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472 Sentences With "come to grips with"

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

I don't think that he's come to grips with it.
I think it's time to come to grips with that.
I want people to start to come to grips with that.
You either come to grips with mastering it... or you don't.
And no one wins until we come to grips with that.
"Godspeed" has helped her come to grips with her stinging loss.
"This is something they haven't come to grips with," he said.
Hoekstra thought Coca-Cola was ready to come to grips with reality.
Neither American political party has come to grips with this sea change.
Corporate-risk managers have just about come to grips with tangled supply chains.
And they struggled to come to grips with the magnitude of their ordeal.
The late-night host tried to come to grips with what comes next.
But we're only starting to come to grips with the potential economic effects.
And, now the Street needs to come to grips with the Fed's new plan.
It stars a newly-turned vampire, who must come to grips with his condition.
How have local African Americans come to grips with the history of this spot?
"He's been determined to come to grips with this from day one," Kang said.
That is something the technology industry will have to come to grips with, soon.
" He added about Twitter, "It has never managed to come to grips with harassment.
Censure would require Republicans to come to grips with the president's unquestionably disgraceful behavior.
I had to come to grips with people saying, 'Sorry you didn't make it.
But when you finally come to grips with the game's logic, it's incredibly satisfying.
That's something we need to continue to come to grips with as a society.
The latest infighting comes as Republicans attempt to come to grips with Trump's looming nomination.
In the documentary, we watch Swift come to grips with 15 years in the spotlight.
Many unfolded against a factual backdrop as he struggled to come to grips with history.
IF WE DON'T COME TO GRIPS WITH THAT, WE'RE NOT GOING TO SOLVE THIS PROBLEM.
Andy says, "It's still hard to come to grips with the fact that she's gone."
The museum's reopening comes as Belgium tries to come to grips with its colonial legacy.
Mexico is literally a lawless land and they need to come to grips with that.
For years, Canada has struggled to come to grips with its mistreatment of indigenous populations.
Mr. Trump's nominees have so far displayed scant willingness to come to grips with that.
And that's going to be very difficult for both sides to come to grips with.
The environmental left must come to grips with that or it will be left behind.
Knowing the process is irreversible, they scramble to come to grips with the massive—er, minuscule?
I decided to come to grips with one of the game's most fundamental systems: my weapon.
In trying to come to grips with Trump, writers have resorted to all sorts of analogies.
Because, unable to come to grips with the problems in the church, they need illegal aliens.
Lawmakers should come together once again to come to grips with bots and other nefarious actors.
Averting your eyes is refusing to come to grips with Trump's mental condition and psychological state.
I was always trying to come to grips with these ideas and come to grips with what it meant for these people to be post-human, and just wind up getting more confused about what it meant to be a human at all in the first place.
Tate, meanwhile, will now have to come to grips with arguably the worst loss of her career.
Sanchez's father, Nicandro Sanchez, told KFSN that she is trying to come to grips with the crash.
It took me 10 years to actually come to grips [with it] and share it with someone.
That world is gone—and even in coal country, some have come to grips with its absence.
Hurricanes Florida's only now starting to come to grips with the devastation that Hurricane Irma left behind.
"Our Broncos family is in shock as we try to come to grips with our incredible loss."
"We need to come to grips with the fact that severe mental illness is real," he says.
"I spent a month trying to come to grips with it, but I couldn't," Lentz told me.
Despite increasing concerns about China's evolution, the West has yet to come to grips with this threat.
It's past time for us to come to grips with these two distinct, but now overlapping, crises.
Yet arguably, this is the least valuable way to come to grips with such a multifaceted topic.
If you haven't fully come to grips with what your baggage is, it just spreads throughout your organization.
Adolescent adjustment requires that we come to grips with the fact that lying is part of human nature.
And the sooner we can come to grips with that, the sooner we can fully live our lives.
TLC's Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins is trying to come to grips with the shocking death of her cousin.
"The struggle was with letting it go and it's something I couldn't come to grips with," Poma said.
The United States must come to grips with the rising costs of continued talks under the current circumstances.
I think the sooner the Palestinians come to grips with this reality, the sooner we'll move towards peace.
By 1874, England had more or less come to grips with the national failure of owning the Arctic.
It's taken the advertising community, and particularly their clients, a long time to come to grips with that.
US allies will need to come to grips with the United States' changing leadership role in world trade.
Because unable to really to come to grips with the problems in the church, they need illegal aliens.
The new administration would be well advised to come to grips with their new reality sooner than later.
They want to see past the surface of things to really come to grips with the nature of reality.
To truly come to grips with America's economic divides across geography, policymakers must confront the problem of localized joblessness.
That's because most people haven't yet come to grips with the forces bubbling under the surface in the country.
Watching amateur bakers come to grips with complicated recipes, Patrick is reminded of his own culinary journey so far.
He said society needs to come to grips with how people are going to live in this new paradigm.
This training bundle helps you come to grips with the ins, outs, ups, and downs of all things Photoshop.
But not before they have damaged Poland's reputation, and its own attempt to come to grips with its history.
In the 1970s, biologists were struggling to come to grips with the implications of new techniques in their field.
They see their friend or their son as a person suffering to come to grips with something he did.
Markets have been whipsawed as investors come to grips with the widening financial and societal impact of COVID-19.
He is also struggling, they claim, to come to grips with the widespread pain and outrage he has caused.
The IRS experience teaches that social media giants waited far too long to come to grips with this issue.
Justin Hartley's wife Chrishell Stause has not yet come to grips with her husband's decision to file for divorce.
There will be memorials and remembrances of the loss as everyone attempts to come to grips with the tragedy.
It is a hard one to come to grips with: ISIS kidnapped his mother and her fate remains unknown.
Now that those troubles span the world, Greece may be the best place to come to grips with them.
The bottom line: The international community will have to come to grips with the death of the two-state solution.
"As growth slowed in 2015 we had to come to grips with what Twitter was," Noto told Recode's Peter Kafka.
"She's focused on trying to come to grips with what's going on," Ramzi's attorney, Sharif Muhammad, told PEOPLE last week.
Now Martin is trying to come to grips with his new reality -- and encouraging others to appreciate what they have.
We've got to come to grips with what are good policies that really benefit us and move forward with them.
The Dow has shed nearly 243,22019 points since early October as investors have come to grips with the gloomier outlook.
"What I've not come to grips with is, there's no more decisions to be made where everyone wins," he said.
With Tammye as inspiration, he sings with her choir and starts to come to grips with his relationship to religion.
Despite multiple conferences dedicated to explicating Mochizuki's proof, number theorists have struggled to come to grips with its underlying ideas.
There has been shock and denial, anger and bargaining, as pundits have attempted to come to grips with Sanders's rise.
Korean chopsticks are thinner, made of steel and can be very hard to come to grips with for the untrained.
Pildis sat on the bathroom floor, writing opinion pieces about what it all meant, trying to come to grips with it.
But they can&apost emotionally come to grips with the fact that this whole thing of Russian collusion didn&apost happen.
British society must come to grips with the idea that working hard in school is no longer a guarantee of success.
AND UNLESS AND UNTIL WE COME TO GRIPS WITH, THAT WE'RE GOING TO GET A CONTINUOUS DOWNWARD PRESSURE -- EISEN: IN PRODUCTIVITY.
What does it mean to raise a child without gender in 2016, or to come to grips with one's problematic desires?
The shockwaves of grief and denial are still sweeping through our family as we come to grips with what has happened.
America has to come to grips with the fact that it can no longer afford to serve as the world's policeman.
But representing Japan does pose problems for a teenager who has yet to come to grips with her mother's mother tongue.
One woman sought out their remoteness to help her come to grips with her grief after losing a son to suicide.
My days were spent listening to children and their parents as they struggled to come to grips with their terrible experiences.
It's taken years for many Americans to begin to come to grips with what this man has (still just allegedly) done.
At the same time, Iraq is trying to come to grips with the number of those killed by the Islamic State.
As a Korean American raised in predominately white neighborhoods, it took me years to come to grips with my own identity.
"We need to come to grips with immigration reform in order to supplement labor force growth in the U.S.," he said.
And we need to come to grips with this economy - whether we decide it's just a slowdown or it's a recession.
Have you ever had to come to grips with a loved one doing a monstrous thing and sticking by that person?
I take that very seriously because I do think it's one of the issues we've got to come to grips with.
They demonstrated that narratives which failed to come to grips with African-American photography and its critical consciousness were woefully inadequate.
So as a society we have to come to grips with what the meaning of intellectual property will be in the future.
Now that you've had plenty of time to come to grips with the iPhone X's notch, let's talk about next year's iPhone.
There are certain things about myself that I've had to come to grips with when it comes to sex, dating, and relationships.
But if the LGBTQ community is going to come to grips with its sexual assault epidemic, it first needs to recognize it.
With POV cameras, however, you're placed into the narrative and have to come to grips with the fact that you're a character.
And for other Senate Republicans, it hasn't been that easy to come to grips with the prospects of Cruz as the nominee.
And there are at least 160 other survivors struck by his torrent of gunfire trying to come to grips with reshaped lives.
If humanity can come to grips with this simple reality and humanely start reducing its rate of fertility, we just may survive.
Streets are eerily empty throughout the city as residents come to grips with isolation to prevent the spread of the deadly coronavirus.
The cities don't even enforce those relaxed rules, as they try to come to grips with an issue that has become endemic.
" He called his plan "audacious," adding, "We had to come to grips with the sheer magnitude of what had to be done.
But in order to do that, she's had to come to grips with the true impact that drugs clearly had on his life.
"At some point elected Republicans are either going to come to grips with or be reminded that all politics is local," Felkel said.
I think you've come to grips with it pretty well and realized that now that you have a son, you're responsible for him.
And with a number of bendable phones appearing quite thick, that's yet another hurdle early adopters will have to come to grips with.
"She wasn't born to be the Queen in a sense, it was something she had to come to grips with," Worsley tells PEOPLE.
Society must soon come to grips with the fact that nearly all human employment is susceptible to extinction in the next few decades.
"The origin of the book was just in my own clumsy attempts to come to grips with my own mortality," Koblish told Mashable.
King, although married to a man, meets a woman (Andrea Riseborough) and must come to grips with the fact that she's a lesbian.
The deal with his dad, how to come to grips with his fame, those kinds of things, I thought, we'll deal with later.
When the last female died in 2009, leaving two males, I had to come to grips with the virtual extinction of the species.
It's hard to imagine anything more explosive in America than race and the country's inability to come to grips with its original sin.
In rural Indonesia, the family of one of the two accused attackers is still struggling to come to grips with their daughter's plight.
Trump and his high-profile backers are struggling to come to grips with the reality that there are no shortcuts back to normalcy.
People and communities must recognize and come to grips with serious fire danger conditions and have advance plans for responding to disastrous wildfires.
Mr. Finley said that he had never entirely come to grips with Rachmaninoff's songs until he heard recordings of them by Mr. Hvorostovsky.
The crux of the problem is that the field of artificial intelligence has not come to grips with the infinite complexity of language.
Synopsis: The daughter of a brilliant but mentally disturbed mathematician, recently deceased, tries to come to grips with her possible inheritance: his insanity.
In the same way, the Supreme Court needs to come to grips with what it would really mean to strike down abortion rights.
Unfortunately, for her and the country, the vast majority of her caucus have not been able to come to grips with that distinction.
We must come to grips with the long war before us and be prepared to secure the future through mental and physical toughness.
"It is clear that there are so many challenges facing young families today that we have got to come to grips with," Clinton said.
Ways of making money out of other people's internet use have not yet come to grips with the timepass of the almost entirely unwealthy.
We all need to come to grips with the fact that imposing complexity on end users will only further enable advanced and persistent adversaries.
Obviously they're in a downward spiral right now and they've got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening….
You've come to grips with the fact that one day virtual assistants will be everywhere, and you're ready to welcome one into your home.
They just are generally unaware or haven't come to grips with the fact that the biggest cohort of affected people could well be children.
I doubt this will ever help me fully come to grips with cape flying in Super Mario World, but that's out of Nintendo's hands.
"You two have to come to grips with the fact that you have a child with mental illness," her father recalls one doctor saying.
The problem for the news media is they can't come to grips with the fact that in five different specials the Republicans have won.
Audiences now, he said, "have really come to grips with the music and want to understand and engage with it in a real way."
The black coins require you to deeply analyze how a level works and come to grips with the nuance of Super Mario Run's mechanics.
It's never clear why Jenny is so interested in Tom, and Marston's inability to fully come to grips with her is a fatal flaw.
So it may come as a surprise that Beck is now pleading with conservatives to come to grips with the Black Lives Matter movement.
Ms. Forester said that it took her years to come to grips with what had happened — or to even think of it as assault.
The next days were a blur as relatives arrived and we tried to come to grips with what had happened, all with Christmas looming.
The case forced the high court to come to grips with the increasingly common problem of elderly prisoners suffering from diseases of old age.
Struggling to come to grips with crippling health care costs, the company endured its first nationwide strike by the United Autoworkers in 37 years.
Eventually, however, she said the community would have to come to grips with the need for a new high school in the Bethesda area.
Months later, she said, she struggled to come to grips with what had happened, making it difficult to trust medical professionals and other people.
Erdogan won big and he&aposs going to have a long time to serve in Turkey and we need to come to grips with that.
The weakness in the Mexican peso looks like it will continue in 2017 as traders come to grips with potential changes in U.S. trade policy.
But neither Ford nor the subsequent cases quite came to grips with what it means for a person to "come to grips" with his execution.
"Obviously, they're in a downward spiral right now and they've got to come to grips with all that's happening," he said of the White House.
But it comes as most fast food chains are trying to come to grips with rising consumer demand for vegetarian alternatives to traditional menu items.
"I love his open-mindedness, and I love how he's helped Kim come to grips with what's going on," Jenner said of the Yeezus rapper.
"Our hearts are in pieces for the victims and for our city as we all come to grips with this terrible tragedy," Hussain's parents said.
This season centers on how Paper Boi (Brian Tyree Henry), Earn (Donald Glover), and Darius (Lakeith Stanfield) come to grips with newfound fame and success.
But if America really wants to come to grips with its addiction problem, the increase in cocaine overdose deaths shows that it may be necessary.
While not universal, sizable numbers of Republican national security experts are beginning to come to grips with the idea of working for the future president.
"They are in a downward spiral right now and have got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening," Sen.
"Racing has to come to grips with the fact that, like every sport, we have integrity issues," Stuart Janney, of the Jockey Club, told me.
Not merely a "Rashomon"-like account of events, the film is also a compelling portrait of a man striving to come to grips with loss.
"They were obviously slow to come to grips with what the Russians were doing on their platform and the misuse of their platform," said Schiff.
A few Democrats of that era have come to grips with the failure of their theory of change, UC Berkeley economist Brad DeLong among them.
It's hard to come to grips with it all, as every scene is constantly evolving via sequels and remakes, rebalancing updates, and meta-altering patches.
But as I argue in the series, we have not, as a society, come to grips with the scope of their control over our lives.
Most important, they think Matt should come to grips with the reason for his frequent nosebleeds: It's because he's doesn't have much longer to live.
"Our Broncos family is in shock as we try to come to grips with our incredible loss," Garinger, the team's president, said in a statement.
"I've come to grips with the fact that you are the product on the internet," said Mark Snyder, 32, who lives in Pompano Beach, Fla.
The Catholic Church around the world is still struggling to come to grips with the worldwide crisis, which devastated its credibility and dented its coffers.
New York (CNN Business)Stocks finished mixed Thursday, as investors come to grips with the Federal Reserve forecasting no further interest rate cuts this year.
And there was Brexit, the dominant issue but one that Mr. Corbyn, as a longtime euro-skeptic himself, never could quite come to grips with.
Yet even as a barrage of surprising stories plays out, many of us have yet to come to grips with the permanence of this chaos.
Mr Murray is right to point out that many European politicians have not yet come to grips with how to manage migration in the coming decades.
I was not able to fully come to grips with the emotional pain that comes with feeling different until I began to grieve over that hurt.
The game is a true story about a young boy and his family, and how they come to grips with his struggle with the deadly disease.
Most sophisticated observers have come to grips with the fact that a SaaS company in hyper-growth mode chews up every available dollar and then some.
Complexity that even the very best artificial intelligence systems struggles to come to grips with—at least if they're to play convincingly against a talented human.
The toxic elements in Star Wars fandom need to come to grips with the idea that this is a series for anyone and everyone who's interested.
"Obviously they're in a downward spiral right now and they've got to figure out a way to come to grips [with] all that's happening," Corker said.
The U.S. will have to come to grips with these changes sooner rather than later when the tension between the haves and have-nots becomes unsustainable.
Second, mainstream media – still the source of most political information for the great majority of Americans – haven't been able to come to grips with this reality.
Because unable to really to come to grips with the problems in the Church, they need illegal aliens; they need illegal aliens to fill the churches.
If Alabama has finally shed its past and come to grips with the modern age, Doug Jones may have had a lot to do with it.
Turkey must now come to grips with those militants, both domestic and foreign, who have returned from Iraq and Syria, and those planning to do so.
In Noley Reid's new novel, "Pretend We Are Lovely," a family struggles to come to grips with the sudden death of one of its young members.
In 2016, the global security landscape darkened as the international community failed to come to grips with humanity's most pressing threats: nuclear weapons and climate change.
"Our Broncos family is in shock as we try to come to grips with our incredible loss," Kevin Garinger, the team's president, said in a statement.
Conlon tells PEOPLE that Hall is still trying to come to grips with how her children were allegedly treated when they lived with their father and stepmother.
"My goal with the book is to help people come to grips with their own personal baggage, to help them live it and move on," he explains.
Snapchat, with its silly features for editing and enhancing photos, has always been better suited for younger users, and the company has come to grips with that.
"They are in a downward spiral right now and have got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening," said Republican Sen.
For all that Fantastic Beasts finally lets the Potterverse enter an adult world, it still hasn't fully come to grips with adult decision-making and adult challenges.
But her husband, Jeff Gillis, said he had held off revealing the indictment while new lawyers for his wife tried to come to grips with the case.
"It's time to come to grips with the fact that the 1984 dystopian future we all fear isn't something a future authoritarian government might impose," he said.
Neither Cruz nor Kasich has made any effort to come to grips with the health care services poor women would need if Planned Parenthood closed up shop.
It is by focusing on this singular disaster that Lloyd Parry finds he can come to grips with the world historical events he has just lived through.
Right. And so, the one thing that has to happen, and I think we have to come to grips with it, is that there is tremendous backlash.
"I think the president can't come to grips with the Russian intervention in our affairs because he views it as a threat to his legitimacy," he said.
"Debilitating news for the #ChicagoPolice family as we come to grips with the unthinkable loss of a dedicated police officer to suicide tonight," Guglielmi tweeted Monday night.
For me, it's been watching the companies who think that they can just do everything they have always done in VR come to grips with the fact.
Even her New French Extremity horror film Trouble Every Day has been criticized as being too metaphorical and abstract to come to grips with its graphically bloody drama.
Social networks have struggled to come to grips with Russian disinformation efforts in the months since the 23 election, despite demands from the US Congress and UK parliament.
In it, astronaut Sally Jansen has been working to come to grips with a Mars mission that went disastrously wrong, and NASA ended its crewed missions into space.
Then again, a single bitcoin is now worth over $2,000 USD, so it might be time to finally come to grips with what the hype is all about.
It's got to happen...Obviously they're in a downward spiral right now and they've got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening.
That is a reality that the White House staff, who, by the way, are the only ones urging Trump to tweet less, needs to come to grips with.
Some Western diplomats acknowledge a failure to come to grips with the scale of the violence, which left some 270 dead, and with widespread support for the purges.
In Season 5 episode 3, Shoshanna has to come to grips with a possible end to her time in Tokyo and leaving the people and city she loves.
But AlphaGo Zero—which is not capable of extrapolation, and instead experiments with new moves semi-randomly—took longer than expected to come to grips with the concept.
Residents of the Sagamihara area, a largely rural, wooded valley where houses are interspersed with orchards and vegetable gardens, were struggling to come to grips with the violence.
It took Merrill Moses a long time to come to grips with the United States men's water polo team's second-place finish at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
The comments shed light on the internal struggle within the Obama administration to come to grips with the drone program and the legacy that Obama may leave behind.
"We haven't yet come to grips with whether or not we ought to close down the Capitol in terms of visitors," House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer told reporters.
Americans should indeed come to grips with their nation's failings and failures, from wars of choice to financial corruption to support of some of the world's worst regimes.
The Catholic Church around the world is still struggling to come to grips with the worldwide crisis, most of which involves cases of abuse that happened decades ago.
A month into Donald J. Trump's presidency, the best algorithmic minds on Wall Street and in Silicon Valley are still scrambling to come to grips with the phenomenon.
Where Descartes and Spinoza tried to come to grips with reality through purely deductive logic, the conventional story goes, Locke and Hume valued the evidence of the senses.
This is something Dr. M considers essential for Syrians, many of whom are still struggling to come to grips with the psychological violence of what's happening to them.
Just as China started to come to grips with the scale of its massive debt accumulation, the impact of the trade war with the U.S. is forcing a retreat.
It's satisfying to watch David come to grips with his powers, especially in a cute conversation with Rachel Keller's Syd Barrett in which David accidentally eavesdrops on her thoughts.
It's extremely difficult to come to grips with the fact that someone that you cared about could potentially be capable of the things we read in the Washington Post.
"Unfortunately the markets haven't come to grips with the current levels of trade policies and tariffs," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley FBR in New York.
"I think the Fed has finally come to grips with reality, if you will, that the United States is no longer standing there, separate from everybody else," he said.
"The market is starting to come to grips with the Fed potentially moving in June," said Walter Todd, chief investment officer at Greenwood Capital Associates in Greenwood, South Carolina.
It takes her some time to come to grips with the notion that she's a digital duplicate, and that the original is still out there in the physical world.
"Obviously, they're in a downward spiral right now and have got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening," Corker told reporters this week.
This is a group of people who are unable to come to grips with the fact that the American people have spoken, the Electoral College voted, and they lost.
"The President has never really come to grips with the entire list of active hostility against the United States by the Russian Federation directed by President Putin," Donilon said.
This week Prince Harry talked about having recently come to grips with the emotional turmoil caused by having lost his mother in a car accident when he was 28503.
Even though it took him a longer while to come to grips with Ben's autism, when he decided, 'This is the way I'm going,' he went full-tilt ahead.
We have to come to grips with things like the alt-right, and there has to be the understanding that they cannot be a legitimate part of our party.
As Republicans come to grips with the ramifications of their tax legislation, it is becoming clear that any hope of a revenue-neutral and conservative tax reform is fading.
Washington (CNN)Over the last 48 hours, the Republican Party has come to grips with a stark reality: Roy Moore may well win the Alabama special election next Tuesday.
Much of the memoir is about young Gertrude's attempt to come to grips with her own budding sexuality by repressing it, the only socially approved solution in that era.
TechCrunch is out hunting for bright spots in the startup world as we all come to grips with the pandemic — particularly where checks are actually being written despite everything.
"They are in a downward spiral right now and have got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening," Corker said, according to CNN.
Writing for Vanity Fair, David M. Drucker takes a deep dive to explain how GOP lawmakers and strategists have come to grips with a Republican Party led by Trump.
It's those stories that people most want to talk about as the entire nation tries to come to grips with this latest school shooting, which left 17 people dead.
They are trying to come to grips with how technology is changing what it means to be human, and to devise new normative boundaries to cope with this reality.
The tech world continues to come to grips with Wednesday's revelation of very serious vulnerabilities associated with central processing units (CPUs) that affect, well, just about everyone with a computer.
Michonne says that she set out on her own to come to grips with what was going on, but she realized that it wasn't about her – it was about them.
Watch as Helen smokes weed for the first time, and Andrew attempts to come to grips with the fact that his grandma is a real human with real life experiences.
Tatiana Ikasovic, a Sydney-based actress, has recently come to grips with the Internet's ability to fixate on the physical minutiae of women and turn it into a cottage industry.
Biosphere 2 was ahead of its time – but becomes more relevant as humans come to grips with the need to regulate our actions and take care of our biospheric home.
To help high schoolers come to grips with the real cost of college — and the likelihood of borrowing — Wilson suggests having the funding conversation early in the college selection process.
There were a lot of complex issues, and a lot that I, being foreign, had to try to come to grips with and try to learn how things work here.
Even though Edge cheats its way to one final respawn, you get the sense that Cage—and Cruise—might have come to grips with their mortality once the credits hit.
Considering his longtime preoccupations, it's no surprise that even when trying to come to grips with crushing loss, he resorts to the language and context of comic books and movies.
He took great pleasure in criticizing his predecessors for failing to come to grips with the economic and security threat from China and the nuclear security threat from North Korea.
The multipronged strategy gives a glimpse into how Twitter is internally trying to come to grips with its path forward amid a shifting chess match of deal talks and considerations.
As Democrats attempt to move forward, they must come to grips with the fact that many of the working-class whites who abandoned the party are likely gone for good.
As Republican lawmakers spilled out of their morning conference meeting, few seemed willing to come to grips with how much Mr. Trump is energizing Democrats and turning off independent voters.
Here's the latest: New Zealand tried to come to grips with grief and horror after a gunman targeted worshipers at two mosques in Christchurch on Friday, killing at least 24.
They seem as concerned, but I think that nobody knows how to come to grips with the idea that our scene was a place that something like this could happen.
I see it on TikTok and other young platforms, as teens and young people come to grips with and analyze how they are manipulated and judged by those very platforms.
I wonder if part of the problem is that "we" -- as a nation -- haven't fully come to grips with the effects of fighting terrorists overseas for the last 20 years.
When they inadvertently seek shelter in the girl's home, carrying an incriminating piece of her clothing with them, her parents come to grips with the situation and have their revenge.
Congress has thrown their finances into upheaval, with local lawmakers still trying to come to grips with the effects of the $1.5 trillion tax overhaul that was passed last year.
It seems like a weird thing for me to come to grips with because I had to get used to people missing a show I was a part of that much.
You'll come to grips with automating macros and VBA, safeguarding your workbooks to protect them from prying eyes, and find out what Pivot Table is and how to build your own.
That's all threatened when their parents follow them there, and the children have to come to grips with who their parents really are, and whether they want them in their lives.
Many younger people in the party, in particular, are frustrated by what they see as the leadership's hurry to move on from the scandals rather than come to grips with them.
Shapovalov, however, said the governing body had got it wrong and queried why organizers had not come to grips with the issue weeks ago with fires raging across Australia for months.
The problems come at a pivotal time when Nissan and other automakers are attempting to come to grips with a major, and costly, technological shift towards electric and self-driving vehicles.
CLINTON: No, I didn&apost like this one because it started with an assertion that basically I had never apologized as if I had never tried to come to grips with it.
As we continue to come to grips with the problems…Read more ReadWith the Trump administration's mode of operation generally leaning towards eliminating regulations, environmental advocates fear the delay will be permanent.
You can expect to pay almost $700 for it, which might require a few days of being perched in Buddha's lap while you come to grips with the money you just spent.
"I think being confident in your own skin is something that is probably one of the longest transition periods in your life that you have to come to grips with," she says.
We must come to grips with a new murky and uncertain world where bright familiar lines between espionage and aggression, and between black and white notions of war and peace, don't exist.
Less than a year after Donald Trump won the presidential election and was inaugurated as President of the United States, many people still struggle to come to grips with this unexpected reality.
"Rates are going up now because people are beginning to come to grips with a long-neglected need," said Tracy Mehan, executive director of government affairs at the American Water Works Association.
But some EU countries reimposed selective border checks last year to help come to grips with a large influx of migrants fleeing war and deprivation in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.
People who are really concerned with lowering emissions worldwide need to come to grips with the fact that international agreements where bad actors can't be effectively punished aren't the way to go.
Houston (CNN)More than 9,000 people are dry and safe Tuesday at a temporary shelter in downtown Houston's convention center, but are now struggling to come to grips with their new reality.
Davis, who has always been wonderful in Halt and Catch Fire, is remarkably vulnerable, creating a character that has never come to grips with her basic social anxieties, much less her sexuality.
America military superiority has deteriorated, and we could face a decisive military defeat if our leaders in Washington do not come to grips with the reality of the world we live in.
Hedges plays Jared (yes, the name has been slightly changed), the son of an Arkansas minister (Crowe) who, after enrolling in college, must come to grips with the fact that he's gay.
In his book, "The World as It Is," former Obama White House staff member Ben Rhodes details a pensive President Obama trying to come to grips with the election of Donald Trump.
Ternus says that the team didn't fully come to grips with the limitations of this architecture until much later than they'd hoped — though none of the speakers will give an exact timeline.
A new Politico report today paints the picture of a White House rife with leaks and a businessman-turned-president attempting to come to grips with the realities of running a government.
In Ford v Wainwright, the 1986 case, the court cited the "natural abhorrence civilised societies feel at killing one who has no capacity to come to grips with his own conscience or deity".
The one-star reviews are especially interesting, filled with people who can't come to grips with their own limitations, along with those dissatisfied with the app for a long list of strange reasons.
Though he often paints himself as Egypt's saviour, Mr Sisi, a former general, has struggled to come to grips with an economy buffeted by terrorism and political upheaval since the revolution of 2011.
Sarah Boyle is still struggling to come to grips with the fact that because of a "human error" she underwent an unnecessary double mastectomy and chemotherapy nearly three years ago, BBC News reported.
True Life: We Are Orlando will document the plight of these survivors as they try to come to grips with the horrific incident and the difficult task of moving on with their lives.
It is apparent that we will not come to grips with the politics of incivility only through Twitter, yet another panel of pundits, or even through the noble and critical experience of elections.
The latest attempt to come to grips with these questions is "Hitler: Ascent 1889-1939," the first of two planned volumes of a new biography by the German historian and journalist Volker Ullrich.
As he walked off the stage at United Center, Hischier, a native of Naters, Switzerland, grabbed his chest as he struggled to come to grips with the reality of what had just happened.
Only recently have federal law enforcement officials come to grips with that threat, and local prosecutors like those in Sussex County have often found themselves doing investigations they are ill equipped to undertake.
They also demonstrate how a new sense of uncertainty has taken root as Fed policymakers come to grips with a broadening realization that the economy's potential appears to be weaker than previously thought.
We were strangers lodging in a strange American fantasyland wrapped in the enigma of Asia, watching a family of misfits come to grips with their oddities and unite in triumph at the end.
We need a TV series on Marxism (and its evolution through Leninism, Stalinism, Maoism, Castroism, etc.) so that Americans can come to grips with the horrors of centralized government and the cost of tyranny.
Over the past 19 years, Curt Boisfontaine has come to grips with the idea that whoever killed his sister Eugenie in 1997 and dumped her body in a Louisiana bayou might never face justice.
And also that this has happened over and over and over again, and every time it does, we get upset and then we come to grips with it and then we forget about it.
When Charlie Watson (Steinfeld), a young woman struggling to come to grips with her father's death, procures a beat-up Volkswagen Beetle from a local junkyard, she thinks she's just landed her first car.
Facebook and Twitter posts, many even before dinner was served, revealed some people still struggling to come to grips with Donald Trump's victory and others expressing relief that his rival, Hillary Clinton, didn't win.
As Silicon Valley begins to come to grips with its poor treatment of women, and support builds for victims and whistleblowers who speak out, behavior of investors and founders is coming under closer scrutiny.
Jones says the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency has backed his claims that he didn't intentionally ingest any prohibited substances ... and insists Cormier simply can't come to grips with the fact he's the superior fighter.
Taxpayers who habitually bail out the NFIP are almost literally throwing money into the ocean, because nobody wants to come to grips with how sea-level rise and warmer oceans are remaking America's geography.
Pelosi can lead because of her unified caucus, resurgent optimism of Democrats nationally and her leverage with Democratic control of the House that Trump has failed to come to grips with, but ultimately must.
As Congress returns soon, one can't help but wonder if our representatives have come to grips with a future where their constituents' everyday life is dominated by a small handful of privacy-invading corporations.
Above all, there's the purported unwillingness to come to grips with the need for a safe separation from, and fair settlement with, the Palestinians, to assure Israel's survival as a Jewish and democratic state.
Eventually, she and her cheery Ph.D. student Dominic (Adam Farrell) light out for that lake of legend, where Vanessa will try out some advanced imaging technology and maybe come to grips with Dad's disappearance.
A. I could tell reporters till I'm blue in the face that I do not consider myself a "media magnate," I'm just a film producer, but they just can't come to grips with it.
The Tale is not easy to watch, but it's a vital touchstone for a culture trying to come to grips with the role abuse and assault has played in far, far too many lives.
And weekly reports detailing just how much time we're spending on our apps seem to be a meaningful step in helping us come to grips with just how much time we're spending on our phones.
"Essentially doing a Kickstarter for these cars strikes me as a cynical move by a company that is struggling to come to grips with the basics of mass manufacturing and making a profit," Abuelsamid said.
But just as Obama wouldn't have won the White House without the overwhelming support of black voters, McMullin is the clear beneficiary of Mormon voters who can't come to grips with Trump has a candidate.
Perhaps it is simply that a previously arrogant defendant, having spent a mere 120 days in jail, has finally come to grips with the gravity of what he did, and can better articulate his remorse.
That's one way to come to grips with your team signing a receiver fresh off what Arizona law terms a "super extreme DUI" for being passed out behind the wheel with a BAC over .2.
And by sending us back to the drawing board on ObamaCare, by forcing us to come to grips with our shared destiny as Americans, McCain has perhaps performed his most valiant public service to date.
It's tempting to think that if one of Wall Street's own quits, that it will be lights out for the stock market as investors come to grips with just how toxic President Trump really is.
Lawmakers have been struggling to come to grips with a solution for the country's eroding entitlement programs, which have for years been at the center of a political tug of war between Republicans and Democrats.
The world didn't really begin to come to grips with the prevalence of sexual abuse until 2017, when the millions of survivors who became the #MeToo movement demolished the myth that sexual violence was insignificant.
Well, if a global perspective helps make our domestic predicament seem less gloomy, tens of millions of people are under quarantine in China as the country struggles to come to grips with a deadly virus.
Conservatives (and Trump allies) seized on the moment as a sign of the petulance and childishness of both Pelosi and her party, still unable to come to grips with the fact that Trump is president.
Europeans viewed Mr. Obama's departure from office with a mix of admiration and regret, and for those who have struggled to come to grips with President Trump's attitude and policies, that feeling has only intensified.
"We have to come to grips with the fact that we waited too long and that we took some options off the table," Michael Oppenheimer, a Princeton scientist who studies climate and policy, told me.
"The thing you're going to have to come to grips with now is that we've given a name to the nebulous concerns that everybody has about their health care," Slavitt recalls the president having said.
So there is some indication that psychological stress can put people in this place where they're looking around for new answers or they're possibly trying to come to grips with the world in a new way.
Janet Mills, a Democrat, signed the legislation into law at a ceremony at the Maine State House and said she wants the state to come to grips with the more controversial parts of the American past.
Meanwhile, that may or may not give the rest of us time to come to grips with the creepily natural interactions of Google's new AI. Updated to correct the types of restaurants that can use Duplex .
His real aim was to get beyond oncology's obsession with its internal-combustion engine—the cellular automaton and its genes—and only after his death has the field started to come to grips with his message.
They slowly come to grips with their inheritance through a handful of key events: Oleander's funeral, a child's birthday, a journey to a remote Scottish island or two, uncovering pieces of family skeletons as they go.
Here's the latest: New Zealand tried to come to grips with grief and horror unlike anything in its modern history after a gunman targeted worshipers at two mosques in Christchurch on Friday, killing at least 2150.
Dr. Phil says it's time to come to grips with our new reality and start making some sacrifices, cutting out routines that are illicit or otherwise ... because if not, things will only get worse for everyone.
Treasuries have fluctuated wildly recently as investors come to grips with the fallout from the virus crisis, because severe restrictions on personal movement aimed at curbing the virus are likely to push several countries into recession.
He began to challenge the notion that America was a racially blind, racially neutral country and he began to argue that many Americans would not come to grips with their own racist beliefs, ideas, and practices.
Ms. Lam, if she stays in office, should seriously reflect on meeting the demands of the protesters, and Beijing should come to grips with the fact that democracy is not a foreign conspiracy in Hong Kong.
On the one hand, each member is trying to come to grips with being "blessed" with extrasensory powers (the ability to see the future; telekinesis; pyrokinesis and the unfailing facility to tell if someone is lying).
Indeed, the heartbreaking permanence of the school shooting reality is undeniable when watching Sandy Hook Promise's wrenching new back-to-school PSA, which forces viewers to come to grips with present-day America for school children.
Phatlum arrived at Lytham with a dreadful Open record, only one cut made in seven previous starts, but she seems to have finally come to grips with the style of golf required on British seaside courses.
One of the factors is that we had a Truth and Reconciliation Commission — we sat down, as a country, to come to grips with everything that had been done during the most oppressive time in our history.
Come Away serves as a prequel to Peter Pan and Alice in Wonderland, following as siblings Peter and Alice try to help their parents come to grips with the death of their oldest son, according to Deadline.
But you need to wise up and come to grips with the fact that your product is not going to sell itself and you're not going to close a sale as soon as it's ready to ship.
He was not about to yield to Rodriguez's wishes for a steady diet of at-bats when he couldn't produce as the designated hitter and the Yankees had finally come to grips with the recurrence of 1965.
As coal burning declines precipitously and renewable energy grows steadily, natural gas demand will rise only modestly by 2040 even as the global population grows, if the world truly wants to come to grips with climate change.
While there are many benefits in using these services, there are many implications too and we need to come to grips with the changes digitization brings because it's having an impact on every aspect of our lives.
Buoyed by public anger over the European Union's struggle to come to grips with the migrant crisis, the FPO candidate stormed to the lead in presidential elections last month, with the decisive run-off scheduled for Sunday.
A 62-member group of young Libyans is using the theater as a way to come to grips with the daily violence and conflict gripping the North African country since the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.
If emissions continue at a high level but the Earth turns out to be less sensitive to greenhouse gases than currently believed, that would give humanity a few extra decades to come to grips with the situation.
The Italian Church has only recently begun to come to grips with the problem of sexual abuse on its territory and more victims, encouraged by action in other countries, have begun coming forward to reveal past abuse.
And finally, Kate (Chrissy Metz) and Toby (Chris Sullivan) have to come to grips with the fact that they're terrified to get too attached to their unborn baby for fear of having their hearts broken all over again.
But it's important to recognize and come to grips with who you want to be and how willing you are to stand up for that — to be a little weird in order to be more true to yourself.
As Jews come to grips with this reality after Pittsburgh, the current generation is looking at our synagogue doors in a way we've been fortunate to largely avoid until now: through the wary eyes of the newly persecuted.
What these numbers mask is dissatisfaction with May's own failure to come to grips with problems that would be familiar to Americans: stagnant wages, rising income inequality, a shortage of affordable housing, and cuts in the education budget.
Usually, those attempts are made in vain, and by the time we've finally come to grips with the fact that there's nothing exciting enough on the horizon to help us not hate Monday, the day is already over.
That is a longer-term change in perception that the company may need to come to grips with, he cautions, especially as iPhone sales start to decline and it is unclear what Apple's next big thing may be.
Likewise, opponents of educational choice should come to grips with the fact that they're not going to convince parents to return to the bad old days when bureaucrats picked their children's schools based on their families' zip codes.
As vehicles automate more, it is plausible that what is acceptable should change, but we haven't really come to grips with what is appropriate to do on either a smartphone or using an in-car application while driving.
American national security officials are worried about that scenario as they come to grips with this little-understood fact: The vast majority of key ingredients for drugs that many Americans rely on are manufactured abroad, mostly in China.
" Indicative of the school's failure to come to grips with leadership's responsibility is the fact that two of the former headmasters who presided over the school during the years of abuse continue to serve Choate as "life trustees.
Mr. Toledano's exit is the latest in an unprecedented wave of executive changes in the fashion industry, as it attempts to come to grips with a slowdown in luxury spending because of lower tourist travel and geopolitical uncertainty.
For the more sober voters still trying to come to grips with their reluctant support for either Trump or Clinton, and the polls show there are millions of Americans in that boat, the debate provided nothing but more frustration.
On the other hand, perhaps apprehension is our current mode of cultural production as we come to grips with a world on the slide toward ecological disaster and the seemingly unbridgeable gulf between the rich and poor, artists included.
Leaders in both China and South Korea worry that Mr. Obama's visit to Japan's deepest wound could be taken by the Japanese as an endpoint to their country's fitful efforts to come to grips with their own wartime atrocities.
She presided over an important sexual abuse case involving well-known and eloquent victims at a time when the nation is just starting to come to grips with the extent of our society's sexual victimization of women and girls.
What these Holy Fathers had in common was not just that they were badly flawed men putting forth badly flawed ideas: At the root of their moral failings is Catholicism's centuries-old inability to come to grips with sex.
If we don't come to grips with this widespread and high-velocity shift from essentially "doing the work" to "creating, organizing and supervising," we run the risk of continued economic stagnation, increasing social inequalities and a more insular society.
Although the Legionaries founder, Mexican priest Marcial Maciel, died in 2008 aged 87, insiders say some older Legionaries who knew him and worked with him have still not come to grips with what the pope called his "criminal behaviour".
"Despite his short tenure, hearts are heavy with grief as we not only try to come to grips with his loss departmentally; but to also be there in every way that we can for his family," the statement said.
Voters today still believe there is a need to come to grips with Social Security and Medicare, and recent polling has found that 83 percent of Americans want their elected leaders to sharpen their focus on the national debt.
To make things more extreme, once you come to grips with how cricket works, you're then thrust into increasingly bizarre scenarios, using the same physics-based gameplay to kick a soccer ball, play badminton, and fight in a war.
As we continue to come to grips with the problems of our dystopian future, it's probably as good a time as ever to dream up some solutions with an idea straight out of the dystopian show Black Mirror: pollinating drones.
Over the past few days, a media narrative has emerged that Trump has come to grips with the fact that a president is not a CEO or a reality TV show host who can clap his hands and get things done.
"We agreed that it is something we are going to make sure we do bring up with our friends and allies around the world as we come to grips with the fact that the world is a dangerous place," he said.
"People at this point haven't come to grips with the irreversibility of this sea-level rise problem," Anderson said, displaying a map that shows the site of Harvard's new $10 billion Allston campus inundated after 3 meters of sea-level rise.
BROOKLYN, Iowa – Residents of the Iowa town where Mollie Tibbetts vanished told Fox News on Wednesday they&aposre still trying to come to grips with the dramatic case as police hunt for the student who was last seen on July 18.
"The market has evolved since the 2010-2014 period of high prices and the challenge for OPEC now, as well as for non-OPEC (producers), is to come to grips with recent market developments," al-Madi said, according to the sources.
And I hope that they can come to grips with the issues, recognize the seriousness of the moment, and promote the kind of reforms that can finally produce governance that actually provides the basic services that the people of Iraq deserve.
HONG KONG — China's Supreme Court on Friday exonerated a man who had been executed for murder in 19963, in a dramatic example of the inequities in the country's legal system and the authorities' halting attempts to come to grips with them.
Financial markets have traded wildly for more than two weeks, as investors have tried to come to grips with the sudden rise in the number of virus cases, and the threat to the economy posed by measures to contain them.
Traumatized by political events of 1970 — the United States invasion of Cambodia, the killing of students at Kent State and Jackson State — she began to come to grips with her own identity as an African American in a violent, racist society.
Her co-star Arthur Darvill wrings unusual pathos, too, out of the part of Oscar, the prospective husband who cannot come to grips with the fact that Charity may not be entirely "pure," to use the lingo of the show.
They are more like posthumous reperformances of it, or maybe they are this art's latest "exhibition" — the way Warhol's Marilyns and Brillo boxes are being put on view at the Whitney so we can come to grips with them once again.
PPE has been the name for this subject since it was first introduced at Oxford after World War I. Now it's taught at a hundred or more American universities, combining intellectual resources to come to grips with complex human issues.
Northam's actions as a young man are both reprehensible and understandable given the nation's long-standing and powerful refusal to come to grips with the history of racial slavery and the subsequent 100-year epic of Jim Crow racial segregation.
"They can't emotionally come to grips with the fact that this whole thing of Russian collusion didn't happen, (and) they are trying to invent theories of obstruction of justice," said Giuliani, a former New York mayor, referring to Mueller's team.
While the very young — 20-somethings — quickly recognized the extent to which they would be subsidizing others under the ACA, the public hasn't yet come to grips with the Medicare equivalent, which has been going on for years (some would say decades).
The implicit public rebuke of the pope by one of his top advisers came after two days of pointed attacks from victims and their advocates, and was another setback for Francis' attempts to come to grips with sexual abuse in the Church.
Aston Villa's chief executive, Tom Fox, is an American with a background in sports marketing, and he is trying to come to grips with the English culture that unlike that in the United States, allows for promotion and relegation based on performance.
There was no question that they made mistakes and they had lapses in operational safety, which they had to come to grips with, deal with and they paid a big price, they wrote $70 billion in restitution money to deal with that accident.
It's harder for us to come to grips with the idea that our biology could be as variable as our IT, even though we understand intellectually that somehow we evolved from single cell organisms to complex humans over the past 22019 billion years.
"We're going to have to find a way to really come to grips with this situation so that someday we don't wake up and learn that the North Koreans have shot a missile that has reached the continental United States," Negroponte said.
And she spent nearly seven years in prison – years that were uniquely harrowing for a trans woman serving in a men's prison with only limited support to complete her transition, or to come to grips with the psychological effects of gender dysphoria.
Still the man who could talk about death with a sympathetic tone that helped me come to grips with loss, Fred Rogers was a fucking treasure, and no amount of homophobic bashing, as beautifully chronicled by Neville can taint his damn name.
"I didn't like this one because it started with an assertion that basically I had never apologized, as if I had never tried to come to grips with it, and as if there had been no attempt to hold me accountable," Clinton said.
I like to think of myself as someone who can come to grips with a new reality quickly, however, so here are four of my worst predictions about the 2015 NFL season that didn't pan out, and what I am taking away from them.
Britain has the same economic divisions that America has, and in both countries the liberal elites haven't fully come to grips with the fact that the economic policies of the last 20 or 30 years have produced a monster, a monster that we created.
In politics, if A (Trump) and B (Cruz) savage each other then the benefits often go to Candidate C. But there has to be a C, not a C, D, E, F and G. This new movement must come to grips with two realities.
In the 18 months since the 2016 election, the world has belatedly come to grips with the unintended consequences of social media, and yet, it's only beginning to ask who should be held accountable — and how they should be held accountable — when the worst happens.
What's interesting is that the theory about how firms should be dealing with this massive change is itself in flux, transforming if you will, as organizations come to grips with the idea that the most basic ways they do business are being called into question.
Zitnick's course sparks strong competition among engineers who already rank among the best in the world, each vying to come to grips with and excel at a field outside of their original purview, but one that few fail to recognize is the hottest in tech.
To the Editor: Labor unions' opposition to environmentally responsible policy making in favor of smokestack-industry construction projects highlights the failure of our policy makers to come to grips with the decline of old-economy industries and the need for major restructuring and retraining efforts.
In the days since the tragedy, our staff and supporters have struggled to come to grips with the idea that anyone could be so incited by our work welcoming and protecting refugees that he would invade a sanctuary and take the lives of 11 worshipers.
Brexit - United Kingdom: Britain on Thursday was a nation trying to come to grips with a possible "no-deal" exit from the European Union — meaning it could sever agreements with longtime partner nations without finalizing prearranged pacts on trade, travel and security (The Washington Post).
If you know that I used to teach this probably doesn't come as much of a surprise, but there's a unique sort of joy that I get from sharing a game with a new, interested player and helping them come to grips with it.
Like the great thinkers and leaders who preceded him, from Du Bois to Paul Robeson to King to Malcolm, Ali's embrace of the world's beleaguered and downtrodden masses forced the nation to come to grips with its foul treatment of its own citizens of color.
They not only added new details to the familiar narrative, but allowed me to come to grips with the central question: Why did one of the patriots' most effective fighters, who had been crippled in the cause of American liberty, decide to change his allegiance?
Two cases that will be heard early on, for example, will require the Court to confront racial bias in the criminal justice system, even as Americans struggle to come to grips with the fact that African Americans are disproportionately arrested, jailed and given harsh sentences.
Naturally there will be folded arms & shade thrown because the Purple Standard is hard boots to fill & a lot of us don't wanna come [to] grips [with] the fact that Prince – (an on the surface) face of health & invincible agelessness – [succumbed] to something so… friggin basic.
While the country will have to come to grips with how to deal with the coming unemployment crisis fueled by globalization and automation, and Zuckerberg doesn't claim to have an answer here, he's brave to stick up for inclusive values that underpin the modern American spirit.
Naturally there will be folded arms & shade thrown because the Purple Standard is hard boots to fill & a lot of us don't wanna come [to] grips [with] the fact that Prince – (an on the surface) face of health & invincible agelessness [succumbed] to something so… friggin basic.
President Obama told me this, in a group of people at the Roosevelt Room one day: that the thing you're going to have to come to grips with now is that we've given a name to the nebulous concerns that everybody has about their health care.
FFXV puts you in the role of Noctis, a sullen 20-year-old prince who looks ripped out of a Japanese RPG playbook, complete with the ability to wield both magic and huge swords, and an inability to come to grips with the heavy responsibilities of adulthood.
Johnson's awkward -- and, candidly, bad -- answer on Moore is likely the first of many from Senate Republicans as they seek to come to grips with what it means to welcome someone who has said what Moore has said and believes what Moore believes into their ranks.
"They are in a downward spiral right now and have got to figure out a way to come to grips with all that's happening," Corker told reporters, his comments coming after reports surfaced that Trump had revealed sensitive intelligence to Russia's foreign minister and US ambassador.
CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - Two Canadian energy companies on Thursday outlined preliminary plans to add new oil sands production at their northern Alberta operations, a sign that the industry may have come to grips with the slump in crude prices after two years of heavy cost-cutting.
The Federal Reserve has been thrust into the lead role of saving the U.S. economy from the coronavirus pandemic, taking on the extraordinary task of rescuing households, businesses and local governments as Washington lawmakers have spent weeks debating how to come to grips with the crisis.
And the thing that we have to come to grips with now, and I find this especially as there has been talk lead up to the midterms and the midterms ... Whatever happens in the midterms, whatever happens in 2020, this is not fixed with an election.
But her final Met performance as the Marschallin — a married noblewoman with a 17-year-old lover who is learning to come to grips with the passage of time, and at one point sings of rising in the night to stop the clocks — took on special resonance.
Cucolo has spoken to countless transitioned veterans who went through some level of difficulty in transition, "Almost all have some feeling of loss, frustration and anger until they come to grips with their new identity and find another community of which to be a part," he said.
"As somebody who feels guilty as a light-skinned black person, as someone who feels empowered because she is a woman of color, she navigates that space and she is forced to come to grips with the white side of her and how she relates to that," Browning said.
What makes Proehl's novel so compelling is how he blends each of the stories together: the road trip becomes a kaleidoscope of characters trying to come to grips with some of the consequences of their decisions in their career, lives or on this particular swing across the United States.
Money B when asked about Afeni's resistance to All Eyez On Me at the time of her death, alludes to the former Panther and extremely deft businesswoman as an emotional and grieving mother, unable to come to grips with the loss of her son, over two decades later.
Instead, the diverging decisions reflect an effort by different agencies trying to come to grips with a radically transformed media and telecommunications landscape, one where Silicon Valley companies are suddenly powerhouses in content creation, and traditional media companies exert vast influence over how information flows across the internet.
A greater pity is that while Handler boldly acknowledges and tries to come to grips with the amount of porn available to boys these days, he fails fully to imagine or analyze how porn's logic twists, grates against or informs Cole's experience of gender and real-life sexuality.
Mr. Zalaquett was admired not only for his efforts in Chile in the 22003s, when standing up to Pinochet was an act of courage, but also for his work years later in helping that country come to grips with its past after its return to democracy in 22010.
Basically nothing happens in this deeply sad movie about a family trying to come to grips with the death of its matriarch, but it's exquisitely acted (by a cast that features Gabriel Byrne and Jesse Eisenberg), with beautiful direction and writing from Norwegian Joachim Trier, making his English-language debut.
The presidential visit to Hiroshima also takes place after Japan and its Asian neighbors have worked to come to grips with painful wartime brutalities that Japan inflicted upon its enemies, including an apology by Japan for the use of Korean sex slaves during the World War II. A world without nukes?
Nearly a decade later the Fed has had to trash its playbook in the wake of a severe financial crisis, rethink how the economy works, and come to grips with a world where even the most powerful central bank does not so much set policy as get dragged towards it.
If even a fraction of the Los Angeles art world would seize the moment to try to come to grips with the realities of the impact, both dire and redeeming, of culture on urban life, this city would be much more than just the new art capital the media buzzes about.
The president's G.O.P. critics should engage in electoral battle because the act of campaigning, the work of actually trying to persuade voters, is the only way anti-Trump Republicans will come to grips with the legitimate reasons that their ideas had become so unpopular that voters opted for demagoguery instead.
"We're living amid a generation that has seen every great movie ever made on a phone, so I think we all have to come to grips with where technology takes us," Ted Sarandos, Netflix's chief content officer, said in a 90-minute interview here Friday with several news media outlets.
Eric Bouillier, the sporting director of the McLaren team, whose Honda engine manufacturer has just started to come to grips with the new hybrid engine formula after a disastrous first year last year, fears that changing the formula so soon could hurt Honda's ability to improve the engine rather than help it.
Republican lobbyists in Washington are struggling to come to grips with the possibility of a Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE presidency.
What he and Professor Grayling concluded was that most of today's leaders have simply not come to grips with the current moment of existential challenge for democracies: Politicians are still waltzing in a world where the stakes are small and intimately tied to their own party loyalty, their donors and re-election.
He had to come to grips with that conflict personally in 1975 after three of his Stanford graduate students and a Dutch colleague, who were conducting research in Tanzania on the biology of aggression, were abducted by militants from neighboring Zaire (now known as the Democratic Republic of Congo), and held for ransom.
What we must come to grips with is that the arrogance and myopia that made our race-based social caste system possible, that allowed us to dishonor our Constitution and delude ourselves on a regular basis, are the same arrogance and myopia that are now threatening the well-being of the entire planet.
But we eventually agreed to the joint appearance, and it became clear that as the nation struggled to come to grips with the stunning terrorist attacks that killed 3,85033 Americans in New York and Washington D.C., it was extremely important to put the appearance of partisanship aside, at least for a little while.
To help figure out how kids can learn, make a living, and come to grips with this change in reality, I called up the CEO of the largest job website in the world and asked him where a kid can learn fast to learn the skills to make up to $22019,000 in a weekend.
And we must come to grips with the reality that this economic and military colossus still harbors resentment toward the United States and the liberal international order it created in the wake of World War II. Worse, we have contributed to this outcome while allowing our own nation to be deindustrialized, hollowed out, and distracted.
Pikangikum — which has one fire truck, but no water to make it useful — is in a state of shock, said Nishnawbe Aski Nation Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler, and "trying to come to grips with the magnitude of the tragedy" that occurred Tuesday night in the fly-in reserve about 500 miles northwest of Thunder Bay.
The three-day stay in the Emirates, a relatively tolerant oasis that is home to some one million Catholics, also comes as a brief reprieve for a pope whose legacy and moral authority have been challenged by his struggle to come to grips with a global sex abuse scandal that shows no signs of abating.
It was my first experience of having to come to grips with reality, sensing the commitment of America's people and the patriotism amongst the masses that came as natural as breathing, as our nation launched into a long and bloody conflict fought on two oceans and several continents, lasting over four years and costing over 400,000 American lives.
It touches on something I've written about before: that these tiny devices are superb windows into our digital lives, but what's on the other side of that window is often unhealthy, and we're just starting to come to grips with what it means to have so much negative content put literally right in front of our faces.
That it took such a long investigation, as well as 40 days of questioning during which the suspects were subjected to "special measures"—the euphemism used by Israel's legal system for physical coercion or torture—is a sign of how difficult it is for Israelis to come to grips with anti-Arab racism within their society.
And so I have had to come to grips with how much more difficult it often is for me to talk about myself than to talk about what I want to do for other people, or to tell stories about, you know, the man I met in Rochester who -- whose AIDS medicine is no longer affordable.
Sites like the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin and Remembrance Park in Buenos Aires attempt to harness "the power of social memory to come to grips with past abuse," says Louis Bickford, a human rights scholar and the former director of the International Center for Transitional Justice, who has studied memorials in Cambodia and elsewhere.
"The current pace of repricing in fed funds is not immediately problematic for the Fed and there is yet time to price more into the curve, though we'd argue that at the June meeting, it's likely the markets will have to come to grips with the possibility of a fourth hike in 2018 and price more appropriately," Lyngen said.
President Donald Trump's executive order — which bans all immigrants and visa holders from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US for 90 days, bans all refugee admissions for 26 days, and bans Syrian refugees indefinitely — sent shockwaves around the world, as politicians and leaders scrambled to come to grips with the ramifications of the sweeping new policy.
As a white writer who writes extensively about race, I've been observing this situation closely since well before the 2016 election, and I've been dismayed by the unwillingness of so many of my white peers -- people who are personally horrified by Trump and his success -- to come to grips with what is happening in our country.
Baltimore lost its third police commissioner in three years on Tuesday, the latest blow to the city's efforts to come to grips with a host of serious problems, including the nation's highest big-city murder rate; a shocking corruption scandal; abusive police practices documented in a Justice Department investigation; and the lingering aftermath of the death of Freddie Gray.
But the feelings they experienced weren't fake, and even after decades of trying to come to grips with what happened to them — something both the men and their wives and families talk about in the last hour of Leaving Neverland — it's hard for them to feel, as children eager to please and be valued, that they were being used.
"It would be easy to focus on the loss in terms of his Olympic medals and enormous athletic contributions to the organization," said USA Bobsled & Skeleton CEO Darrin Steele in a statement, "but USA Bobsled & Skeleton is a family and right now we are trying to come to grips with the loss of our teammate, our brother and our friend."    
WATCH: GIULIANI SAYS TRUMP SUBPOENA WOULD IGNITE LEGAL BATTLE "Now they may not know how to do it, they might not realize they are doing it, but they can&apost emotionally come to grips with the fact that this whole thing of Russian collusion didn&apost happen -- that they are trying to invent theories of obstruction of justice," he added.
The search terms' popularity suggests people are trying to come to grips with Republican Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE's surprise win in the presidential election.
One would hope that the recent publication of an anthology of their work, Keeping / the window open: Interviews, statements, alarms, excursions, edited by Ben Lerner, would help change this, but I wonder: precisely by revealing the scope of their activities — writing, translating, and publishing — it shows how hard it is to come to grips with their work as a whole.
Meanwhile, residents of the Iowa town where Tibbetts vanished told FOX News on Wednesday they&aposre still trying to come to grips with the dramatic case as police search for the student who was last seen on July 18 ...  FOX News has confirmed that police have taken copies of all surveillance tapes associated with Tibbetts&apos disappearance from Casey's General Store.
The meeting comes as many Republicans on Capitol Hill are trying to come to grips with Trump's freewheeling style -- on display Wednesday night during a speech in Cincinnati in which he reignited a controversy over a tweet some have said is anti-Semitic -- that seems to appeal to many in the GOP base but could turn off the broader electorate heading into the November election.
I've been playing my PS2 copy of Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 for the past week or so, and it's forced me to come to grips with something that is basically unspeakable in the video game community: I think that the Tony Hawk franchise, at its peak of Pro Skater 3 / Pro Skater 4 / Underground, is a better skateboarding game than the much-beloved Skate series.
As Italy and Europe more broadly struggle to come to grips with an escalating problem with bad loans, a new paper by economists connected to the Center for Economic Policy Research, a European policy shop, highlights the extent to which Italy's main banks — known to be the weakest in the eurozone in terms of cash reserves — have stepped up their lending to the country's most troubled companies.
It was another brutal day on Wall Street as investors continue to come to grips with the new economic realities imposed by the COVID-19 outbreak in the U.S. Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and the S&P 500 are scraping near their lowest point in the last three years, brushing their lowest numbers since the inauguration of President Donald J. Trump.
I believe that the court and society must also come to grips with the fact that any discussion of the constitutionality of affirmative action necessarily forces us to consider a larger question: namely, whether one of America's greatest engines of individual and communal advancement — our institutions of higher education — shall be enlisted in achieving a racially integrated society that transcends the nation's legacy of slavery, Jim Crow and segregation.
He is very much aware that the solutions aren't just a matter of telling ourselves that it's all going to be OK. The sooner we come to grips with that, the less shelf space we will offer to anyone claiming to tell us they've figured out how many happy points you need to stockpile before you know whether or not you've got a meaningful job in the first place.
And while the composer distanced himself from readings of the symphony that would reduce it to the horrors of the second World War, it's hard to swallow the dissonance between a video game about American soldiers tearing it up across the European theater and a symphony of such profound sorrow and loss that was written after someone was unable to musically come to grips with one of the most profound tragedies of human history.
" On October 20th, a few days before his thirty-third birthday, Sun wrote in a Facebook post, "It's been hard to come to grips with having aggressive and incurable Grade 4 brain cancer; it's been hard not to get angry and sad about it; it's been frustrating that every pathology test after my surgery came back with the worst possible result; and it's been hard to accept that modern medicine isn't able to fix me.
To your question about Mitch McConnell, there's a political solution that we have to come to grips with—if a Democratic Party would stop acting like the party of the elite and be the party of the working people again and go into states including red states to convince people we are on their side we can put pressure on their senators to actually have to vote for the nominees that are put forward (INAUDIBLE).
" Emanuel said for the market to see significant gains, investors will have to embrace the idea that global economic weakness will not drag down the U.S. "For their to be material upside, those cyclical stocks need to lead...People have to come to grips with the concept that there isn't going to be a recession, whether the Fed engineers no recession or a trade deal engineers no recession...or just the fact you're in the year before an election means no recession.
The hope is that Norman would learn to describe exactly what he saw, and what he saw was extremely bleak (for the record, moderators of r/watchpeopledie have told us that the subreddit helps many people come to grips with the fragility of life.) "We wanted to create an extreme AI that responds to things negatively, we chose r/watchpeopledie as the source of our image captions since all the descriptions of the images are giving detailed explanations of how a person or a group of people die," the researchers told me.
Y.) defended President-elect Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE's tweets criticizing Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson ClintonThe magic of majority rule in elections The return of Ken Starr Assault weapons ban picks up steam in Congress MORE Tuesday, saying that the former president refuses to come to grips with Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonLewandowski on potential NH Senate run: If I run, 'I'm going to win' Fighter pilot vs.

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