Word: connection
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...feel like I’ve never really been able to connect with my boyfriend. No matter what, he doesn’t communicate his feelings to me, I never know what he’s thinking about things, and I always feel confused. I feel silly addressing these problems to him because he hasn’t done anything concretely wrong. Any suggestions...
...achieving personal growth. Retired elementary school teacher Linda Sicher, 58, of New York City, for example, pieced together several volunteer turns to combat her greatest postwork fear: "that my brain will die." Not a chance. Each activity has taught her something new, and she has been able to connect the dots between them. Once every month she's on call at the Mt. Sinai Sexual Assault and Violence Intervention (SAVI) program, ready to speed to the side of a rape or abuse victim before the professionals arrive. Leveraging her training for SAVI, she created a program on child abuse...
...hunter’s rifle) with the psychoanalysis of the hunter once he returns to the city. Robinson says that this poem, like many of hers, is about art. But on my own I could not have been confident in that conclusion: I am unsure of how to connect the hunter’s “dreams of Lichenstein” with the psychiatrist’s desire to “seek other places to hide.” Nonetheless, the wittiness of lines like “Gelman blundered his way / into your heart. You found...
...idea is straightforward: you connect an adapter to the top of the iPod, cue up a song, and it automatically beams the music to its receiver, which is connected to your sound system. Since it?s not sending audio over FM like those in-car transmitters but rather a 2.4GHz Bluetooth signal, it can maintain a nice full sound at distances up to 30 feet. You can hear a little bit of digital hiss at the high end, but only when you?re nearby-near enough to just plug your iPod directly into your stereo. This...
...game had yet to score a goal in an Ivy League game, kept the ball on the offensive, but Harvard’s defense maintained control for most of the first half. In that frame, the Tigers won of most of their fifty-fifty chances and connected on most of their passes, but couldn’t capitalize. The Crimson defense wouldn’t let them get a decent shot off on Harvard goalie Ryan Johnson. When Princeton did take a shot at the goal from point-blank range with 31 minutes to go in the first half, Harvard...