"It was a moment of definite disbelief, but also openheartedness," she said.
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What was most endearing about Jamal was his honesty, openheartedness and warmth.
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But sometimes, the couple had told friends, their openheartedness left them feeling vulnerable.
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The show is still finding its footing, but it's hard not to fall for its almost puppy-like openheartedness.
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Instead, we should celebrate our child's humanity — with all of its complex, contradictory potential — with openheartedness and with love.
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"This is putting our solidarity, our common sense and our openheartedness for one another to the test," Merkel said.
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You could use it to describe Forrest Gump, whose I.Q. of 75 did not prevent him from expressing loyalty and openheartedness.
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So too is her long-awaited foray into the live-action big-screen spotlight: That openheartedness makes the movie something of an outlier.
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Perhaps we can model the presence and openheartedness that make it possible to cry because the love another person has for us nourishes and sustains us.
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In retaining her dogged openheartedness and honest work ethic, she has been able to prove that hip-hop is the land not of opportunism but of opportunity. ♦
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Throughout their travels, the couple wrote a blog together and shared Instagram posts about the openheartedness they wanted to embody and the acts of kindness reciprocated by strangers.
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Over the next five or six years, I'm hoping to apply a small measure of that openheartedness down here, on fractured Earth, among all us mugs plodding the muddy trails.
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I had learned from my mother that there's a way of responding to life, a kind of openheartedness to whatever happens, that is more interesting than closing down, that's more nourishing.
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He had always been a vulnerable, childlike man, but there were moments, in his last days, when his mother couldn't tell whether he'd achieved some higher state of openheartedness or was just disoriented.
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In each case, the openheartedness of these couples is an affront to the narrow-mindedness of some in their families, who display everything from well-meaning skepticism to historically burdened viewpoints to outright hostility.
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"She became a Bronxite by stint of her commitment, openheartedness and guileless conviction that a better world was possible," said Eileen Markey, who met Ms. Hynes as a fellow student at Fordham and is an assistant professor of journalism and media studies at Lehman College of the City University of New York.
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