhappy marriage and struggles to come to terms with his wife's suicide. |
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So anyway, Gary was telling me that it had taken him a long, long time to come to terms with his boringness. |
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Cleave is left facing a tragedy and having to come to terms with things failed and half done. |
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I think the union movement has to come to terms with that and build a base to say that we want an egalitarian society again. |
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I find myself sat despondently at my desk, trying to come to terms with the fact that I actually have to work for living. |
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So it took me some time to come to terms with the fact that he supports fox hunting and his son is a whipper-in. |
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The members have called for the deferment of the increases to allow tenants come to terms with the new rents. |
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If only the director could come to terms with the fact that his dramatic tendencies are hokey and unoriginal. |
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Taking a moment to come to terms with what had just happened, I recomposed myself and returned to my candelight supper, dazed but undaunted. |
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Like the ponderer of a Zen koan, the viewer must come to terms with this paradox. |
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Loyalists are likely to dismiss the criticisms as a familiar refrain from opponents who have never come to terms with his leadership. |
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But he admits it took him a while to come to terms with the shock of being stopped for the second time inside 12 months. |
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During his stay Jan worked with his brothers Tim and Ben to help them come to terms with Sam's impending death. |
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The reason why I want others to contribute is that I haven't fully come to terms with what it is about, but I'm sure it pays repeat viewings. |
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She cannot come to terms with the unkindnesses she experiences or hears about, nor the countless suffocations of poverty. |
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So long as one nurses the hope of civilized co-existence, one tries to come to terms with the ground realities. |
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While most of us are out partying, the family will be trying to come to terms with their terrible loss. |
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The best known Marxist economists outside the orbit of official Communism found it all but impossible to come to terms with what was happening. |
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We must acknowledge and come to terms with the implicit cissexism in assuming that only women have abortions. |
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With its honeycomb of medieval streets, the centre of York has struggled to come to terms with growth of motor traffic over the last 50 years. |
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His dry humour and his lived-in face perfectly convey the hopelessness he feels as he tries to come to terms with his personal demons. |
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This is not going to be an easy hurdle for local government to come to terms with. |
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The nursery teacher is still trying to come to terms with having a big, dark coloured cat loping along the side of her car. |
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People being told to leave their homeland and settle somewhere over a green line was something I could not come to terms with. |
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Will they ever come to terms with what was done in their names and, for the most part, with their tacit approval? |
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You can make a good fist of doing it, but in the end you have to come to terms with the fact that you are not dealing with a tame beast. |
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Defeat is never easy to come to terms with but when your team goes down as tamely and disappointingly as this it is all the harder to take. |
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The savings bank collapsed after the owners and regulators couldn't come to terms on a recapitalization plan. |
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Some saw the ad as providing explanation and making them think, but for others there were too many technicalities to come to terms with. |
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To come to terms with the facts, it is necessary to home in on more elementary errors, as Bastiat and Mises repeatedly do. |
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As a young man David McInroy had to come to terms with the fact he was not destined for a career as a professional footballer. |
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This broad topic was agreed upon after the two sides failed to come to terms on more specific topics. |
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The parties should come to terms on the issue quickly before it gets out of control. |
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This makes the fact that the lyrics are so poor even more difficult to come to terms with. |
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It is difficult to come to terms with the fact that his affable presence will be no more. |
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Despite my initial slight dislike of the idea, I had not only come to terms with it, but also started to like it. |
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While the former long for the past, the latter try to come to terms with their dual identity as Chinese and Americans. |
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But that is in fact an almost expectable event around his age, when people must come to terms with their limitations and old dreams for themselves. |
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The rift put Washington at odds with countries like Brazil, Uruguay or Chile, which seemed to have come to terms with their past. |
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The hardest thing to come to terms with is that ultimately you cannot make everything all right for people, Blaine says. |
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I had come to terms with death then, and I feel so blessed every day that I am still alive. |
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The men, middle-aged and raddled by the inevitable broken roads they have travelled, struggle to come to terms with their lives and damaged relationships. |
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Little Ray and Caz uncover some uncomfortable truths, and Ray and Jim have to come to terms with the prejudices of ageism, family loyalty and love. |
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He was diagnosed with sarcoma, a rare form of cancer, in August and had to come to terms with dying in a manner of months. |
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The scruffy, residential district of Realengo is trying to come to terms with what happened on Thursday morning. |
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You see that they've lost their sharp wit and edginess, but you've long come to terms with that. |
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Hemingbrough are struggling to come to terms with life in the top division although the signs are that they are improving despite their reversal at Stockton and Hopgrove. |
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Anyone who reads this site on a passing basis will have had to come to terms with my, erm, creative application of the rules of spelling, punctuation and verb modification. |
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This was one of those days, one which is still hard to come to terms with. |
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He's trying to come to terms with the barbarity of the attack and is concerned that such scenes of violence are becoming more prevalent in cities. |
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The play, set in 1982, depicts the struggles of three privileged slackers to come to terms with impending adulthood. |
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I still remember the hurt that was etched on his face as he tried to come to terms with the defeat and more particularly, the manner of that defeat. |
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Especially not a country like India, which must come to terms both with its multiculturalism and its caste and religious mix. |
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However, the oft-times champions struggled to come to terms with rather unaccomplished opponents, and they only scored twice in the opening 14 minutes. |
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But I see no incentive for the GOP to come to terms, and I think the potus knows it. |
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Like many former mining towns in north-east England, Easington is still struggling to come to terms with the sudden loss of the major local employer. |
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It will have to come to terms with the ghost of Ronald Reagan, and it will have to come to terms with Rush Limbaugh. |
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It will be stuck with below par growth for the foreseeable future as it is forced to come to terms with the slump in the high technology sector, he said. |
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He added that seeing people come to terms with tragedy and catastrophe had played a profound role on his spiritual beliefs and influenced his faith. |
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Staff work around the clock to ensure these youngsters cram as much into their short years as possible while helping their parents to come to terms with the inevitable. |
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Inquiries are still ongoing into the deaths just over a week ago, and the couple's families are still struggling to come to terms with what has happened. |
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I have even seen a pop-up book of the universe which perhaps fortunately fails to come to terms with the Big Bang, but these books seldom feature observers. |
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Those who dismiss God as a product of psychological conditioning or pre-scientific myth have not come to terms with the findings of modern science. |
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In a rapidly changing digital world, where many are stretched and stressed, we need to come to terms with the effects of such stress and pressure on the human psyche. |
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The Cowbridge resident, who struggled to come to terms with her hearing loss, spent the best part of a decade learning to lipread. |
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Unable to come to terms with a changing society, the identity of the Afrikaner characters in the novel is regressively tied to the past. |
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While there, he befriends tunneller Jack Firebrace, who helps him come to terms with both the conflict and his lost love. |
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The first and third were called off due to revolts elsewhere in the empire, the second because the Britons seemed ready to come to terms. |
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Louis fell ill and withdrew from the campaign, and Geoffrey was forced to come to terms with Henry. |
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Historians have not yet truly come to terms with the weaknesses of that muddled era of centralisation and Thatcherite socialism. |
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Palermo said the need to come to terms with war's bloodiness is common to veterans of all conflicts. |
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Henry's father advised him to come to terms with Louis and peace was made between them in August 1151 after mediation by Bernard of Clairvaux. |
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But a promise of French help quickly forced the confederates to come to terms. |
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When the Orsini offered to admit the French to their castles, Alexander had no choice but to come to terms with Charles. |
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So, for instance, a good deal of the Greek language literature can be read as an attempt to come to terms with Hellenistic culture. |
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Llywelyn was forced to come to terms, and by the advice of his council sent his wife Joan to negotiate with the king, her father. |
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The African bishops could not come to terms and the Donatists asked Constantine to act as a judge in the dispute. |
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With Benson's help, Walpole had come to terms with the loss of his faith. |
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We had a fall out, couldn't come to terms and haven't talked since. |
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We hope someday she and her mother will come to terms on the matter. |
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In 1101, after Earl Hugh's death, Gruffudd and Cadwgan came to terms with England's new king, Henry I, who was consolidating his own authority and also eager to come to terms. |
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They struggled to come to terms with the fact there would be a new addition to the family with siblings Abbie, 12, Paige, 10, Ryan, eight, Milo, five and Lyam, four. |
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Ultimately, at the end of the campaign, Owain was forced to come to terms with Henry, being obliged to surrender Rhuddlan and other conquests in the east. |
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