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121 Sentences With "aloneness"

How to use aloneness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "aloneness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "aloneness". Mastering all the usages of "aloneness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

If he failed any definitive American experience, it was aloneness.
Though I may feel immediate aloneness, it's ultimately an illusion.
But the fact of myself, of my aloneness, had somehow been exposed.
But nobody saw the catastrophe coming, or imagined the aloneness of this man.
" Recently heartbroken, Laing — approaching her mid-30s, "an age at which female aloneness . . .
The album is a celebratory exultation of aloneness, communicated through layered, careful musicianship.
Something about living with strangers that I'd found on SpareRoom reinforced the aloneness.
I need to make my aloneness more hopeful, at least on the surface.
Sooner or later, in our aloneness, we were going to find each other.
Art enters the domain of community and of the political without opposing aloneness.
"It's that endless tundra of aloneness, of loneliness, stretching out before me," Sonya says.
Reading this book made me feel aloneness more acutely, but also exposed its value.
Despite having incredible, loving, caring parents, I related strongly to this feeling of aloneness.
So now those parents whose children do move out are alone in their aloneness.
Nor is it just their hushed contemplation of aloneness and connection that links them.
The black-haired girl with her attendants, their laughter a rebuke to my aloneness.
To swim, as to write, is to choose an intense state of socially acceptable aloneness.
In "Continuity," this consummate poet of aloneness writes: Cure me of this void, I said.
It can be unsettling out here, Scott said: the aloneness, the sheer scale of the landscape.
I imagine that feeling—of potentially indefinite aloneness—would be among the most difficult to capture.
Ending that aloneness is the whole point of "Non Solus" — or so it seemed to me.
People often refer to aloneness and writer's block as the two great challenges of being a novelist.
Though he died of an infection, I think his aloneness was likely a major factor in his death.
I was alone in my new secret world, and that very aloneness was part of the great intoxication.
His sudden aloneness in this big world (and that big chair) is just too hard to face and accept.
The patterns that have emerged from their experiences with radical aloneness illuminate ways to understand and improve your own.
Rather than a party album or even a romantic album, Dedicated is an album about aloneness, contemplation, self-scrutiny.
Our deficiencies, insecurities and defense mechanisms are revealed in our aloneness, which God can then use to strengthen our character.
God wants to give us dreams and visions of what can be done through us and that can come through aloneness.
And then there's also the wider question: because the aloneness or the isolation comes first, that has to be the standard.
But aloneness on a cruise ship is something one has to make efforts to achieve; it is not the natural state.
On the other hand: the term still has the notion of "partnered" at its root, suggesting that aloneness is an undesirable state.
The thing with single people is you'll sometimes look at them with longing and envy: don't they seem so happy in their aloneness?
This makes the utter helplessness that later enfolds them all the sadder, as each actor subtly conveys a sudden awareness of brutal aloneness.
Finally comprehending the magnitude of her loss, she senses that through literature and art she can make uneasy peace with her fundamental aloneness.
Indeed, loneliness (and aloneness, because they're not the same thing) feel like the default setting for American Weekend, making for an absorbing sonic environment.
What it's about: An exploration of not only loneliness but also aloneness, as discovered through art in New York City — the titular lonely city.
In creating "thank u, next," then, Grande offers aloneness as an attractive possibility, and in pop music and our culture at large, that's rare.
My aloneness eclipsed everything else about me; I lacked even the company of a series of "thinking of you" texts to convince me otherwise.
There are many aspects of this story that seem mildly shocking in retrospect: the haphazard aloneness of it all, the wrongheaded decision masquerading as moxie.
The truth is, I need to feel better about it, need to pretty up the bleakness and the association with disease that aloneness has assumed.
This going-aloneness is not for want of anyone to go with, but instead because I actually want to be alone to fully enjoy the experience.
It's a song cycle for acoustic guitar and electronics — made with members of the Chicago band Bitchin Bajas — about a young woman's ambition, success, dissatisfaction and aloneness.
What is often missed in the corresponding coverage, says Steve Cole, a genetics researcher at UCLA who frequently collaborated with Cacioppo, is that loneliness is not aloneness.
So often, discomfort with solitude is rooted in not really liking yourself all that much, and in the fear that your aloneness says something about your worth.
"These groups eliminate the feeling of aloneness and give stories of hope, so you know you don't have to do it alone," Silva told Reuters Health by phone.
But maybe the thing we fear most about rebels is their aloneness, their apparent lack of need — for approval, of course, as well as for people in general.
" Padgett goes on from there, always tracking his physical location, or what he is doing or thinking, which is about "being an only child" and his sense of "aloneness.
The album – which explores themes of aloneness in the world and is filled with catchy minimalist, synth pop – marks something of a return for the producer and singer-songwriter.
I have always loved solitude, but without the crowdedness of human interactions — on a city street, in the virtual world — my aloneness felt no more than a neutral existence.
Carrère's most profound exploration of that kind of nourishing aloneness came, in part, out of a 2004 vacation in Sri Lanka with his son, his girlfriend and her son.
It conveys the idea that although you feel completely alone in times of suffering, there is someone else out there going through something similar, feeling that same sense of aloneness.
The book is a bit pat, the arguments often self-evident—but it shoved Sontag back into the arena of political contest, her precious aloneness having been crumbled by collective suffering.
In 1996, Dr. Gunderson published another analysis, "The Borderline Patient's Intolerance of Aloneness: Insecure Attachments and Therapist Availability," providing doctors and patients with an X-ray of the condition's internal emotional terrain.
In the 1970s she joined Broadside Press where she published the rest of her poetry (Riot, Family Pictures, Aloneness, Aurora, and Beckonings) and the first volume of her autobiography, Report from Part One.
My aloneness in my travels — and my fear, at this semi-ripe age, that it could all go haywire for me too — is, I suspect, common among grown children whose parents died young.
It's a record that urges me to know myself better, and make myself better; to exist within loneliness, to explore it, and eventually to possess it, until it simply becomes aloneness, which is better.
To my surprise, she cataloged emotions that huddled inside me too: the aloneness, the sense of being cast in an endlessly looping horror movie, the disconnect from a world where things like this didn't happen.
Her hair was wet and matted, and she bit off each word, spittle popping off her lips, her hands cutting the air, eyes rolling around in her head — a figure of terrifying aloneness and confrontation.
And Radiohead's maximal "A Moon Shaped Pool," its first album in five years, reconciles the aloneness of Thom Yorke's sound and persona with the collaborative-minded and sometimes orchestral visions of the group's guitarist Jonny Greenwood.
Valenzuela: Looking back, I think the aloneness for me—in terms of gender perception and how the construction of gender is in the Latin music industry—was a combination of feeling inadequate, constantly, in all spaces.
Upon her return home to New Orleans, Edna trades the social minutiae expected of upper-crust Victorian white women — receiving callers and returning their calls — for painting, walking, gambling, dinner parties, brandy, anger, aloneness and sex.
Perhaps there is nothing to your concern, it is but the concern of a woman who is alone in a world not so very hospitable to a woman alone as if aloneness were a brazen and unwomanly choice.
"I was keeling towards the midpoint of my thirties," writes Olivia Laing in The Lonely City, "an age at which female aloneness is no longer socially sanctioned and carries with it a persistent whiff of strangeness, deviance and failure".
I see this most acutely during the holidays when I care for hospitalized patients, some connected to I.V. poles in barren rooms devoid of family or friends — their aloneness amplified by cheerful Christmas movies playing on wall-mounted televisions.
Just as 221th-century Americans accepted monotony as inevitable, they also accepted loneliness — or as they called it, "lonesomeness" — as part of the order of things; they thought it was unpleasant but not unexpected and that everybody was going to experience aloneness in their lives.
For Asian-American chefs, this seesaw between the obligations of inheritance and the thrill of go-it-aloneness, between respecting your ancestors and lighting out for the hills, manifests in dishes that arguably could come only from minds fluent in two ways of life.
The movie puts a goofy spin on the Batman saga, but it squeezes its brightest, most sustained comedy from Mr. Arnett's hypnotically sepulchral voice, which conveys the entire bat ethos — the Sturm und Drang, the darkness and aloneness, the resoluteness and echoiness — in vocal terms.
I made enchiladas with chicken in red sauce and with each bite I thought of the woman whose kitchen-kindness rescued me from aloneness and brought me back, forkful by forkful, into the world of the living where people cooked and ate and drank and made memory.
Smithson's gallerist, Virginia Dwan, said the jetty ''was something otherworldly, but I hesitate to say hell, because I don't mean everybody being tortured and so forth, but the feeling of aloneness, and of it being in a place that was unsafe, and something devilish, something devilish there.
But I also just love the idea of serving up a massive alien-invasion / global diplomatic crisis story as what basically amounts to a distraction — the real story being that of Dr. Banks' life, her longings, her grief process, and her total aloneness as a singularly brilliant woman.
And for those of you who are dwelling in your single status, take heart: You may not be looking forward to a day full of love and romance, but perhaps you can find solace in the self-mockery that, on Valentine's Day, makes you less alone in your aloneness than ever.
Though it wasn't something she was consciously considering on the road, or during the songwriting and recording process, which continued when McClellan ultimately settled in New York, she says she realized that the meditations on aloneness resulted in a throughline on the record, a consideration of the role "male validation" plays both in her life and the world around her.
Sooner or later, however, everyone is confronted with both failure and aloneness.
Deaf children in an oral setting may feel depressed, anxious and experience aloneness and embarrassment as a result of such language deprivation.
The episode follows Bemis through the post-apocalyptic world, touching on such social issues as anti-intellectualism, the dangers of reliance upon technology, and the difference between aloneness (solitude) and loneliness.
And by the mid-1940s, Elaine de Kooning had painted a series of approximately a dozen portraits of Joop Sanders, which seem to express aloneness and androgyny. He studied in 1948 with Willem de Kooning.
Additionally, AYAs face problems that adults and children rarely see including college concerns, fertility, and sense of aloneness. Studies have often shown that treating young adults with the same protocols used in pediatrics is more effective than adult oriented treatments.
Brahma answers, asserts verse 2 of the Upanishad, "Seek knowledge with Sraddha-bhakti-dhyana-yogadavehi (faith, devotion, meditation in yoga), not ritual works, not wealth, not offsprings". Aloneness and renunciation, states the text, is the path to the life of eternity.
He was the founder of the Niten Ichi-ryū school or Nito Ichi-ryū style of swordsmanship, and in his final years authored , and Dokkōdō (The Path of Aloneness). Both documents were given to Terao Magonojō, the most important of Musashi's students, seven days before Musashi's death. The Book of Five Rings deals primarily with the character of his Niten Ichi-ryū school in a concrete sense e.g. his own practical martial art and its generic significance; The Path of Aloneness on the other hand, deals with the ideas that lie behind it, as well as his life's philosophy in a few short aphoristic sentences.
He suggested that parenting might contribute to the development of autism, but he also balanced this suggestion with the observation that the aloneness of these children was present very early on, making it unlikely that the whole picture of the disorder was the result of parenting.
Ordinary Ecstasy: The Dialectics of Humanistic Psychology. London, UK: Brunner-Routledge. Humanism focused on uniquely human issues, such as free will, personal growth, self-actualization, self-identity, death, aloneness, freedom, and meaning. It emphasized subjective meaning, rejection of determinism, and concern for positive growth rather than pathology.
The client comes to eventually feel recognised, accepted and understood as who they are; their sense of personal being, or self, is fostered; and they can start to drop the destructive defenses which disrupt their sense of personal being. The development of the self implies a capacity to embody and span the dialectic of 'aloneness-togetherness'—rather than being disposed toward either schizoid isolation (aloneness) or merging identification with the other (togetherness). Although the therapy is described as psychodynamic, and is accordingly concerned to identify activity and personal meaning in the midst of apparent passivity, it relies more on careful empathic listening and the development of a common 'feeling language' than it does on psychoanalytic interpretation.
Withers is most recognized for her works on paper which are a hybrid mix of narrative, abstract and modern surrealism. Her paintings explore the conflicting ideas of joy and melancholy, as well as community and aloneness in regards to the concept of home and communication."110 degrees" Modern Dallas. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
Linton and the project have put on photo exhibits in Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona. In the exhibits, the photos were only accompanied by the names of the subjects. The photos have been described as having quiet solidity, an air of survived desertion, simple, and giving of an air of aloneness. IHAN displayed photos in conjunction with the Carlos G. Figueroa foundation.
Harvard University Press, 2000, p. 199. According to Gavin Flood, the earlier Brihadaranyaka Upanishad is describing meditation when it states that "having become calm and concentrated, one perceives the self (ātman) within oneself". One of the most influential texts of classical Hindu Yoga is Patañjali's Yoga sutras (c. 400 CE), a text associated with Yoga and Samkhya, which outlines eight limbs leading to kaivalya ("aloneness").
Reprinted in Almost all the characteristics described in Kanner's first paper on the subject, notably "autistic aloneness" and "insistence on sameness", are still regarded as typical of the autistic spectrum of disorders. It is not known whether Kanner derived the term independently of Asperger. Donald Triplett was the first person diagnosed with autism. He was diagnosed by Kanner after being first examined in 1938, and was labeled as "case 1".
From these abstractions, it comes to concreteness with the picture of red earth in the rain, drawing a parallel with the lover's journey from aloneness to union. Finally, there is the image of the kurinji flower itself. Though never mentioned in the poem, it is nonetheless present as a fundamental part of a landscape of hills. A kurinji flower only blooms once in twelve years,The latest flowering was during 2006.
In addition, Erdman is a trained psychotherapist and author on topics related to therapy and psychoanalysis. Credits include "Idioms of Attachment: Performative Dimensions of Object Relating, Affect, and Connection" (with M. Crocker of the Sexuality, Attachment, and Trauma Project), Psychoanalytic Review, 106(2):149-173 (2019), and "The Powerless Therapist and the Helpless Borderline: Acceptance, Aloneness, and Dyadic Joining," Psychoanalytic Social Work, 24(2):114-130 (2017). He teaches at the New York University School of Social Work.
He wrote the classic Japanese martial arts literature The Book of Five Rings and Dokkōdō (The Path of Aloneness).A Book of Five Rings by Miyamoto Musashi (translation from Japanese by Victor Harris), London: Allison and Busby, 1974. The Tokugawa Shogunate enforced the policy of Sakoku ("closed country"), which prohibited most foreign contact and trade between 1641 and 1853. Under the policy, most foreign nationals were barred from entering Japan and common Japanese people couldn't leave.
An ideal spot for yoga is a secluded and pleasant spot, state verses 2.89–90 of the text. The verses 2.94–2.119 present Pranayama, "extension of the prāṇa or breath", to cleanse the body through breathing exercises. After Pranayama, states the text, the Yogi should seek self-knowledge through Kaivalya (aloneness), wherein he meditates on his transcendent Atman (soul). This process, asserts the text, can be assisted by a yogi focusing his awareness to kundalini centers within his body.
Samkhya and Yoga are dualistic systems; they treat Purusa and Prakrti as equally real entities even though absolutely opposed to each other. The concept of Kaivalya signifies that the aim of these systems is to secure an "aloneness" by severing all connections. The discriminating knowledge does cause the separation of Purusa from Prakrti but Prakrti remains intact to cause further bondage. Kaivalya is false transcendence achieved by cutting oneself off altogether from all manifestation and through the ushering in of a blissful silence.
Some commentators including professor Rubin Gotesky have argued the sense of aloneness was rarely felt until older communal ways of living began to be disrupted by the enlightenment. Starting in the 1900s, and especially in the 21st century, efforts explicitly aiming to alleviate loneliness became much more common. Loneliness reduction efforts occur across multiple disciplines, often by actors for whom loneliness relief is not their primary concern. For example, by commercial firms, civic planers, designers of new housing developments, and university administration.
The film is about a depressed independent director who becomes frustrated when he asks to film his actresses nude. It features partial nudity and sex scenes, as the director becomes jealous after seeing Kerness and her boyfriend make love during a steamy session in the shower. In summary, "a very direct and subtle, very sad and funny look at nothing more or less than sexual frustration and aloneness", according to the Ann Arbor Film Festival, who screened it in 2012.
Another popular etymology is the hypothetical Greek word ἀντίμόνος antimonos, "against aloneness", explained as "not found as metal", or "not found unalloyed"."Antimony" in Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 5th ed. 2004. Fernando even derives it from the story of how "Basil Valentine" and his fellow monastic alchemists poisoned themselves by working with antimony; antimonium is found two centuries before his time. "Popular etymology" from OED; as for antimonos, the pure negative would be more naturally expressed by a- "not".
Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole Now many counselors would consider therapeutic presence to be one of those necessary conditions as the goal of person centered therapy is to allow clients to become more fully themselves and experience this through the counseling relationship. #Existential theory focuses on the meaning of life, identity crises, confronting aloneness, and other anxieties involving “big picture” ideas. Counselors who utilize existential therapy focus on existential roots and emphasize the idea that human beings are ultimately responsible for the choices they make and the actions they take.Gehart, D. (2013).
According to the book In a Different Key: The Story of Autism (2016), Leo Kanner's original 1943 paper stated that "the child's aloneness" was evident "from the very beginning of life." Furthermore, he drew a contrast between autism and schizophrenia, in that autism was part of a child's constitution whereas schizophrenia developed later in life.In a Different Key: The Story of Autism, John Joseph Donvan, Caren Brenda Zucker, Penguin Random House, 2016, pages 89-91. This first paper drew only a handful of citations in the medical literature.
The ensuing revelation that apparently unfazed grown-ups feel loneliness and pain too unnerves him and makes him aware of the darkness surrounding them. Just before he feels overwhelmed, Douglas and his friends return, breaking the spell of aloneness. Tom later tells Douglas that the ravine would not belong in Leo's Happiness Machine, thus contrasting the pleasures humans wish for with the realities they receive instead. Chapter 11 (The Happiness Machine–continued) — In a relatively short chapter, Leo sits with his wife Lena on the porch swing in the night.
He had acquired the reputation of being "a problem author" and after 1961, he tells us, he lived "under an ever-darkening cloud- pall of opprobrium" (Jacqueline Mittelholzer, "The Idyll and the Warrior", p. 86). He felt persecuted, convinced that the poor reviews of his books were damaging his literary reputation and interfering with the publication of his work. The Aloneness of Mrs Chatham (1965), for example, was refused by 14 publishers. The difficulties he encountered in being published toward the end of his life affected Mittelholzer seriously.
Existentialism suggests that it is possible for individuals to face the anxieties of life head on, embrace the human condition of aloneness and to revel in the freedom to choose and take full responsibility for their choices. They can aim to take control of their lives and steer themselves in any direction they choose. There is no need to halt feelings of meaninglessness but instead to choose and focus on new meanings for the living. By building, loving and creating, life can be lived as one's own adventure.
Additionally, AYAs face problems that adults and children rarely see including college concerns, fertility, and sense of aloneness. Studies have often shown that treating young adults with the same protocols used in pediatrics is more effective than adult oriented treatments. In countries like the US and the UK, specialized AYA units have started to be built in children's and adult hospitals to cater to the need of these age groups. AYA wards are designed to be bright and welcoming with many games and televisions to keep patients busy.
The Kaivalya Upanishad (Sanskrit: कैवल्य उपनिषत्) is an ancient Sanskrit text and one of the minor Upanishads of Hinduism. It is classified as a Shaiva Upanishad, and survives into the modern times in two versions, one attached to the Krishna Yajurveda and other attached to the Atharvaveda. It is, as an Upanishad, a part of the corpus of Vedanta literature collection that present the philosophical concepts of Hinduism. The Upanishad extols Shiva, aloneness and renunciation, describes the inner state of man in his personal spiritual journey detached from the world.
Back in New York two years later, Betty was hired as a photo researcher for Time magazine and Alfred became a practitioner of street photography capturing the activities of the lively metropolis, especially at night. His painting also reflects his interest in social realism and is executed in a sombre, deep-hued and expressionist Ashcan style. In 1955 Edward Steichen selected his Aloneness at a ParadeU.S. Camera, 1955, Volume 18, Issues 1-6, Page 69 for the world-touring Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Family of Man, seen by 9 million visitors.
This theme of aloneness is reiterated by several shots in which she is alone in the frame, most notably the wide shot of her in the vast and empty desert. Another source of anxiety is her relationship with her current boyfriend, Riley, whom she finds plotting world domination with Adam in his original, human, form. She fears what Riley could turn into as a result of his alliance with the military. She also fears the destabilizing effect of this alliance on their relationship, and the destabilizing effect of this relationship on her life as the slayer.
Leo Kanner (; June 13, 1894 – April 3, 1981) was an Austrian-American psychiatrist, physician, and social activist best known for his work related to autism. Before working at the Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Kanner practiced as a physician in Germany and in South Dakota. In 1943, Kanner published his landmark paper Autistic Disturbances of Affective Contact, describing 11 children who were highly intelligent but displayed "a powerful desire for aloneness" and "an obsessive insistence on persistent sameness." He named their condition "early infantile autism," which is now known as autism spectrum disorder.
He also reported early difficulties with eating and suggested that eating may have represented the first intrusion into the children's extreme aloneness. He noted that the children had no particular health difficulties and that their EEG results were normal. He did, however, observe that f of the 11 children had relatively large heads, and a few were somewhat clumsy in their gait. Recounting his observations of the children's families, Kanner noted the high level of intelligence characterizing parents and relatives, while at the same time asserting that there were few warm-hearted parents among the families he observed.
The "Dokkōdō" ("The Path of Aloneness", "The Way to Go Forth Alone", or "The Way of Walking Alone"), is a short work written by Miyamoto Musashi a week before he died in 1645. It consists of 21 precepts. "Dokkodo" was largely composed on the occasion of Musashi giving away his possessions in preparation for death, and was dedicated to his favorite disciple, Terao Magonojō (to whom the earlier Go rin no sho [The Book of Five Rings] had also been dedicated), who took them to heart. "Dokkōdō" expresses a stringent, honest, and ascetic view of life.
Verses 1.22 to 1.39 of the text discuss the soul and one's true identity as that "which is the indestructible, infinite, Spirit, the Self of everything, integral, replete, abundant and partless", translates Warrier. Self-knowledge is born of awareness, asserts the text, and the soul is Brahmanic bliss, a state of inner calm no matter what, one of contemplation, of tranquil aloneness, of perpetual quiescence. It is the mind that craves and clings for objects and sensory impulses, leading to bondage to the object and whoever controls the object, states the text. This causes suffering and the lack of true bliss.
The philosophical premises of Yajnavalkya and Patanjali are different, according to Richard Rosen. Patanjali accepts the dualism premise, and defines yoga as cessation of mental activity associated with sensory interaction with nature, leading to Kaivalya (aloneness) of the self and a state of self-awareness.Richard Rosen (2001), Review of Yogayajnavalkya Samhita by TKV Desikachar, , Issue March/April, page 149 Yajnavalkya accepts the Advaita Vedanta premise of non-dualism, "essential oneness of self and nature", and defines yoga as path to intense interconnectedness between Jiva and Paramatman, where the union of self and supreme self is realized.
NATIV strongly opposed this move but it became the crucial push that set the movement to 'Let my People Go' in motion. Rubin, Khrul, Joseph Schneider and Asher Blank were enlisted by NATIV as advisers. In the camps, Rubin had felt a painful sense of aloneness and despair at the lack of outside support. He never forgot the activists' plea to him that Israel not remain silent, but rather do all in its power to help them get out. In 1972, Rubin married Karny Jabotinsky Rubin, daughter of Eri Jabotinsky and grand daughter of Ze’ev Jabotinsky, Psychiatrist and former ombudsman to the National Health Law (1996-2006).
The Upanishad is mostly poetic verses, and structured as one chapter with one hundred and twenty one verses. The opening verses of the text assert its goal to be the attainment of Kaivalya (liberating aloneness). The first seventy verses present its theories of Kundalini yoga including a discussion of chakras (energy centers), nadis (blood and energy vessels), prana vayus (life force air), mudras and shakti (power).Daren Callahan (2007), Yoga: An Annotated Bibliography of Works in English 1981-2005, McFarland, , page 289 The rest of the text describes meditative exercises with Om, asserting that enlightenment is achievable by combining Hatha yoga, Kundalini yoga and reflection on one's innermost consciousness.
Thus Joey grows up impaired, never resolving his relationship with his absentee father or insufficiently loving mother, and ends up with his "aloneness like a corridor that has no end". Inge has told his story of life and death and all those spaces in between with a gentleness and probity which gives his novel a persistence few writers achieve. During the early 1970s Inge lived in Los Angeles, where he taught playwriting at the University of California, Irvine. His last several plays attracted little notice or critical acclaim, and he fell into a deep depression, convinced he would never be able to write well again.
Note: Used for Australian Singles and Albums charting from 1974 until ARIA created their own charts in mid-1988. In 1992, Kent back calculated chart positions for 1970–1974. Creswell stated that "Wide Open Road" was "an angry song that finds the cost of freedom is aloneness" in his book, 1001 Songs. In May 2001, the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA), as part of its 75th Anniversary celebrations, named it one of their Top 30 Australian songs of all time. Their critical success in the UK boosted their profile back in Australia where they recorded In the Pines in early 1986, while awaiting the release of Born Sandy Devotional, which eventuated in March.
The conversational model of psychotherapy was devised by the English psychiatrist Robert Hobson, and developed by the Australian psychiatrist Russell Meares. Hobson listened to recordings of his own psychotherapeutic practice with more disturbed clients, and became aware of the ways in which a patient's self—their unique sense of personal being—can come alive and develop, or be destroyed, in the flux of the conversation in the consulting room. The conversational model views the aim of therapy as allowing the growth of the patient's self through encouraging a form of conversational relating called 'aloneness-togetherness'. This phrase is reminiscent of Winnicott's idea of the importance of being able to be 'alone in the presence of another'.
"Your name is the one key thing that cannot be taken from you," says Jan Scruggs, founder of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, "It captures who you are and what happens to you throughout your life." Jan Scruggs, To Heal a Nation, p. 38. In Existentialist literature, lack of a name—or of a full name—symbolizes human aloneness; the hero of Franz Kafka's The Trial, for example is "Michael K.," and the hero of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man has no name at all. Named characters fill McCarry's last three novels, but each book's hero (in one case, heroine) never has a name; one has a "funny name" that is used for payroll and administrative paperwork, but is fictitious and meaningless.
In response to questions, she would produce an "echolalia type reproduction" of what was asked. After profiling each of the patients, in the "Discussion" and "Comment" portions of the paper, Kanner stated that the common characteristics observed in the children formed a "unique syndrome" that may have been more frequent than what was reported at the time given the small sample size in the study. Kanner indicated that the fundamental issue of this disorder is the children's inability to relate to people and objects in an ordinary way from birth. Distinguishing between the symptoms of the two disorders, Kanner explained that a person with schizophrenia steps outside his or her world and departs from already existing relationships, whereas the children he described had never established such relationships, experiencing an extreme aloneness from very early on.
Ekakshara is that which is all pervading, the divine, the bliss of aloneness, the one eternal support, the cleanser, the past of everything, the present of everything and the future of everything, the imperishable syllable, asserts the text. Verse 7 states that the Rigvedic hymns, the songs of Samaveda, the formulas of Yajur originate in this cosmic syllable, it is all knowledge, it is all sacrifice, it is the purpose of all striving. It dispels the darkness, it is the light in which the Devas dwell, it is all knowledge, it is that what is the fulcrum of all beings, it is pure truth, it is that which isn't born, it is sum total of everything, it is what the Vedas sing, it is the Brahman that the knowers know.
The truly free doesn't want anything or anyone, he is "steadfast, blissful, polished, simple, sweet, without self-pity", and he works and lives because he wants to, without "craving for what is yet to be, or banking on the present, or remembering the past", is a "Jivanmukta (liberated in life)" states verses 2.28–29. He reaches this state because "all the world is his Self alone", self-realization is the plenitude that is everywhere in the world, all is one supreme sky, devoid of all duality, the free is being you, yourself, the Self and nothing else, states verse 2.39. The best renunciation, asserts the text, is through the virtue of knowledge to the state of Aloneness, as it reflects the state of pure universal Being where all is the manifestation of one Atman alone.
"Indian Camp" is constructed in three parts: the first places Nick and his father on a dark lake; the second takes place in the squalid and cramped cabin amid terrifying action; and the third shows Nick and his father back on the lake—bathed in sunlight. Hemingway's use of counterpoint is evident when, for example, at the end, Nick trails his hand in lake water that "felt warm in the sharp chill of the morning." Paul Strong believes the deleted section may have provided context and additional counterpoint to the plot, with Nick's aloneness in the "stillness of the night" juxtaposed against the middle scene, crowded with people. Paul Smith writes that by cutting the piece, Hemingway focuses on the story's central point: the life and death initiation rituals, familiar to the residents of the Indian camp but alien to young Nick.
" As a practical matter, he could solve his problem by getting a job; but, as a device for developing the novel's theme, his aloneness is a way of making him (and the reader) recognize that there is nothing inherent in the objective nature of the world that would give any necessary meaning to whatever actions he chose, and therefore nothing to restrict his freedom. "[H]is perception of the world around him becomes unstable as objects are disengaged from their usual frames of reference," and he is forced to recognize that freedom is inescapable and that therefore creating a meaning for his life is his own responsibility. "Nothing makes us act the way we do, except our own personal choice." "But," David Clowney writes, "freedom is frightening, and it is easier to run from it into the safety of roles and realities that are defined by society, or even by your own past.
" Genesis 1:27, N.K.J.V. Hansen believes that it takes male and female together to fulfill this purpose and that the restoration of this foundational relationship is necessary before the Church as a whole can fulfill its destiny to express God's image.Fashioned for Intimacy Jane Hansen with Marie Powers, Regal Books, 1997 Hansen believes that women were "uniquely and specifically designed to stand before the man in an intimate, face-to-face relationship.""Jane Hansen on Male Female Reconciliation" Jane Hansen, October 24, 2004 However, although women were meant to look to God to find their life, identity, value and significance, since the fall of Eve in the dawn of creation, they have looked instead to men to fulfill these needs. Hansen states that only when "a woman's heart is turned back to God to meet her needs, she is…free to be the help God intended her to be: to draw the man out of his aloneness by relating on a level that moves past the surface and touches the deep places of his heart.

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