Experiences
in sentence
1255 examples of Experiences in a sentence
And as you make your way into the exhibition where it talks about the recovery, we actually project directly onto these moments of twisted steel all of the
experiences
from people who literally excavated on top of the pile itself.
And as you leave that storytelling moment understanding about 9/11, we then turn the museum back into a moment of listening and actually talk to the individual visitors and ask them their own
experiences
about 9/11.
And so these oral histories, which we've actually been capturing already for years, are then mixed together with interviews that we're doing with people like Donald Rumsfeld, Bill Clinton, Rudy Giuliani, and you mix together these different players and these different experiences, these different reflection points about 9/11.
We're aware of this anyway even in our common
experiences
or our newspaper stories of the spread of violence from fights or in gang wars or in civil wars or even in genocides.
Many other hallucinations, including smells, sights, and sounds, also involve the same brain areas as real sensory
experiences.
But it’s clear that hallucinatory
experiences
are much more closely tied to ordinary perception than we once thought.
Now the self that
experiences
directly can only exist in the moment, but the one that narrates needs several moments, a whole sequence of them, and that's why our full sense of self needs both immersive experience and the flow of time.
The self that lives in the long narrative arc and the self that
experiences
the moment become one.
It allows us to store some immediate
experiences
and a little bit of knowledge.
We cannot only have grateful
experiences.
And they have always to do with my own personal
experiences.
Now for as long as I can remember, my job has been to take people out into nature, and so I think it's a lovely twist of fate today to have the opportunity to bring some of my
experiences
out in nature in to this gathering.
My mother died, a relationship I'd been in ended, I moved back to the United States from some years abroad, and I got through all of those
experiences
intact.
And I remember being amazed at that point to think that someone who clearly had so many bad
experiences
with so many different treatments still had buried in him, somewhere, enough optimism to reach out for one more.
I was really moved by these experiences, and I decided that I wanted to write about them not only in a book I was working on, but also in an article, and I got a commission from The New York Times Magazine to write about depression among the indigent.
And I'm going to now shift to talking a little bit about my own
experiences.
And the comment section for that video became sort of like a self-help section, where people could talk about their tonsil stone
experiences
and, like, tips and tricks for getting rid of them.
But for millions of us, those
experiences
linger, causing symptoms like flashbacks, nightmares, and negative thoughts that interfere with everyday life.
This phenomenon, called post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, isn’t a personal failing; rather, it’s a treatable malfunction of certain biological mechanisms that allow us to cope with dangerous
experiences.
For most people, these
experiences
disappear within a few days to two weeks as their hormone levels stabilize.
Not everyone has all these symptoms, or
experiences
them to the same extent and intensity.
So I'm going to try and describe some of the
experiences
that we're looking for through each of the works.
So the thing about environmental folklore is it tends to be based on our experiences, the things we've heard from other people.
And breadwinners who are also caregivers have a much wider range of
experiences
and contacts.
He has access to new subjects like music and art, to new friends and to
experiences
that extend far beyond his home.
You have taken the dreams of that nine-year-old boy, which were impossible and dauntingly scary, dauntingly terrifying, and put them into practice, and figured out a way to reprogram yourself, to change your primal fear so that it allowed you to come back with a set of
experiences
and a level of inspiration for other people that never could have been possible otherwise.
As my family and I ran for safety when I was about 12 from one of those attacks, I resolved that I would do everything I could to ensure that my own children would not go through the same
experiences
we had.
PM: So Gabby, what have you learned from your
experiences
the past few years?
And I decided that if I came here and shared with you some of my experiences, that maybe we could all be a little less anxious and a little more bold in our conversations about race.
I've covered war for about 20 years, as I said, but my most intense
experiences
in combat were with American soldiers in Afghanistan.
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