Word: paines
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...heart of Porter's teaching will be that lesson of New York City. "People underestimate their capacity for change," says Porter. "There is never a right time to do a difficult thing. No one is going to make a change that involves pain if they think they can avoid it. A President's job is to help people have a vision of their potential. A great disservice is done when we don't help them understand they have most of the responsibility for their lives...
More than a decade later, covering the fighting between Nationalist and Communist forces in China, Mydans could use an opposite strategy to relay the pain of an old woman in the ruins of her village. His picture of a Texas town works through addition, building a superabundance of facts; his shot of a bereft woman is a masterpiece of subtraction, paring away everything that is extraneous to one victim's grief...
Joyce acknowledges that the Morning News "got off track" but defends the current version. Though he admits that previous CBS News presidents protected their staffs better, he argues that CBS Inc. never before had such financial troubles. "It's totally understandable that there should be pain in the aftermath of the layoffs," Joyce says. "It was a terrible process but one we had to go through." As for the complaints about news coverage, Sauter blames "naysayers who have negative feelings about almost anything that has taken place over the past four years...
...filmmakers, the disintegration of a marriage is not at all an occasion for faultfinding or for a highly compressed dramatic crisis. Everyone in Twice in a Lifetime is decent. Harry only reluctantly concedes the validity of his need for emotional renewal, and he never entirely forgives himself the pain he causes. He is, in fact, as surprised as anyone when, while celebrating his 50th birthday with his fellow mill hands, he falls passionately in love with a barmaid (Ann-Margret). Stunned, Kate is tempted toward but fights off a state of permanent victimization. Helping her to remobilize are a married...
...sexual jealousy to carrying on "like a backward five-year-old who sees another child with his tricycle." He solemnly advised readers to be proud of having a mate that others wish to sleep with. To the late psychoanalyst Leslie Farber, this view of jealousy was an attempt by pained sexual revolutionaries to conjure up invulnerability by declaring the pain invalid. Though the sexual revolution has fallen on hard times, some still agree with its alarmist view of jealousy. Manhattan Psychiatrist Robert Gould told Friday, "Jealousy has its roots in unhealthy patterns of development. It is tied up with possessiveness...