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924 Sentences With "to come to terms with"

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

The dogs help people to come to terms with trauma.
That's something that you have to come to terms with.
Germany has done a lot to come to terms with
"Chris had to come to terms with reality," the source says.
So Jonathan is struggling to come to terms with his situation.
"It's still very hard to come to terms with," he says.
Often, I think about how to come to terms with this.
It took me a while to come to terms with it.
I needed to come to terms with this on my own.
He's still trying to come to terms with his friend's death.
Stern's family is trying to come to terms with the arrests.
Especially trying to come to terms with it and my faith.
I didn't expect to come to terms with my own sexuality.
"It took awhile to come to terms with it," she said.
Here's what both parties have to come to terms with first.
And it's just a hard, hard thing to come to terms with.
It took me a while to come to terms with being trans.
Americans need to come to terms with this shrewd but cynical move.
The Caribbean may have to come to terms with more destructive storms.
Yoosung has to come to terms with the death of his beloved cousin.
That is just something you're going to have to come to terms with.
It's not really gossip, it's more trying to come to terms with it.
James Milner will never be able to come to terms with this moment.
"It's new things we are learning to come to terms with," Baruah said.
For three months, I struggled to come to terms with the unalterable truth.
The struggle to come to terms with these tensions is constant and inescapable.
Britain's political parties now need to come to terms with the Powell question of national identity in much the same way that they once had to come to terms with the Jenkins question (social liberalism) and the Thatcher question (economic liberalism).
That's an issue she'll have to come to terms with in her own time.
Society has yet to come to terms with this kind of invasion of privacy.
Going to an unfamiliar place helped me to come to terms with my feelings.
Nevertheless, the work is critical for Guatemala to come to terms with its past.
Was that hard for you to come to terms with playing someone like that?
Following the event, Kline spent years struggling to come to terms with Patrick's death.
And I'm sorry its taken me so long to come to terms with that.
Almost all countries struggle to come to terms with dark periods in their histories.
I had to come to terms with the fact that it's not a maybe.
"It took us some time to come to terms with these organizations," he says.
Physical  This is easier to identify, but still hard to come to terms with.
It was confusing and sad and very difficult to come to terms with this diagnosis.
Patterson's relatives said they are devastated and struggling to come to terms with the loss.
To make matters worse, the patient didn't want to come to terms with his addiction.
It took me a long time to come to terms with what my father did.
It's something that a majority of nations are still trying to come to terms with.
McBride: I think he represents a difficult thing for her to come to terms with.
Casey Affleck stars as a janitor trying to come to terms with a personal tragedy.
Successful men are often driven by a need to come to terms with their fathers.
The industry is trying to come to terms with the factors contributing to these declines.
It is time to come to terms with reality: "maximum pressure" on Iran has failed.
"She had to come to terms with what sacrifices she would make," Ms. Salibello said.
It's hard for me to come to terms with vulnerability, which is what sex requires.
An eight-year old cousin, Joshua, is struggling to come to terms with the loss.
What does it mean to come to terms with history, according to Ward's bracing book?
He struggles, he says, to come to terms with the fleeting quality of human experience.
It took extensive therapy for Shulman to come to terms with what happened, she said.
It's hard to come to terms with events like Fort Hood, Sandy Hook or San Bernardino.
"I have had to come to terms with that and make peace with that," he said.
AUSTRIA'S far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) is finding it hard to come to terms with defeat.
" Of Chris' decision to plead, the source explains: "Chris had to come to terms with reality.
"Fashion has yet to come to terms with it" — or for that matter, with nonstandard sizing.
This is difficult for both halves of the titular innocent couple to come to terms with.
Home is the place where she really had to come to terms with a new life.
Others in the Valley struggled to come to terms with the vote tally as it stood.
Most traditional psychotherapy involves talking through powerful emotions in order to come to terms with them.
Or does its theology rob us of the opportunity to come to terms with our suffering?
Now they're struggling to come to terms with what his presidency will mean for their industry.
And yet even he struggled to come to terms with the fate of his childhood friendship.
She said that the family was struggling to come to terms with what Carlos had done.
Perhaps it's best we give him some time to come to terms with this difficult revelation.
I hope that she'll be not sad and be able to come to terms with it.
But if folks like Hillary want to "come to terms with hard truths," let's start now.
That's an idea that's really hard for a lot of people to come to terms with.
Yet leading Republicans are starting to come to terms with the Trump candidacy as an inevitability.
I struggled to come to terms with it myself while I powered through episode after episode.
Struggling to come to terms with his sexual identity caused him many years of crippling depression.
Trump and Putin, and Germany needs to come to terms with the concept of European power.
PROFESSOR HILL Because I think we had to come to terms with a number of facts.
Now I just have to come to terms with the fact that my cat likes vaporwave.
Plus there are jiggles in places that are honestly just hard to come to terms with.
George W. Bush's presidency was conservatism's most ambitious attempt to come to terms with its internal contradictions.
Still, even months after the diagnosis, the Nuttalls are struggling to come to terms with the illness.
"Today we continue to struggle to come to terms with what happened," the statement read, in part.
Nico has to come to terms with this his own way and hopefully, Schmitt can respect that.
Now, burdened with a memory he is struggling to come to terms with, Madasani's words are heartrending.
As she struggles to come to terms with the event, Emad becomes obsessed with finding her attacker.
We, as allies, have to come to terms with how we have enabled this environment to persist.
Humans have always impacted their environment, and we're just starting to come to terms with the consequences.
For Japan truly to become a normal power, it needs to come to terms with its history.
Now, the family is struggling to come to terms with Kelly's death as they make funeral arrangements.
You can find Emma trying to come to terms with the realities of this video on Twitter.
The FPÖ epitomises Austria's failure fully to come to terms with its complicity in the Third Reich.
We are trying to come to terms with this tragedy and to understand why this has happened.
You somehow have to come to terms with what is ugly as well as what is precious.
We have to come to terms with where our own red lines lie and make them clear.
Even so, it has been difficult for many to come to terms with the trauma of Feb.
At the same time I've tried to come to terms with my role in this gigantic clusterfuck.
The renaming of the square is Belgium's latest effort to come to terms with its colonial legacy.
The coronavirus outbreak has forced many retailers to come to terms with their absence and leave policies.
The ballet was a way to "come to terms" with her own mother's condition, Ms. Marston said.
Historians agree that Spain still needs to do much to come to terms with its past century.
Our clients filing today were devastated and needed considerable time to come to terms with their losses.
Lizzie: It's rough to come to terms with the fact that we're living in the final days of One Video, but perhaps it's even rougher to come to terms with the fact that music videos do not seem to have measurably improved since we started this godforsaken column.
Survivors struggle to come to terms with Manchester terror attack Survivors struggle to come to terms with Manchester terror attack MANCHESTER, England — Manchester was a city in shock on Tuesday, after a terror attack at an Ariana Grande concert the night before left 143 people dead and 59 injured.
That subverts Peru's decades-long struggle to come to terms with its dark past of crimes against humanity.
Speaking to USA Today, Handler, 44, said she was recently forced to come to terms with the loss.
The child's family struggled to come to terms with the abduction as police searched for the little girl.
The thought is excruciatingly painful, but it's just something we're going to have to come to terms with.
More than a year later, Arndt still struggles to come to terms with what he saw that night.
A source tells PEOPLE the disgraced news anchor has struggled to come to terms with his new normal.
That also means having to come to terms with the things that you need to let go of.
And so he sits on the market, waiting for his agent to come to terms with this fact.
The university, like many other institutions, is working to come to terms with its past ties to slavery.
But I do not think that social democracy has the analytical skills to come to terms with this.
In theory, there's still time for Trump to come to terms with the realities of power in Washington.
"Everyone is working long hours and trying to come to terms with horrible loss of life," Buschow said.
By now, losing the port isn't really unbearable; we've had years to come to terms with this reality.
"Moneyed interests in both parties don't want to come to terms with it," he told the New Republic.
"They have to come to terms with what they created," said Laura Ingraham, the conservative talk-radio host.
You have to come to terms with them in a different way, when you're constantly confronted with them.
We had to come to terms with the fact that people really didn't know that this was illegal.
They are still trying to come to terms with their new president — friends and foes, for different reasons.
That's something that Biden may have to come to terms with if he doesn't win in South Carolina.
He has already had to come to terms with two other moves made by the President last week.
Both struggle to come to terms with a changing Hollywood industry — at the height of Charles Manson's killing spree.
Toronto still has to come to terms with the alienation that Ford exploited and worsened, but did not create.
It's time to come to terms with what a Trump administration is going to mean for all of us.
You have to come to terms with the fact that no matter what you do, people will dislike it.
Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan are struggling to come to terms with the end of their eight-year marriage.
In her teens, Zhenya had identified as a lesbian and struggled to come to terms with her sexual orientation.
For him, politics and heroics faded beside the simple struggles of ordinary people to come to terms with fate.
As the family struggled to come to terms with the death, they donated Taylor's organs and saved five lives.
"The family asks for prayers and privacy right now to come to terms with this tragedy," the statement reads.
This special report is about their struggle in the past 19903 years to come to terms with this transition.
It took a while for me to come to terms with that and have really open discussions about money.
At first, it's funny, with Freeman's signature voice of God trying to come to terms with the nascent technology.
Raisman continued, elaborating on how difficult it is to come to terms with being a survivor of sexual abuse.
A source recently told PEOPLE the disgraced news anchor has struggled to come to terms with his new normal.
Eight months may have passed, but Meghan McCain is still struggling to come to terms with John McCain's death.
It was like, 'Well, I'm still trying to come to terms with what this is and I feel bad.
A source recently told PEOPLE that Lauer has struggled to come to terms with his new low-key lifestyle.
These televised hearings took place in 1973 and allowed the public to come to terms with the shocking facts.
Aguirre-Sacasa admitted in March the cast and crew were still struggling to come to terms with Perry's death.
Maybe they figure it took me a while to come to terms with my disability (spoiler alert: It did)?
Disoriented and trying to come to terms with what I'd witnessed, I make my way to the train station.
A personal war on two fronts that I am still fighting to come to terms with two years later.
I have tried to come to terms with the idea of putting all this "out there," and I cannot.
He said he had agonized in a moral and mental struggle to come to terms with his own betrayals.
What about the young woman struggling with self-esteem issues, desperately trying to come to terms with her disability?
If you're single, the eclipse will bring a breakthrough that causes you to come to terms with irrational behavior.
Aguirre-Sacasa admitted in March that the cast and crew were still struggling to come to terms with Perry's death.
"It's really important to come to terms with your preferences, and then be able to ask for them," Guichet says.
Watching host James Delos repeatedly try and fail to come to terms with his artificial nature was heartbreaking and fascinating.
Leaving LGBTQ experiences out of sex ed curriculums further ostracizes teens that are learning to come to terms with themselves.
Investors need to come to terms with the reality that overall weak growth is turning out to be quite persistent.
"We now have to come to terms with the fact that his chair will forever remain empty," Reiss-Andersen said.
Now at the Leda refugee camp in Teknaf, southern Bangladesh, Alam is struggling to come to terms with what happened.
"Campaigning for change for other women was something I did to come to terms with my loss," she told Broadly.
So when we realized we weren't going to come to terms with [Hooft], we said let's let the dust settle.
"They have to come to terms with what they created," said Laura Ingraham, a conservative activist and talk-radio host.
I struggled so much to come to terms with what felt like a constant uncertainty, but I finally got there.
"They are all struggling to come to terms with the conditions and context they find themselves in," Ms. Kirby said.
Such revelations forced American citizens to come to terms with the military's "kill anything that moves" approach to the war.
But then he forced me to come to terms with how that idea of masculinity poisoned his life — and mine.
Now, oppositional voices "have to come to terms with the existing, 'new' and much more balanced media landscape," he said.
The band is continuing "to struggle to come to terms with what happened," the statement added, before asking for privacy.
"Giovanni's Room," on the other hand, is an attempt by the young writer to come to terms with just being.
Journalists are trying to come to terms with Moscow's ability to steer Western news coverage by doling out hacked documents.
The questions Chin poses have never seemed more urgent, as Europeans (and Americans) attempt to come to terms with diversity.
It is that America — and especially the Republican Party — is going to have to come to terms with organized labor.
"We need to come to terms with a past that has an ugly side, a wicked side," the Very Rev.
Mr. Trump came along just as the mainstream media, especially newspapers, were trying to come to terms with the internet.
" While Juli is doing her best to come to terms with Jarrid's death, she admitted, "Our hearts are broken here.
A source tells PEOPLE that the Facts of Life actress is struggling to come to terms with the unimaginable loss.
Instead I found a litany by creative folk struggling to come to terms with an unpleasant year that ended badly.
Six years after leaving the Army, Soto still spent nights awake, trying to come to terms with his Korengal tour.
Their continued public prodding has left Silicon Valley no choice but to come to terms with its own business practices.
So Trump may just have to come to terms with the fact he lost the popular vote fair and square.
"I had to come to terms with the fact that it's not a maybe," he sulks at the song's opening.
Meanwhile, Dylan and Tank's community of adoring fans are still struggling to come to terms with Tank's death — and its implications.
Briana DeJesus struggled to come to terms with her ex-boyfriend Luis' reluctance to help her raise their newborn daughter Stella.
Growing up as a devout fundamentalist Mormon in a polygamous family, Mariah Brown struggled to come to terms with her sexuality.
As hundreds of people queued outside the morgue, Amaya said Freetown was struggling to come to terms with its latest disaster.
I'm trying to come to terms with the fact that I'll probably spend the rest of my career covering the consequences.
Helen's daughter Mireille works to come to terms with forming her own identity as an actress away from her mother's fame.
It took me a long, long time to come to terms with the fact that it was him, it wasn't me.
After all those years of hurtling skywards, Vardy was forced to come to terms with some form of deceleration at last.
Some of those things are still hard to come to terms with, but everything starts to settle when you grow up.
She says she and her family struggled for years to come to terms with their son's identity as a gay man.
YNH: In essence, I think that we need to come to terms with the fact that we can't prevent it completely.
But a source says it hasn't been easy for Kardashian to come to terms with her brother's relationship with Blac Chyna.
He's right: We should be having a debate over how to come to terms with Boston's Colonial (and slave-connected) history.
This, I think, is the hardest thing to come to terms with: that the normal you've been chasing doesn't exist anymore.
CS failed to come to terms with Ally on a new US$11bn warehouse lending facility that was announced in March.
"People have to come to terms with the reality that 'we really are different people,'" says Ellyn Bader, a couples therapist.
But it is the close-knit wrestling community that is struggling most to come to terms with its sense of betrayal.
It's about trying to come to terms with her identity after a lifetime spent trying to quash her most basic impulses.
It is a growing threat that Facebook and similar companies have begun to come to terms with only in recent months.
It's also a book about how Danticat and other writers have tried to come to terms with the fact of death.
I was unable to come to terms with the fact she was no longer a part of the world around me.
But compelling for anyone who has struggled to come to terms with the loss of loved ones, no matter the circumstances.
"We have to come to terms with the fact that this is going to cost a lot more money," O'Leary says.
And the adversaries are treated like competing mafia families you have to come to terms with to ensure your own security.
While it's easy to say beauty comes from the inside, many women won't ever have to come to terms with the idea.
After being in labor for 36 hours at home, I had to come to terms with having to go to the hospital.
It took me a couple of years to come to terms with not being able to do music anymore at that time.
In the midst of the civil war, Nigerians were struggling to come to terms with the lingering after-effects of colonial rule.
As she struggled to come to terms with the illness, Colgan says it was late her grandmother's words that helped her through.
It took me over a year, actually, to come to terms with the fact that this work is really about mental illness.
Then there was the fact that Messer had to come to terms with losing custody of her twins after her rehab stint.
After her husband, Gordon, is arrested for securities fraud, the Kleins have to come to terms with losing their seemingly perfect lives.
"I had to come to terms with what my real issues were, and it wasn't about going to the gym," she says.
Marroquin, now 22, was forced to come to terms with a staggering contradiction: He adored his father but hated what he did.
Lorenz Larkin and Rory MacDonald, top ten welterweights by anyone's reckoning, recently failed to come to terms with the UFC as well.
So I think all of my characters in the contemporary section are struggling to come to terms with life after the fire.
When it comes to managing your money, it can be difficult to come to terms with the choices you have to make.
With things like cloud storage and wireless accessories, it's actually pretty easy to come to terms with a USB-C-only laptop.
It has taken me years to come to terms with the fact that nothing I ever do will make up for it.
The latter came out of nowhere, so Sydney spent much of the season trying to come to terms with what was happening.
"The biggest thing to come to terms with was that my entire childhood was kind of bought with stolen money," she said.
So Democrats might actually be less healthy because we weren't really forced to come to terms with a lot of these issues.
Yet he refuses to come to terms with his disability, including refusing to use assistive devices and skills he learned in rehab.
My husband and I had to come to terms with the most brutal outcome for a parent: We could not save him.
And I knew that I was going to have to come to terms with what happened and chart a path going forward.
The psychological and cultural inability to come to terms with that reality results in many victims being disbelieved, and treated quite badly.
In Tony Blair's day, Thatcherites reconciled themselves to opposition by arguing that they had forced Labour to come to terms with capitalism.
Another speaker noted that she'd needed six hundred hours of counselling just to start to come to terms with her family history.
We have to come to terms with the fact that embracing AI is rapidly becoming be a prerequisite for excelling in many fields.
David admitted he too struggled to come to terms with the death of his siblings and wanted to "confirm it" on his own.
I think it took some time to come to terms with even calling myself gay … I just simply started living as a lesbian.
Over the course of eight episodes, the show explores Ryan's sexuality, independence, and what it means to come to terms with his disability.
I'd have to come to terms with the fact that I can't control how other people feel, can't hold out for universal approval.
"A Calabrian mobster considering turning state's evidence has to come to terms with betraying maybe 200 of his relatives," Gratteri told the Guardian.
One such clone is assigned to man a distant outpost, and has to come to terms with a terrible incident in his past.
And, while you're at it, take some time to come to terms with the fact that there are eight months left in 2018.
Winterkorn, who has taken no public role since leaving VW, said he too was still attempting to come to terms with the scandal.
There is a case to be made that in the 1970s, "Roots" did indeed push the U.S. to "come to terms" with slavery.
And it was really only through the discovery of gay porn that he was able to come to terms with his own sexuality.
Right now, she's trying to come to terms with the family change and surely she will come to terms with this complex transition.
Despite knowing he was gay since he was seven or eight, Michael struggled to come to terms with his sexuality as a teenager.
More than that, the family — and those outside of it — continues to come to terms with Empire's pending heir, Hakeem's baby with Anika.
Many Western leaders have yet to come to terms with this new reality, hoping that anti-immigrant sentiment is just a passing phenomenon.
Sexual harassment isn't just a problem Hollywood is currently trying to come to terms with — it's "epidemic", one award-winning actress told CNBC.
And in that hospital room and in the days and weeks that followed, I had to come to terms with that fear myself.
Every nation, and the public, is being forced to come to terms with this imperialist past and the old institutions from that era.
In the same way Melo struggled to come to terms with his sexuality, each queen keeps their drag persona hidden for various reasons.
The market is trying to come to terms with what the virus fallout will be and what values do we assign to that.
In the time since that day, Game said he has struggled to come to terms with the pain he has caused so many.
Western powers have always been adamant that Kosovo, like other countries in the region, has to come to terms with the Balkan wars.
A devastated community mourns Back home in Kenya, a devastated family is trying to come to terms with the loss of three generations.
Having met his hero, Lee was – for a moment, at least – forced to come to terms with the reality of idolising Jamie Vardy.
It had taken me years to come to terms with my own death sentence, with the fact that I would one day be executed.
Struggling to come to terms with the election of Donald Trump, many tech leaders faulted their own insulation from the concerns of Middle America.
As Russia approaches the centennial of the uprising, it has struggled to come to terms with the legacy of those who remade the nation.
By virtue of his success, the late monarch has left behind a modern country that now has to come to terms with his passing.
When a beloved artifact — a science fiction novel called The Pyronauts — goes missing, she has to come to terms with what she's really lost.
You see Jamie go through a multiple of personalities trying to come to terms with losing the person he loves and his unborn child.
The participants were drawn from soldiers with spinal cord injuries, all of whom were having to come to terms with some form of paralysis.
"It was a real shock and, yes, it took me a while to come to terms with it," she told the Mail on Sunday.
Hawke plays Toller, an ex-military chaplain struggling to come to terms with the loss of his son, who he had encouraged to enlist.
Sherry Benson, a 57-year-old graphic designer from Marshalltown, said she is still trying to come to terms with Trump's evolution on abortion.
The 27-year-old posted on Instagram about what it's like to come to terms with her new "post-baby" body — without a baby.
Knowing what victims and their caregivers will face in the days, months, and years after the shooting is difficult to come to terms with.
Is Hillary ready to come to terms with why from 28503 to 22019, 93 percent of black homicide victims were killed by other blacks?
Her anger at the world when losing a loved one helped me to come to terms with death when it hit close to home.
At the same time I could see him struggling to come to terms with what he'd done and what his role in history was.
"It took Germany the longest of all partners to come to terms with someone like Trump becoming President," another senior German official told me.
But Republicans who had opposed Trump had to come to terms with the fact that these warnings had not been heeded by their voters.
But the shakeup has thrown fans into a frenzy, with some struggling to come to terms with the sight of a human-like Pikachu.
Now, the mom of four says that although she knew Tony would die, she is still struggling to come to terms with the death.
But as much as I enjoy commanding a premium rate, I've struggled to come to terms with allowing myself to be fetishized so blatantly.
But even for people who have admired a public figure from a distance, it can be difficult to come to terms with negative revelations.
Those efforts clearly failed, and Republicans have to come to terms with the fact that the rot was far more advanced than we understood.
Ms. Bruce said it took a long time to come to terms with the notion that her father's comedy would be interpreted by others.
It was only after 2012 that I managed to come to terms with Asmara and its countless murky stories of war, exile, and colonialism.
The Jeju killings remain a sensitive topic in South Korea, which is divided over how to come to terms with its tumultuous modern history.
For more than 30 years I've wrestled with how to come to terms with all that it embodies — and how to talk about it.
In the upcoming superhero horror flick The New Mutants, a diverse group of young mutants are forced to come to terms with their powers.
The process has been fraught with legal disputes in a show of how Spain still struggles to come to terms with its dictatorship past.
"Calypso" chronicles his latest attempts to come to terms with the slings and arrows of truly outrageous fortune that life has flung at him.
Shortly after her divorce, she decided that she needed to understand her mother's volatility to come to terms with her own depression and rage.
It was part theatre, part therapy, part séance—a measure of just how far Germans will go to come to terms with their past.
These clashes are likely to continue, and perhaps worsen, as America tries to come to terms with the deep emotions invested in our past.
Was it wrong to try to understand her own body, morphing in pubescence, and to begin to come to terms with her nascent sexuality?
But with each new negative test result, I began to come to terms with the fact that I would never have a biological child.
"When you walk into the vineyard and see everything just blackened and everything gone, it's pretty hard to come to terms with," Henschke said.
You have to come to terms with the fact that this conversation will be upsetting for both of you and push through it anyway.
Whatever that suggests for the long term, in the short term it's clear that she is trying to come to terms with what happened.
A new regime will need to come to terms with creditors in order to be given access to international credit markets again and start rebuilding.
A poignant obituary for a young mother is starting conversations about opioid addiction, as the woman's family struggles to come to terms with her death.
As Granger and Amber continue to come to terms with River's sudden death, they are doing their best to find the "good" in the situation.
He was really uncomfortable, and struggling to come to terms with the fact that he's not going to grow big and strong, just like daddy.
Therapy has helped a lot—it's pushed me to come to terms with accepting that this is my body and that I should own it.
In the early weeks of 1997, I was a high school sophomore just starting to come to terms with my identity as a queer woman.
If Trump's words emerge, as Drimmer and Fleming argue, "from our cultural legacy," then it is our responsibility to come to terms with that legacy.
"There is no more fuel in the engine," he says, adding that it is time for the country's leaders to come to terms with this.
He has family friends around, but they've had to come to terms with the fact he's striking out on his own at a young age.
Over the intervening months the world has been forced to come to terms with—and repeatedly adjust to—having Mr Trump in the White House.
Guatemalans are still struggling to come to terms with what happened in their civil war between US-backed rulers, left-wing rebels, and indigenous communities.
But then, we had to come to terms with the fact that there would be no more new vampire births or bed-breaking sex scenes.
Artist Anicka Yi's work rejects the traditional art making tools and forces the viewer (and sniffer) to come to terms with some otherwise gross things.
What issues do you think society as a whole needs to come to terms with and what ways would you suggest we fix these problems?
Through therapy, the lawyer learned to come to terms with her diagnosis, and now, she's excited to get to work on her mental wellness workbooks.
It also shattered her faith as she struggled to come to terms with how God could have allowed this to happen to her, she said.
The movie shows Jackie in the first week after the assassination as she struggles to come to terms with the tragedy and her own grief.
The victims of 22018's Camp Fire might be experiencing solastalgia at this very moment as they continue to come to terms with their losses.
Though the fighting is over, the war has continued to impact Sri Lanka because the public has yet to come to terms with what happened.
As viewers, we've waited over two seasons for Kimmy to come to terms with the sexual and emotional abuse she endured while in the bunker.
Another portion resisted calls for change by turning inward and embracing a past that refused to come to terms with a national history of inequality.
Ullman recounts struggles to define herself in the boys'-club atmosphere of technology companies and to come to terms with the implications of her work.
But to do so, they need to come to terms with whom they are falling in line behind and what that says about their party.
"The children need time to come to terms with this, to get their bearings and find their feet," the royal palace said in their statement.
But doubts over the broader outlook for global growth and President Donald Trump's willingness to come to terms with Beijing over trade continue to weigh.
Even as Republicans prepared to leave Cleveland, they were still straining to come to terms with the views and personality of their newly minted nominee.
All these people are living double lives and are struggling to come to terms with their situation, but "Shab" is happy giving them lip service.
He was 26 and struggling to come to terms with his sexuality when he climbed a hill near his home and over-dosed on painkillers.
"This step allows us to come to terms with the ill-conceived legacy of Meciar amnesties," leftist Prime Minister Robert Fico said before the vote.
I knew from our first interaction that she wasn't going to come to terms with there being another woman in Nate's life any time soon.
People think they know you -- they stop you and talk to you in a way that is sometimes quite difficult to come to terms with.
I've had to come to terms with a lot in my roughly 25 hours with Rage 2, id Software and Avalanche's new open world shooter.
Here we would expect the individual to come to terms with or neutralise the stressor, or even spontaneously improve across all clinical parameters after weeks.
It's hard to come to terms with death, even if said death is the end of a television program that loomed large in your imagination.
Ingvar Kamprad's image and Sweden's continue to reflect each other: without shadows, without disgrace, and without any ambition to come to terms with their past.
Two Iraq veterans, Tom Voss and Anthony Anderson, decide to come to terms with their wartime memories by walking from Milwaukee to Santa Barbara, Calif.
Germany has yet to come to terms with its violent colonial legacy in Africa, which laid the groundwork for and inspired Nazi atrocities, they say.
"If you are woken up, you are shocked, and people struggle to come to terms with what has happened," she said of the residents' reaction.
In a courtroom surrounded by other veterans, including Judge Dugan, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, Tim started to come to terms with his experience.
A lot of people, depending on any number of circumstances, have to come to terms with the Truth at earlier points in life than others.
As officials work to solve the case, Lauren's family works to come to terms with the death of the woman remembered as "sweet" and kind-hearted.
That's "Tootie" Smith (Margaret O'Brien) trying to come to terms with her family's impending move to New York, away from the family home in St. Louis.
You have to come to terms with that and find new ways to process things," Brimm told CNBC Make It. "It's an incredible source of resilience.
So he's going to have to come to terms with losing a lot of money and hoping that he's gonna regain it back in the future.
Joe Giudice is struggling to come to terms with an immigration court's ruling on Wednesday to deport him to his native Italy after his prison sentence.
But it was only through beauty that I was able to come to terms with my own identity and self-acceptance as a Korean-American man.
Instead, there were the flat, controlled voices of those trying to come to terms with disappointment, while hoping against hope that their worst fears are wrong.
If this is true, it is bad news for a state that may have to come to terms with perpetual drought, particularly in its southern regions.
"I really had to come to terms with the fact that maybe it was going to be just Ricki and me forever," admits Maynard Johnson, 31.
The actress said her experience with Ratner stuck with her for several years and haunted her as she tried to come to terms with her sexuality.
But Russia and the US are on opposite sides of so many issues that the White House would certainly have to come to terms with it.
Now, Wagner is struggling to come to terms with news that the couple reportedly died in a helicopter crash shortly after saying "I do" on Saturday.
Once the embassy was taken by followers of Islamic leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Vance sought Carter's backing for an attempt to come to terms with Khomeini.
While we are confident that this is the right choice for us, it has for sure not been an easy one to come to terms with.
According to the CDC, before the retraction, Hawaiians were mostly trying to come to terms with the threat and searching for information about what to do.
Two months ago, Ruth Scully had to come to terms with the most devastating thing that could happen to any parent: losing her child to cancer.
Democrats not happy with her leadership have to come to terms with the fact that they aren't going to ever knock her out of her job.
"The entire film is filled with all different kinds of imperfections and failings, and it's always something you have to come to terms with," he says.
In the aftermath of the slaying, Hugelmaier's family is struggling to come to terms with the death of a woman remembered as "sweet" and kind-hearted.
Although this isn't new information or even the first time this has come up, people are still struggling to come to terms with the shocking revelation.
Cantor said that while America boasts the largest economy in the world, Washington was yet to come to terms with a "very unconventional" and "disruptive" leader.
Austin is out this week due to a Dental Procedure, which leaves Patrick, Rob, Cado, and Danielle to come to terms with their own oral hygiene.
It's an elaborate scheme of who can make the other person the most jealous, although neither one really wants to come to terms with their feelings.
Mr. McCoy has spent the past few years exploring such vulnerability through his lens as he struggles to come to terms with his own war experience.
If the novel seems unrelentingly cheerless at times, its tone reflects Gavin's struggle to come to terms with his family's particular history of displacement and loss.
He notes that, in forcing Denmark to come to terms with its true size, 1864 was the foundation of the small but successful contemporary Danish state.
Though his university environment was more liberal, Watson said he was still too shy and reluctant to come to terms with that part of his identity.
There and in other small villages, survivors gathered on Monday outside their houses, looking at one another dazed, struggling to come to terms with this tragedy.
Mr. Abe's visit will be one of a series of efforts by Japan to come to terms with its wartime history, without engaging in direct apologies.
I ask if Silicon Valley needs a reckoning, if there's something the technology industry needs to do to come to terms with what it actually is.
"The inability to face up to a more modest royal family gels with our inability to come to terms with Britain's diminished role in the world."
I had to learn to become comfortable in front of the camera and to come to terms with letting myself be seen without dissecting every part.
The decision deals a blow to momentum in the investment community to coax fossil fuel companies to come to terms with the realities of climate change.
"But the inability for metropolitans to come to terms with the shamanistic power of populism is as relevant here as it is over there," he added.
We know it's tough to come to terms with, but if you don't believe us just check out this video of the Biebs throwing punches after church.
While the world continues to come to terms with Donald Trump Jr.'s deplorable and inaccurate Twitter meme, even more issues about it are coming to light.
Speaking from personal experience, I know just how hard it is to come to terms with sexuality and gender identity while being part of a religious community.
Ultimately, though, we're not sure what is harder to come to terms with: Tom Schwartz putting a steak in his butt, or Tom Sandoval's braid/ponytail situation.
I was 37 when I met my husband – and had started to come to terms with the fact that it probably wasn't going to happen for me.
It takes time to come to terms with the loss of youth, to accept what is coming, and to figure out what to do in the meantime.
And that's something I've even had to come to terms with because I am conservative, but am I going to support a guy who is more moderate?
Serbia, an EU membership candidate, and its war-time foe Croatia, an EU member, are still struggling to come to terms with the aftermath of the conflict.
I know the date and time my child is going to die and we haven't even had time as a family to come to terms with this.
Here are some other places around the South where communities have had to come to terms with the physical reminders of segregation: This photo taken Monday, Jan.
A state of emergency is still in place in France, and people there are still struggling to come to terms with the horrendous events of last year.
Asian shares were steady as investors tried to come to terms with a sharp shift in U.S. bond markets and the implications for the world's top economy.
I have had to come to terms with the reality that many people will not embrace the kind of work I am doing—even other professional historians.
A similar failure to come to terms with the past, perhaps, explains, why Confederate flags are on sale at most car-boot sales in the Deep South.
When it comes to shaping Pyongyang's calculus on its nuclear program, it is important to come to terms with some inconvenient truths that have hampered U.S. policy.
It may be worth noting that Mr. Murphy has long had ties to the Republican establishment, which has struggled to come to terms with Mr. Trump's ascendancy.
Since a coup attempt in 2016, many of the liberals who encouraged Turkey to come to terms with the genocide have been silenced or forced into exile.
Naturally, their age difference — and the jokes Charlotte cracks about it during a standup comedy set — is something Lee has to come to terms with as well.
Yeah, I think the whole thing helped me come to terms with it, just in the fact that I was trying to come to terms with it.
But, between the lines, it was easy to discern the pain of a party still struggling to come to terms with Trump's victory over Clinton last November.
It's clear that the Clinton camp has been unable to come to terms with its defeat, just as many of its supporters continue their mantra of #NotMyPresident.
Once again we have to come to terms with being one of the Caribbean peoples on the hurricane highway, who, through slavery, colonialism and hurricanes, invented resilience.
"In 1972 my mother was diagnosed with a terminal illness, and I had to come to terms with the fact that we're all mortal," Ms. Ford wrote.
But after long weeks of work, Daniel was tired on weekends, maybe even more than usual, as he tried to come to terms with his wife's diagnosis.
Bill Baxley's four sons — two of whom are physicians — struggle to understand what happened to their father and to come to terms with their own inherited risk.
Harry Potter fans around the world will have to come to terms with Johnny Depp as Grindelwald in Fantastic Beasts, and Daniel Radcliffe himself is among them.
But clearly the stock market has been trying, fitfully, to come to terms with the steady upward march in the 10-year Treasury, now at 2.85 percent.
The most recent episode showed Mia and Oliver struggling to come to terms with the Green Arrow&aposs death, since he&aposs not expected to survive "Crisis."
And finding someone who makes up for what you lack is better in the long run, even if it's hard to come to terms with at times.
The tiny East African nation is struggling to come to terms with a violent past, characterized by suffered colonial occupation, civil war and decades of intermittent massacres.
Do you think self-marriage receives criticism because it's a form of radical self-love too great for a lot of people to come to terms with?
Former Secretary of State John Kerry warned that BDS could end up being a real problem for Israel if it fails to come to terms with the Palestinians.
I spoke with Mallory about being an advice columnist in the #MeToo era, and how men are finally starting to come to terms with their culpability in harassment.
Once outside again, however, I felt the chill of a nation unable, or unwilling, to come to terms with the demons of its own internal contradictions and strife.
The new U.S. administration should be given the courtesy "to come to terms" with their trade policy, McClay said, adding that Washington needed to show leadership in trade.
In a candid Instagram post last month, mom Kristelle Morgan admitted that she had to come to terms with a difficult reality after giving birth to her daughter.
This is the point in every summer where we all have to come to terms with what is possible and shake off whatever is just dehydration-induced delusion.
At the time of her Tumblr relationship, Jordan was just 18 years old, and struggling to come to terms with her sexuality, as well as her mental illness.
Following a massive interplanetary war in a distant solar system, a veteran of the side that lost the war works to come to terms with what comes next.
One clone among many sent out to the colonies, he's forced to come to terms with his past if he has any hope of escaping from his posting.
The workers were unable to come to terms with Wabtec, the western Pennsylvania-based rail transport company that took over the facility in its merger with GE Transportation.
Since news of the scandal first broke in March, Loughlin and Giannulli's daughter Olivia Jade has faced intense backlash, which she's still struggling to come to terms with.
"Our thoughts are with all of those who died or were injured, and their loved ones as they try to come to terms with what happened," Crowther added.
I think my way of trying to come to terms [with my childhood] is to deal with the memories and come to some sort of understanding through examination.
And I started wondering if they have been able to come to terms with the fact that this man may walk out the door and never come back.
It wasn't until the end of the Cold War that the nation began to come to terms with the enormous legacy costs of cleaning up the weapons laboratories.
And it occurs to me that my grandmother's nightly cataloging of towns back then was her way to come to terms with Lebanon's own history of violent displacements.
Over the last five years, however, he's has started to come to terms with the fact that he actually likes superheroes, medieval battles, and nonsense involving magical lizards.
Six years later, he's still "trying to come to terms with his Korengal tour," Chivers writes, wondering if there would be "accountability" for those that sent them there.
That said, given the particular flavor of the current political turmoil, there's obviously an authentic phenomenon that we have to come to terms with, however tricky to define.
Fissures Splinter a Family's Suburban Facade In this dark, seething debut, 13-year-old Colin struggles to come to terms with his father's suicide and his own sexuality.
Welshman Owens, who came out as gay in 2007 after a long struggle to come to terms with his sexuality, gave "all (his) support" to Thomas on Twitter.
United has scrapped and struggled to come to terms with life at the end of empire, making little impact on the competition, if it has qualified at all.
Doris Stevens is struggling to come to terms with the mysterious death of her son Ronald Wayne White, who she said had been missing since 2016, WFAA reports.
While there has been some willingness by liberals to come to terms with aspects of the conservative critique, the same cannot be said for the social issue right.
Germans, who have prided themselves for generations in an orderly society that requires only gentle policing, are beginning to come to terms with change on a vast scale.
"I think the market's starting to come to terms with these higher rates," Mihir Worah, PIMCO's chief investment officer for asset allocation and real return, told CNBC Wednesday.
As Hurricane Dorian began to lash the Carolinas on Thursday, people in the Bahamas were beginning to come to terms with the with the scale of their loss.
And to see you willing to come to terms with you who you are in a room full of thousands of people you never met, that's really something.
But what McConnell and the rest of the establishment still can't seem to come to terms with is that it is this very "element" successfully elected a president.
But, you might argue, even if social evolutionism is offensive it might nonetheless be right, a harsh truth we need to come to terms with about "human nature".
Reports of terrorists carrying out attacks despite having been under surveillance are hardly new in Europe, as security services struggle to come to terms with each new threat.
The first half of the month finds the Sun in your sign challenging Mars in Scorpio, forcing you to come to terms with some difficulties concerning these themes.
Beyond the practical difficulties of being a national team member without the accouterments of a national team, gymnasts are struggling to come to terms with a harsh spotlight.
In the past ten years, George and Cindy Anthony have struggled to come to terms with the death of their granddaughter and the subsequent murder trial of Casey Anthony.
We will be providing specialist support for our pupils and staff and we ask to be given the time and space to come to terms with our huge loss.
But as a result, I'm still trying to come to terms with what it means to me and I hesitate to describe a reaction to audiences in the stands.
This would be a much more direct challenge to Moscow's authority, forcing it to come to terms with its lack of positive support and real soft power in Eurasia.
Wilkinson also took to Twitter to thank fans for their support and condolences, and she didn't hide the fact that she's struggling to come to terms with the loss.
The main job of their successors was to come to terms with these twin revolutions: Tony Blair converted Labour to Thatcherism and David Cameron converted the Tories to Jenkinsism.
Roanhorse shows him trying to come to terms with the mess he made of the Resistance, and going to extraordinary lengths around the galaxy to make up for it.
In the weeks since Prince's death, people who loved his music struggle to come to terms with reports that opiate drugs may have played a part in his death.
A year and a half later, the survivors try to come to terms with their survival and imprisonment, while the missing heir to the family, Lucas, is still missing.
More of his insights would have been welcome; he has announced himself here as a voice to be listened to as Turkey struggles to come to terms with itself.
Olivia Jade is struggling to come to terms with the backlash she's faced since her parents Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli were charged in the nationwide college admissions scam.
"I really had to come to terms with the fact that maybe it was going to be just Ricki and me forever," Maynard Johnson told PEOPLE in December 2017.
As the state struggles to come to terms with the devastation — while continuing efforts to put out the fires — investigators are working to determine the cause of the blazes.
"All around the world people are trying to come to terms with the horrific events that took place in Orlando this morning," Corden said at the top of telecast.
I was just thinking of when I was in eighth grade, and I was trying to come to terms with myself, but I wasn't also competing with people online.
Realizing how much pain she was in for how many years, and how deeply she suffered, was really something that was hard for me to come to terms with.
While Cotton's gender identity has clearly been difficult for Carlotta to come to terms with, it's not the only thing that has driven a wedge in the pair's relationship.
Brenna told Glamour that she was inspired to share her inner thoughts because she's an actress, and finds it helpful to come to terms with what's in her head.
A recent profusion of personal narratives, best-selling books and social entrepreneurs' projects suggest that, as a culture, we are finally starting to come to terms with our mortality.
When dealing with Putin, President Trump's vaunted deal-making ability will be of little use, as he will be attempting to come to terms with a fundamentally amoral man.
Schwab was the son of Kansas State Representative Scott Schwab, who said in a statement that the family was devastated and trying to come to terms with their loss.
The show gives them the space to come to terms with how oppression and violence remain ingrained in people, haunting them in the decisions that allow their daily survival.
Well, I think self-love and self-awareness are things that I've really had to come to terms with and figure out through a lot of trial and error.
" A former Trump Administration official said, "For a lot of people in that room, it was the first time they had to come to terms with Trump being President.
At the Quebec mosque, its windows still pocked with bullet holes, the Muslim community is still struggling to come to terms with the attack and their fear and grief.
"Witte de With has 'failed' to come to terms with its own internal contradictions, and has yet to reckon with the historical figure it symbolically embodies," the letter read.
"I think those that are arguing for a long extension are doing it because they think Britain needs a long time to come to terms with itself," he said.
" Playing a hot elf wasn't necessarily the catalyst for Amy to come to terms with her gender identity, but she sees the experience as a "piece in the puzzle.
"It was one of those things where we struggled a little bit to come to terms with whether or not we wanted to brand ourselves as keto," Pulida said.
"Well, I think we've only scratched the surface of what it means to come to terms with living with yourself, living with the world, living with others," he says.
Fiction will have to come to terms with its complicity with the status quo, and will hopefully stop trying to tell stories without looking directly at who inspires them.
But it strikes me that before you decide to give away some of your power to outsiders, you first have to come to terms with how powerful you are.
But I now realize that I did the best I could at the time, and I had to come to terms with my new reality at my own pace.
According to his interview, that's when he realized how "untenable the situation was," and felt he needed to come to terms with his identity in a more public way.
The new wave of anti-LGBT measures is forcing many to come to terms with contrasting views: Blacks who disapprove of homosexuality who also strongly reject anti-gay discrimination.
The second clip shows Wesson continuing his dedicated search, while his wife candidly admits how they've struggled to come to terms with how their adult son is currently living.
In any case, Mr. Gardiner surely deserves the benefit of any doubt, and I, for one, will continue to try to come to terms with the interpretation as a whole.
Singh: A political earthquake Two days after the Brexit vote and it is still difficult to come to terms with the magnitude of the political earthquake that has hit Britain.
As Reynolds settles into fatherhood and develops his own bond with his daughter, he says he's learned to come to terms with the complicated relationship he had with his dad.
"Game Over" revolves around Sapana (Taapsee Pannu), a young woman who teeters on the brink of a nervous breakdown as she struggles to come to terms with a traumatic incident.
"Internally, there's a great deal of confusion about what's been done and people are trying to come to terms with what exactly happened," one of these people told BuzzFeed News.
It's an inevitability that some struggle to come to terms with, as they do battle against the mounting clutter and end up spending most of the festive period franatically cleaning.
It's a place that shifts between a beautiful seascape and a dark, nightmarish world, as Kay attempts to come to terms with a series of traumas from throughout her life.
He says that he knows nobody wants him to cover Jake Paul, but that he feels that he needs to do it in order to come to terms with himself.
Romania has only in recent years started to come to terms with its role in the extermination of Jews, admitting for the first time in 2003 that it took part.
I had to come to terms with the fact that I was not an expat like I had been in the U.K. We weren't planning to relocate again anytime soon.
The biggest and most important reveal of the night comes after a newly self-aware Bernie asks to delve into his earliest memories to come to terms with his past.
"This is a very difficult time for the Ruszczyk family, they are trying to come to terms with this tragedy and to understand why it has happened," the family said.
Any reading of the constitutional text — be it originalist or not — needs to come to terms with the historical fact that this doctrine was based on racist and imperialist assumptions.
"All around the world people are trying to come to terms with the horrific events that took place in Orlando this morning," the host said at the top of telecast.
The past few seasons have seen Mary try to come to terms with the death of her late husband Matthew, who was killed in a car crash in season three.
Hi Leah, I'm in my late twenties and feeling stuck with not being able to come to terms with my childhood trauma of growing up with a paranoid schizophrenic mother.
And a recent blog post about a pregnant startup founder shows that the issue remains a hot-button topic that the industry has yet to come to terms with. 4.
"The Germans are very clear about Nazism and where it now belongs, but we've never really tried to come to terms with our dictatorship," said Bru Rovira, a Catalan journalist.
That power gives Earth and its biosphere a long-term resilience we must now fully imagine if we are to come to terms with the climate change we are driving.
Luther himself had a strong musical connection, and I determined to use the 2017 milestone to try to come to terms with this side of him through reading and listening.
Ward's relatives said they are struggling to come to terms with the tragedy, and they're hoping to find out what happened to the beloved day care teacher who loved children.
Now a shadow hangs over the community as people struggle to come to terms with the deaths of three adults and four children in a murder-suicide on Friday morning.
The rebuke provides the latest look at how the Continent's leaders are trying to come to terms with the United States' shifting policies on issues like the Iran nuclear deal.
Rice's continuing defense of the democracy agenda will be much noted among Republicans seeking to come to terms with the implications of President Trump's "America First" approach to the world.
As for his divorce to Jennifer ... Ben says it was one of the hardest things to come to terms with because he had vowed not to repeat his father's mistakes.
Kristen Radtke's memoir, "Imagine Wanting Only This," tells a story of the young writer's growing fascination with ruins and abandoned places, as she attempts to come to terms with death.
In the caption, she wrote: "Hiding behind the images we've created for ourselves, as women, is easy; but it is so important to come to terms with your natural beauty."
Since the birds went viral, Weiler says she's worked to come to terms with their journey through the internet cycle, and recontextualize what the Trash Doves have meant to her.
Speaking in London, where he was attending a NATO meeting, Mr. Trump hinted that he was ready to wait until after the 2160 election to come to terms with China.
"A lot of the pros struggle to come to terms with the changes in distance, particularly the young pros," said Alan Burns, a professional caddie who works for Justin Harding.
Painful as it is, soldiers need to come to terms with their actions, as do the nations that send them to war, and more than treatment, what's required is atonement.
Meanwhile, Barboza — who's still struggling to come to terms with Gretchen's passing — said that the experience has certainly been bittersweet, but he knows her legacy will live on beyond her treats.
At least I think I looked calm because internally I was trying to come to terms with the fact that I was about to catch a serious beating from some teenagers.
Naeff's "suspended now" reveals the schism between past and present as residents, artists, and cultural practitioners attempt to come to terms with their attempts to find a narrative about their city.
With more phone makers axing the jack, it's time to come to terms with the fact that it's soon going to be a wireless, USB-C and Lighting-based headphone world.
" – to Vanity Fair in 2015 • "It's so devastating to come to terms with speaking of someone in past tense when you used to see them as your present and your future.
In the wake of that backlash, tech is now trying to come to terms with the impact of the tools it has introduced and to manage the wealth it has created.
You just have to come to terms with the fact that you're not going to be repping Apple and amassing all of that valuable street cred that comes with the brand.
Hareide revealed that his team struggled to come to terms with the occasion and that they depended on Schmeichel to keep them in the game as Peru turned up the heat.
Wayne has always had a complicated relationship with the various identities he's had to juggle, and this song is a good example of him looking to come to terms with them.
Simone Biles went through an incredibly dark time while struggling to come to terms with the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of disgraced former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar.
His dad, on the other hand, struggles to come to terms with the fact that the idea that he had of who his son really is might not square with reality.
But as Democratic voters and #NeverTrumpers struggle to come to terms with the stunning upset, some are still wondering: Is there anything that could stop Trump from taking the White House?
"I've had to come to terms with the fact that as much as I love them, they might never love me the same way," said Braun of his superstar line-up.
Last year, though, Cyrus seemed to come to terms with the whole experience, celebrating the 10th anniversary of Hannah Montana with a long post that thanked her castmates and the fans.
Former WWE superstar Eva Marie says she is, and always will be, an alcoholic ... and her disease almost cost her everything before she was able to come to terms with it.
A "devastated" Palombo and his family needed time to come to terms with the decision while considering any appeal, his lawyer John Hartley, of Hodge Jones & Allen, said in an email.
I hope as a nation that we are beginning to come to terms with the systemic problem of sexual harassment and assault, but we still have a long way to go.
His happy childhood is followed by difficulties in high school -- extreme bullying and struggling to come to terms with his sexual identity -- which cause serious strife with his friends and family.
But now we have to come to terms with the fact that for the next four years, we're not going to set the agenda; Trump and the Republicans in Congress will.
Walt eventually realizes how much he has hurt Jesse and attempts to come to terms with it, but in the end, nothing is resolved, everyone more damaged than when they began.
Part of the solution, however, is for police leadership and rank-and-file to come to terms with the historically unfair treatment law enforcement has meted out to people of color.
My wife did her best to come to terms with my coming out, but we broke up when I told her I was starting estrogen, and I moved out shortly afterward.
At the end of the record he has to come to terms with his strange, messed up reality, and according to Monika, the song "America" is his process of accepting it.
Democrats worry that Sinclair's hard-right leaning news will simply muddy the public discourse waters further in a nation already struggling to come to terms with a rather nasty disinformation problem.
"We all have scars of one kind or another, visible or not," says Ms. Pine, 40, of Long Island, who has used photography and writing to come to terms with cancer.
The Rockets managed to re-sign their All-Star guard Chris Paul in free agency and remain strong favorites to come to terms with their restricted free-agent center Clint Capela.
"Amy and the Orphans" is a playwright's attempt to understand a perplexing, guilt-making figure from her childhood, and to come to terms with her grandparents' abandonment of a disabled daughter.
Her admirers saw it as tackling "feminism's failure to come to terms with the viewpoints and lives of religious women, except as objects needing reform," her husband wrote in an email.
"It forces a lot of fans to come to terms with the fact that this music from their youth, the people who produced it, are passing from the scene," he said.
But the ambassador's warning, like later admonitions from Winston Churchill and others, made no dent in the British government's unflagging commitment to come to terms with Hitler, no matter the consequences.
As cannabis laws across America continue to soften, states and local communities are beginning to come to terms with the destruction wreaked by the war on drugs, especially on black communities.
In the United States, towns and cities battered by a string of devastating hurricanes are just starting to come to terms with what it could take to bolster their storm protections.
South Korea as well has had their cases slowed dramatically, and it's really about this self-isolation that we in America are just still really struggling to come to terms with.
"My life has been turned upside down as I try to come to terms with the devastating changes thrust upon me both physically and emotionally," Yulia Skripal said, speaking in Russian.
While he enjoyed reading Faulkner's novels, translating Auden and Eliot's poems and meeting Einstein, he was unable to come to terms with what to his mind was a consumerist, soulless society.
In growing up I had to come to terms with the sadness that hangs over my life, and I had to find the gifts in sadness to become a stronger person.
And you have to come to terms with that and figure out how you're going to navigate that and step up to the responsibilities that the world wants you to assume.
Extremely happy-go-lucky types may find it alien or melodramatic, but I think most people will find recognisable stuff here, even if realising that is hard to come to terms with.
IBM announced Friday it is launching its framework for using the technology behind bitcoin, saying it's time for companies to come to terms with how the revolutionary technology will change their businesses.
In the season 1 finale of the Netflix series, Jessica (Alisha Boe) finally opened up about her rape, something that she had been struggling to come to terms with all season long.
The mistakes I made and the people I've hurt that led to this moment will haunt me for the rest of my life and I have to come to terms with that.
War Machine director David Michôd told The Ringer that it was hard to come to terms with his movie skipping a theatrical release, but Bong has ridden the crest of this change.
Imagine being Ollie and having to wait for your doctor/the person you're sponsoring to come to terms with your imminent death and your free will while stuck in a hospital bed.
"We're just going to have to come to terms with it," Trent Lott, the former Republican Senate majority leader under George W. Bush, told lawmakers on a recent visit to Capitol Hill.
He noted that it took years for him to come to terms with the incident and that immediately after it had happened, he thought that he was somehow misinterpreting the whole thing.
And in a year where Hollywood has started to come to terms with a systemic power imbalance that has led to rampant sexual harassment and abuse, their contributions matter more than ever.
In wake of the unexpected words of kindness, shocked Trudeau fans are left struggling to come to terms with the fact that their love affair with the Prime Minister could be over.
Having survived the King's Landing massacre, Jon Snow (Kit Harington), Davos Seaworth (Liam Cunningham), Tyrion Lannister (Peter Dinklage), and Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) will have to come to terms with Dany's destruction.
Chiron grows up poor and black in low-income housing in Miami, and he's also slowly trying to come to terms with his homosexuality, something he only confronts in fits and starts.
While it was a relief to have an answer for the pain, Hough struggled to come to terms with the idea that her body was failing her after years of athletic training.
During the first season, Emily (Shay Mitchell), a young woman struggling to come to terms with her attraction to girls, is assaulted by her boyfriend Ben (Steven Krueger) in the locker room.
Now it was a communist state still in ruins, run by a single political party, the Socialist Unity Party, and struggling to come to terms with its new place in the world.
I really wish the backside didn't look so much like an iPhone — camera bump and all — but I guess it's something I'll need to come to terms with since everyone's copying it.
The number one strategy I use to able to enjoy time away is to come to terms with this fact: I am the same person on vacation as I am at home.
Casey Affleck's taciturn janitor finds himself the reluctant legal guardian of his orphaned nephew (Lucas Hedges) and has to come to terms with his ex-wife (Michelle Williams) and a family tragedy.
But pedophilia can be especially hard to live with for those who haven't committed a crime, and are forced to come to terms with an identity that most people regard as monstrous.
I had to come to terms with the fact that sometimes I do things—by virtue of being a movie actor—that gets scrutinized in a way that makes me incredibly uncomfortable.
The movie begins to unfold when Pope is suddenly taken from his parents one day and forced to come to terms with a world in which his favorite show doesn't actually exist.
After several weeks of failed attempts at creating a new narrative, this is a chance for Germany's conservatives, and the country as a whole, to come to terms with this new reality.
As the siblings learn more about the people of the island, the ducks, their father, and themselves, they start to come to terms with their shared pasts and present-day hang-ups.
It is a chance to come to terms with the existential fragility that is overlooked in most of our waking hours and that must be faced even by the greatest among us.
As tensions escalated between the United States and Iran, young people had to come to terms with the possibility that for the first time, their generation would be on the front lines.
And when two queer members of the congregation fell in love, they asked Folliard to perform their backyard wedding ceremony, which forced the church to come to terms with its unspoken policies.
Jason Miller, a spokesman, said he would let Mr. Trump's "tweets speak for themselves" and added that those raising questions about the hacking were refusing to come to terms with his victory.
If he forms a coalition he will have to compromise with his partners and if he leads the opposition he will have to come to terms with the critics in his own party.
The Dallas Mavericks are expected to come to terms with big man Dwight Powell on a three-year, $33 million contract extension soon after free agency begins Sunday night, according to multiple reports.
Europeans, he said, would be more willing to come to terms with the Chinese — if it means that BMW and Mercedes Benz in Germany can take market share from Ford and General Motors.
Or perhaps, for some, as the days the nation had to come to terms with President Trump's use of the presidency to ask a foreign government to assist in his personal political gain.
It takes him some time to come to terms with what's happening to him, and that time is mostly spent running from reanimated corpses and learning about the secret monster-fighting organization Prodigium.
Young people imagining a fundamental overhaul of America will first need to come to terms with the political power that boomer Democrats will retain for at least the next decade — and probably longer.
So not only is he paralyzed for what he thought he believes in, he now has to come to terms with the fact that he was wrong; he got it all fucking wrong.
It's basically our fate as a species to be constantly erring between opposites, and that can be difficult to come to terms with as we crawl about this floating rock in our skinsuits.
The whole thing made me realize I'm attracted to men and perhaps if we hadn't made a habit of this it would have taken me longer to come to terms with my sexuality.
Casey Affleck's taciturn janitor finds himself the reluctant legal guardian of his orphaned nephew (Lucas Hedges) and has to come to terms with his estranged wife (Michelle Williams) and a long-ago tragedy.
R. Kelly is struggling to come to terms with his weeks-long incarceration and has been "devastated" by conditions in the Chicago jail he's been held in, the R&B star's lawyer says.
" But it took them both some time, he added, to come to terms with being in a relationship: "We had big egos and neither one of us was even out of the closet.
Any potential buyer will have to come to terms with Austria's Kaufmann family, whose vehicle ACM owns a 55 percent stake in Leica, having brought in Blackstone as a co-investor in 2011.
In an honest, encouraging post on Instagram, mother-of-two Alexandra Kilmurray opened up about struggling to come to terms with her postpartum body and how she came to love her body again.
The campaign aims to fight the stigma surrounding abortion, and to get society to come to terms with the fact that about one in three women will have an abortion in their lifetime.
Biesemans describes the screenwriting as the most laborious and frustrating part of the filmmaking process, as he had to come to terms with the fact that he needed to be his own writer.
Though essentially the same in meaning, the opposite construction— we're all ugly—seemed freeing: If everyone was ugly, no one could judge my appearance or my failure to come to terms with it.
"What he did is despicable and I am still trying to come to terms with the scope of violation and trauma I have experienced," the woman told the court, according to the ABC. 
Charles Barkley says LaVar Ball needs to come to terms with the fact he SUCKED at basketball ... and the idea he would beat Sir Chuck in 1-on-1 is straight-up delusional.
"We are still trying to come to terms with what happened," Mr. Labidi said, adding that the attack had deeply shaken Quebec's Muslims and highlighted growing fissures in Quebec society, including intensifying Islamophobia.
Torre later called that non-action on his part his greatest managerial regret, and in the aftermath of that series he failed to come to terms with George Steinbrenner on a new contract.
This country — at least the parts not wholly under the sway of right-wing propaganda — needs to come to terms with substantial evidence that the president is in thrall to a foreign power.
In the movie version, the story opens with Lara Jean struggling to come to terms with the attention her new boyfriend Peter gets from other girls, but hey, every relationship has its difficulties.
As someone who doesn't spend a notable portion of recreational funds on specialized "beauty" treatments, I had to come to terms with how much feeling better about my face was worth to me.
The car wash owner from the South will have to come to terms with the fact that his child has returned home as a proud trans woman named Desiree, played by Laverne Cox.
"During their days-long visit, Lucy tries to understand her past, works to come to terms with her family, and begins to find herself as a writer," per a release from the show.
In Dick Johnson Is Dead, documentarian Kirsten Johnson (Cameraperson) zooms in on her aging father and her relationship with him as they both begin to come to terms with his inevitable eventual passing.
Revisiting trauma, loss, or even just elements of your own story that are hard to come to terms with is hard enough to get down on the page, but actually reading it aloud?
You still might second-guess your decision, especially if you have to come to terms with forfeiting a needed purchase or valued activity, or even delaying retirement, as you watch the funds vanish.
"I see this as a continuation of the market trying to come to terms with slower growth next year," said Alicia Levine, chief market strategist at BNY Mellon Investment Management in New York.
Dionne argues that conservatives need to recapture the reformist spirit that Dwight Eisenhower embodied: They have to come to terms with the modern world in order to steer it in a more congenial direction.
But hospital staff told them repeatedly that they just didn't recognize him because of his facial injuries and because they were struggling to come to terms with a difficult situation, according to the suit.
A Texas father is struggling to come to terms with the death of his 4-year-old son, who died of a rare condition called "dry drowning" nearly a week after a swimming trip.
Amanda Johnson took a major step towards healing her body with her decision to get weight loss surgery, but she's struggling to come to terms with the rude looks she still gets in public.
"While we are confident that this is the right choice for us, it has for sure not been an easy one to come to terms with," they wrote in a post on their blog.
Which, in the end, this coming from a company that has struggled to come to terms with its effect on everything from our democracy to users' mental health, shouldn't be much of a surprise.
Mama encourages the youths she's mentoring to stick to one gender presentation to avoid confusing nontrans people, and she struggles to come to terms with a more modern conception of gender fluidity and pronouns.
Set in 1960s New York City, Rules of Magic will follow three siblings — Franny, Jet, and Vincent Owens — as they struggle to come to terms with the discovery that they are descendants of witches.
"We as a species need to come to terms with this," Dr. William Hurlbut, a senior research scholar in neurobiology at Stanford Medical School, said Tuesday at CNBC's Healthy Returns conference in New York.
As everyone grapples with their new positions, Archer even starts to come to terms with what it means to kill people — something we've seen him do dozens upon dozens of times in previous seasons.
As someone who goes to therapy, it kind of pissed me off that it took sitting in a Lululemon-branded room full of strangers for me to come to terms with my personal values.
As we watch Bernie Sanders's supporters struggling to come to terms with the nomination of Hillary Clinton, it makes sense to ask why leftists are involved in the Democratic Party in the first place.
But worry not, dear Rambo fans, this isn't going to just be a movie about an aging man reckoning with his past mistakes and trying to come to terms with the violence within him.
Despite his best efforts to resist disclosing his status—one he had barely begun to come to terms with—he was told he would be sent home if he refused to explain his discomfort.
With the rise of live-streaming video on Facebook, the company has had to come to terms with multiple cases where users have live-streamed their suicides or suicide attempts live on the platform.
He also fails to come to terms with the extent to which, thanks to 3D printing and the internet of things, the information revolution is spreading from the virtual world to the physical world.
Unable to come to terms with her situation and find closure, Ishrat is, for all practical purposes, an absent parent, and Hamid finds himself playing the role of adult in their two-person household.
The final sprint to 2018 will test the party's leadership and force the GOP to come to terms with whether they are a governing party or one too mired in intraparty squabbles to function.
I think, in the first instance it's very difficult for the Irish government to be honest, to come to terms with different perspectives emanating from the United Kingdom, particularly even within the British government.
I think a lot of us do it, even those of us who haven't experienced anything like the trauma you grew up with and are trying to come to terms with every single day.
That was where the series was my way of kind of trying to come to terms with what was actually going on, trying to find some way to explain this or understand the story.
"All around the world, people are trying to come to terms with the horrific events that took place in Orlando this morning," he said in a speech recorded before the ceremony, Entertainment Weekly reported.
We are a country in the midst of serious political change that will have a profound impact on how we do our foreign policy and people are having to come to terms with that.
There are moments that recall the aged Jake LaMotta in Raging Bull sitting in front of a mirror, alone, trying to come to terms with the life he's derailed through his vices and addictions.
It also gave Denver the financial flexibility to come to terms with the former All-Star guard Isaiah Thomas on a one-year deal at the veteran minimum of $2 million, according to ESPN.
Nonetheless, a sense of unease lingered Sunday, as residents were still struggling to come to terms with the surreal scenes of violence that engulfed their city, leaving three dead and more than 30 injured.
Many men are struggling to come to terms with #MeToo and how they feel complicit in abuses, even if they aren't the perpetrators, by not taking a more active stand for a woman's sovereignty.
When it comes to immigration, there's a political reality Republicans will have to come to terms with: There isn't a proposal that can please an immigration hawk and get 60 votes in the Senate.
After several months of therapy, she managed to come to terms with the ways her guilt and shame held her back and aims to use this storytelling series to help others do the same.
You may wonder why in the year 2017, after so many graphic and scalding national seminars on sexual predation over the last 26 years, we are still trying to come to terms with it.
Editorial It took the Vatican 359 years to come to terms with Galileo and acknowledge, in 1992, that it had wrongly condemned him for heresy when he said the Earth revolved around the sun.
As Alisha and Paula navigate their friendship, they attempt to reckon with what it means to be and to love a sister, how to come to terms with hard truths, and how to heal.
With the oil industry just beginning to come to terms with the implications of the coronavirus, there is an argument for waiting until the next OPEC meeting, scheduled for early March, to make decisions.
As schools and legislators struggled to come to terms with the unthinkable, one teacher in Muskegon, Michigan, thought to make a traditional Native American dreamcatcher to catch Columbine's bad dreams after its collective nightmare.
"We clearly have differences ... We want to come to terms with China, terms that are fair and reciprocal," Ken Isley, administrator of the U.S. Agriculture Department's Foreign Agricultural Service, told conference attendees on Wednesday.
Selga said he's trying to come to terms with the news that his mother, Fernisa Sison, her husband, Michael Quitasol, and his three stepsisters -- Angela Quitasol, Evan Quitasol and Nicole Quitasol -- are likely dead.
"What happened in the early '90s and even before, in the lead-up to the genocide, is something France will have to come to terms with," said Louise Mushikiwabo, the foreign minister of Rwanda.
Overcome with emotion, Ms. Brown thanked Ms. Polanco's transgender family, saying they stood alongside Ms. Polanco and gave her support when her blood relatives had struggled to come to terms with her gender identity.
Just as I started to come to terms with the idea of failing my ancestors who, unlike us, couldn't resort to buying meat from a store to make tourtière, Chamberland pointed to fresh partridge tracks.
"She has so much to come to terms with, and she and Claire have finally rebuilt this relationship, then actually there's gonna be an even bigger wedge between them because of the distance," Skelton notes.
They have yet to come to terms with the changes the evolving social media and news environment bring to politics, and perhaps even more importantly the wider scale of frustration and yearning for new options.
Sure, we were all happy for them, but at the end of the day, it was hard to come to terms with the fact that we'd never be the one to win Jon Snow's heart.
"In the days and weeks to come, we most certainly will lean on each other for comfort and understanding as we attempt to come to terms with this great loss," Moyer said in a statement.
"We have yet to come to terms with the full extent of the damage he's doing to America's role in the world," says Michael Fullilove, who heads the Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney.
When she asks about friends, Fleabag makes a joke about her pet guinea pig (the last season followed the character as she struggled to come to terms with the death of her human friend, Boo).
If virtual reality is going to be something that everyone uses, we first need to come to terms with the fact that not everything deserves to have a VR experience, especially in the technology's infancy.
While family, friends and fans continue to come to terms with the tragic death of 24-year-old Miami Marlins pitcher José Fernéndez, new details have emerged about how he spent his final hours alive.
While the Colombians clambered up the stands to celebrate with their nearest and dearest, Mahut consoled Roger-Vasselin who was crying into his towel as he struggled to come to terms with the near miss.
It's also possible that families with loved ones in the ICU didn't have a chance to come to terms with the patient's death, and were more surprised by the course that events took, Casarett added.
In recasting her tragic death as meaningful to a large, close-knit family—and resurrecting Kitty as a full person rather than a cautionary tale—Mr Genovese seeks to come to terms with her death.
"You have to come to terms with who you are, be proud of who you are, love yourself, and know what it is you need before you can love someone else fully," she told PEOPLE.
Recently she announced, out of the blue, that she needed a break from our friendship because of something that she had been told about me and that she needed time to come to terms with.
It's time to come to terms with the "how do you balance family and work" question and its variants, in the earnest hope that radical honesty could help the effort to bring about radical change.
While Heller thinks Rand really focused his criticisms on design quality, it also seems that he struggled to come to terms with a rapidly changing design world—one that didn't always share his aesthetic values.
Sunday is a spiritual day for you, as healing planet Neptune harmonizes with optimistic Jupiter, encouraging you to come to terms with and let go of whatever deep-seated issues weigh heavy on your mind.
I grew up in Germany and when you are confronted with the terrible things that have happened in the name of your country, you have to deal and learn to come to terms with it.
Mary Ann's surprise visit to San Francisco is predictably extended and she struggles to come to terms with the ex-husband, Brian (Paul Gross, again), and the daughter, Shawna (Ellen Page), whom she left behind.
One of the men who came forward with claims of abuse by Father Timone committed suicide in 2015 after what his widow said was a decades-long struggle to come to terms with the abuse.
The increasing refusal of Muslims to share water or food with Christians suggests an inability to come to terms with a past that defies the religious identifications meant to structure all of Pakistan's social relations.
Each episode in the documentary series focuses on one subject — Linda, Lee, Brian, David and Sally — as they reflect on their family, faith and what it means to come to terms with a devastating diagnosis.
This is what the Putin regime represents: an entire society psychologically damaged and unwilling to come to terms with its own past, leading to a widespread depression and belief that the country has no future.
The form's relationships with truth and drama become muddied at the hands of subjects notorious for fabrication, and filmmakers often have to come to terms with the void created by certain questions going ultimately unaddressed.
"Chhapaak" shows Agarwal's struggle to come to terms with the way she looks, and her decision to lead a campaign to stop the sale of acid, which she eventually takes all the way to court.
Cruz, a smart man, represents a conservatism that's had to come to terms with Trump, and the senator has tried to remain true to the tenets of small government and his own profound religious values.
Yet, as Democrats continue to come to terms with their anger and denial, it is now clear what their response to defeat will be: to fight Republicans "tooth and nail" every step of the way.
Maybe MBJ wants the revenge America deserves on Drago's unholy spawn so badly that he can't even begin to come to terms with the all-encompassing rage he feels when the name "Drago" is uttered.
And they have to come to terms with their own growth too; as new residents of Sunnyside Daycare, they're about to meet new kids and learn to love them, as scary as that can seem.
The book is divided into three parts, the first dominated by the proximity of the beloved, the second by her absence, and the third by a more philosophical attempt to come to terms with solitude.
Tasked with harvesting the energy from a black hole, theirs is a mission with no return — the closer they get, the more they have to come to terms with the idea that they're not coming back.
Instead, it ends with her dodging a police department drug test after she accidentally shoots a civilian dead — an incident we learned about early in the first season — and struggling to come to terms with it.
The mother of a 45-year-old kindergarten teacher from South Carolina who was killed by an alligator while walking her dog on Monday says she's still struggling to come to terms with her daughter's death.
But I can say from long experience of caring for, literally, thousands of dying people over many years that even the strongest-willed can become very vulnerable when struggling to come to terms with their mortality.
"That has been something that I've had to come to terms with," she explained, before noting that her mother, Susan Adams, has remained supportive, as well as her son Shane and "beautiful ex-husband" Shane Fontayne.
Eventually, I had to come to terms with the fact that, after writing for a few months, nothing was ever going to be more meaningful than that EP. It had to do with losing my mother.
Strangely enough, that contradicts the monster's call: to confront fears and emotions honestly, to experience them organically, and to come to terms with them in the way that is best suited for each of us, individually.
And right now, in a lot if ways, millennials like me are still on that journey, trying to come to terms with our African-ness in a country that has been historically hostile to that identity.
In her revealing new memoir Unqualified, the 40-year-old actress details Jack's birth and the "emotionally exhausting" weeks that followed, in which she and now-ex Pratt worked to come to terms with terrifying news.
"We are still trying to come to terms with this tragedy, and we are struggling to understand how and why this could happen," the family said in the statement released to CNN affiliate Sky News Australia.
Asian shares slipped on Wednesday, giving up small gains made the previous day as investors tried to come to terms with a sharp shift in U.S. bond markets and the implications for the world's top economy.
As the reality of Donald Trump's election starts to set in, it's reassuring to know that late night hosts are struggling to come to terms with the news just as much as some of us are.
As the 70s ended, Highway To Hell, Hellbent For Leather, and Overkill were on the stereos of a disenchanted British youth struggling to come to terms with union strikes, Tory rule, and the winter of discontent.
That's why the show and its heirs have almost always focused on the final frontier and humanity's desire to come to terms with "strange new life" — because back on Earth, life is wonderfully perfect and dull.
"I think it's the thing I'm starting to come to terms with: It's not an injury, it's a condition, so I'm not going to wake up one day and it's going to be cured," Wright said.
But it's one thing to see someone dramatize your descent into drugs and crime, and another to come to terms with it yourself—and maybe earn the money to land on your feet in the process.
Nina LaCour won the Michael L. Printz Award for excellence in young adult literature for her novel "We Are Okay," about a lonely college student who struggles to come to terms with a past family tragedy.
In the age of President Trump, the great disrupter of the way things have always worked, the architects and preservers of the old approach are still struggling to come to terms with how it has frayed.
"After our last child was born, I had to come to terms with the realization that I would never have the experience of raising a boy, which was really hard," says Twenge, who has three girls.
Kosovo declared independence from Serbia 20143 years ago, but Serbia has yet to come to terms with its loss — refusing to recognize Kosovo and stirring trouble between the country's ethnic Serbs and the ethnic Albanian majority.
The politics of racial disfranchisement that began during slavery continues into 2019 with the practice of voter suppression; it is a reflection of a society that still has yet to come to terms with its history.
Zach Eisenstein, Washington, D.C. As a young person starting to come to terms with my queer identity, I never benefited from a lesson or curriculum that I could even remotely see myself reflected in before college.
That doesn't compute at all, but while you're trying to come to terms with that strange and wonderful fact, please sit down and go through these other highlights of superhero movie news from the last seven days.
Blaming the public for failing to comprehend the context and complexity of the Holocaust is hardly fair when even those philosophers and writers most connected to it have been unable to come to terms with its meaning.
He hasn't given up on his lifelong aspiration of running his own business, but says he needs to be realistic and is trying to come to terms with having to get a regular office job for now.
In the highly anticipated HBO film The Tale — directed by documentarian Jennifer Fox and based on her own life — Laura Dern plays the adult Jenny as she struggles to come to terms with a childhood sexual assault.
It's a technique that Ramsay's used in the past, specifically in We Need To Talk About Kevin, which told the story of a mother trying to come to terms with her son's involvement in a school shooting.
Most especially, hopefulness was no help to my son, who is now 6 and who has to come to terms with the reality that his dad died from a tumor with no known cause, and no cure.
It is a cop-out to say that Katy Perry ruined the spirit of Warped for me, but it's a cop-out I cling to because the truth is a bit harder to come to terms with.
The family of the baby girl, who reportedly slipped out of her grandfather's hands and fell to her death from a docked cruise ship over the weekend, is struggling to come to terms with the unimaginable tragedy.
It took my entire life up to that point to come to terms with my identity, so I think that allowing people time and space to also come to terms with it is totally fair and okay.
As women have been coming forward with stories of being sexually harassed and assaulted by men in every industry, acquaintances and colleagues of those men have had to come to terms with their role in these events.
Companies will become cautious on deals, with some likely to put M&A on hold as they scramble to come to terms with the political and economic uncertainty sparked by the vote, four M&A lawyers said.
If we're serious about ripping up the patriarchy and actually creating a world where we don't have mediocre wealthy white men running the show, we have to come to terms with our blind spots and our biases.
Now, his daughters from a previous relationship, Kaitlyn, 18, and 15-year-old Alexys Hendrickson, are struggling to come to terms with their stepmother's death and the fact that their father could go to prison for life.
But three things are particularly offensive: being nice to Taiwan (28 occasions of bruised feelings); sympathy with the plight of Tibet (12); and failure to come to terms with the second world war (hence Japan's multiple offences).
Ryanair shares have outperformed many of their peers in recent months as the sector struggled to come to terms with Britain's vote to leave the European Union and a flood of capacity that has driven down prices.
"What MDMA therapy does is it provides a chance for effective psychotherapy, and that allows a patient to come to terms with trauma," said Ben Sessa, a British psychiatrist who advocates for MDMA as a treatment aid.
We also have a Reboot this week, Michael Mann's Heat, in which we try to come to terms with the new information: that Al Pacino claims his character was on cocaine throughout the events of the film.
"It's disturbing," McGillivray says in a text, "that many of Trump's diehard supporters are so stubborn that they can't seem to come to terms with the reality that their president is just as guilty as Roy Moore."    
His buddies in the Republican Party still need help to come to terms with the death of the establishment candidates and their policies, said Mr Scaramucci, who would support Mr Trump if he were the GOP nominee.
As you age, you have to come to terms with reality and "Frances Ha" does a great job of exploring this with dark humor that only makes you feel a little depressed, but in a good way.
They indicate the #MeToo movement has extended beyond workplace harassment to include child sexual abuse survivors, who have long struggled to come to terms with their past, and find the strength to stand up and speak out.
In the meantime, we—the suffering, and the witnesses to suffering—may have to come to terms with how big a role belief plays, and will continue to play, in the labeling and the experience of disease.
She immigrated to the United States as a child, and said she struggled with self-confidence as she tried to come to terms with her identity, to overcome a "brown girl's self-loathing" and to fit in.
I respect Helen Vendler and her continuing efforts to come to terms with those who are writing at the same time she is, by no means an easy task in the postmodern world, if it ever was.
But now a cadre of Republican lawmakers are speaking out and urging party officials to come to terms with why their 23-seat majority unraveled so spectacularly and Democrats gained the most seats they had since 19893.
For years the police in the National Socialist Underground case treated the murders as gang warfare within the Turkish community, interrogating victims' relatives as suspects even as they were struggling to come to terms with their loss.
Like many people struggling with mental health issues, some players are still trying to come to terms with their childhood trauma, referred to by Parham as "invisible tattoos" because of their unseen but significant effect on people.
The pictures reflect the photographer's attempt to grasp "her own background, to come to terms with a world that she loved and loathed, a world awash in beauty and rife with violence and cruelty," Mr. Campbell observed.
Global equity markets could struggle to come to terms with a dramatic slowdown from the world's largest economy next year, one Goldman Sachs strategist told CNBC on Monday, with trade tensions elevating the risk of near-term volatility.
It is also no longer a reflex habit to flush the toilet after urinating, even when using a public toilet -- something that outsiders who have not experienced what we went through find difficult to come to terms with.
In becoming knowingly herpes-positive, not only does one have to come to terms with being a person that society has erroneously categorized as "bad," but one also has to contend with one's ability to pass it on.
In a sneak peek from Wednesday's season premiere, the cast struggles to come to terms with the fate of their former castmember and friend after he was arrested and charged with assault and battery in the second degree.
"He is very upset about the loss of Shamba and I think he is trying to put up a brave face, but he is really battling to come to terms [with] what has happened," Maguire told News 24.
Tonight's episode, titled "A Dark Crate," took us with Naz into his first few days getting acquainted with the messy politics of living on Rikers Island, as his parents try to come to terms with their immediate future.
"One of the things the world needs to come to terms with is that yes, we are one of the most vibrant democracies in the region, but that position is severely threatened," said Dennis Onyango, NASA's communications director.
But he follows that up by reducing the film's climax: But from here Black Panther spirals into a stodgy tale of internecine feuding, in which T'Challa is required to come to terms with the sins of past generations.
Mr. Icahn, whom Mr. Trump has suggested as a possible Treasury Department secretary in a Trump administration, also controls the Tropicana casino, which was the last of the casinos to come to terms with the union on Thursday.
I realized that if I were truly to see myself as equal to my seriously ill clients, and not performing a kind of "charity" in my work, I had to come to terms with the necessity of interdependence.
When it comes to immigration, there's a political reality Republicans will have to come to terms with: As Flake explained candidly, there isn't a proposal that can please an immigration hawk and get 60 votes in the Senate.
Plot: An elderly Margaret Thatcher talks to the imagined presence of her recently deceased husband as she struggles to come to terms with his death while scenes from her past life, from girlhood to British prime minister, intervene.
In a statement to the outlet, Gao's management team Jetsta said first responders attempted to save his life for three hours but were sadly unsuccessful and that they are struggling to come to terms with the devastating news.
And though I still flinch at his phrase "women like me," which is both demeaning and presumptuous, he was right that it would be difficult to come to terms with the fact that my old life was over.
As Manchester and the rest of Britain were trying to come to terms with the country's deadliest terrorist attack in more than a decade, the two men are being hailed on social media for their selflessness and courage.
As Donald Trump all but solidified his Republican presidential nomination in Indiana Tuesday, the #NeverTrump movement was forced to come to terms with a harsh reality: that Democrat Hillary Clinton may be the only way to stop Trump.
In historical terms, Trump is simply not important enough to threaten American democracy — he's just an angry, spoiled man refusing to come to terms with the fact that he's, for once in his life, not getting what he wants.
"We had to come to terms with the fact that our research efforts were simply not making the progress necessary to translate into truly transformational therapies for patients," Mikael Dolsten, the company's head of research, said in a statement.
As the students try to come to terms with what is really happening (some are in denial), the group of teenagers find themselves confined to their school with what seems to be their fellow peers … or so they thought.
Though France has long struggled to come to terms with its wartime role under the collaborationist Vichy regime, presidents including Jacques Chirac and Francois Hollande recognised that the French state shared responsibility for deporting Jews to Nazi death camps.
More than two months have passed since November 8, and in that time many people have had to come to terms with their emotions and try to reconcile what the next four years will look like under President Trump.
She tries to come to terms with language by volunteering as an ESL teacher for adult students, but she can't teach any of her students to say English words; they just end up saying Spanish cognates with English endings.
Everyone on the show has been through painful changes, and Sansa has to come to terms with the fact that her little brother is not only different from the child he was, but not really the human he was.
To put Beethoven in context, you need to come to terms with why a supersensitive artist like him would consider actually moving to Paris to join the movement that advocated liberty, equality and fraternity, rather than to conservative Vienna.
And it is a tragedy for those 16.3 million people who are currently unemployed in the euro area that the new generations of European leaders have yet to come to terms with fundamental problems posed by a single currency.
The mother of the Utah toddler who suffocated under a bean bag last week as a child care employee sat unaware on top of him is demanding answers as she struggles to come to terms with the toddler's death.
Last month, the channel released a brief teaser that revealed that the show would return in April, and hinted that the crew of the Rosinante will have to come to terms with their various past mistakes as war looms.
The director — who worked with the late actor on legendary movies such as Aliens, True Lies and Titanic — said in a statement to Vanity Fair that he was struggling to come to terms with news of Paxton's unexpected death.
A "devastated" Palombo and his family needed time to come to terms with the decision while considering any appeal, his lawyer John Hartley, of Hodge Jones & Allen, said in an email, while Bermingham's legal team had no immediate comment.
I'm now an adult whose life was completely transformed by DACA, trying to come to terms with the fact that the Obama-era law protecting my status in this city where I've planted deep roots is suddenly in danger.
When the tees debuted last fall, they sold out immediately after influencers and street style stars showed them off on Instagram and incited jealousy in everyone who was trying to come to terms with the current state of affairs.
In addition, senior officials also warned of the possibility of widespread defaults occurring in June if the commonwealth is unable to come to terms with its creditors on a restructuring plan for its nearly $70 billion in outstanding debt.
In addition, Kate (Chrissy Metz) helped Madison (Caitlin Thompson) come to terms with — or at least, start to come to terms with — with her eating disorder, something Kate suffered from, too, in the time leading up to Jack's death.
"While we are confident that this is the right choice for us, it has for sure not been an easy one to come to terms with," the parents of four wrote in a blog post on their official site.
Captain Ronaldo Aldo is transmitted to a base called the Citadel at the far end of the galaxy, and has to come to terms with an isolated, lonely existence, with little hope of being transmitted to a better post.
While Moore might have lost regardless, the relative narrowness of his defeat -- 22,000 votes or so -- suggests that an attempt to come to terms with the accusations in some sort of professional campaign manner might have made a difference.
Those saying nothing should be done need to come to terms with the vast amounts of evidence that show real peril, both for the United States and the entire world, if action is not taken, the sooner the better.
Try to come to terms with a player who has been so, so misfortunate in his career; watch him find the audacity to fist pump when the world has seen him at his basketball worst on so many occasions.
I was a plus-sized diva so even when I was big had high self-esteem, but I did have to come to terms with the fact that having excess skin post-weight loss is part of the journey.
I had to come to terms with the fact that I was going to need medical intervention to have a child, and that wanting to try IVF before adoption isn't necessarily selfish: It's about giving my body a chance.
One year after the Allied obliteration of the Third Reich, the historian Friedrich Meinecke published what would be one of the first efforts on the part of a German scholar and intellectual to come to terms with National Socialism.
I feel a lot better and more positive about it, and even though I am dying I don't want to use euthanasia: I want to use the next couple of months to come to terms with everything and everybody.
And most of our favorite inmates (and parolees) use this season to come to terms with who they want to be, behind bars or no; a few find there is no such thing as escaping the effects of prison.
It's understandable that even a slick huckster like Jerry, played with an anxious smile by James Seol, has been led to the brink of a nervous breakdown in trying to come to terms with the nature of K-pop.
Things get rockier when he attempts to come to terms with the meaning of Trump's triumph and to reflect on what might lie ahead for him and the handful of like-minded commentators who have ended up politically homeless.
MY NAME IS LUCY BARTON Laura Linney is Lucy, struggling to come to terms with her difficult past when her mother visits her in the hospital, in this solo show that comes to Broadway following a premiere in London.
In the last 18 months, I have spent a great deal of time reflecting on this incident and the difficulties I caused Ms. Borel, and I have had to come to terms with my own deep regret and embarrassment.
It's still a difficult thing to come to terms with, but I can't help but feel that the revelation I had with my Mega Drive and Game Genie all those years ago has made it that little bit easier.
Should the show go to series, the family drama will center on two vastly different siblings, played by Schum and Findlay, who discover they are related and have to come to terms with the "mysteries of their separate childhoods," per THR.
"He expresses readiness to come to terms with the Russian President instead of making conflicts with us, the way today's administration is doing," Alexey Pushkov, head of the foreign relations committee of Russian parliament said, according to the Tass news agency.
In one episode, Eugene Levy's character, Johnny Rose, who had owned his own business before losing his wealth, has to come to terms with applying for unemployment and humble himself further by asking for a ride to the unemployment office.
Then, by the end of the season with Liberty's pregnancy, she and J.T., who eventually reconcile as friends, are forced to come to terms with the news that their biological son is moving to America with his new adoptive family.
Airlines and their passengers and regulators may take a while to come to terms with this, so it is likely that pilots will sit in cockpits long after they are needed for anything other than the reassurance of the paying public.
The revelation that Facebook had brought in a consulting firm to look into Soros came last month from a lengthy New York Times report that detailed Facebook's attempts to come to terms with its influence during the 2016 US Presidential election.
Captain America (Chris Evans), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), James Rhodes (Don Cheadle), and Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo) are watching the worldwide death toll still actively mounting, as they try to come to terms with the aftermath of their battle with Thanos.
The careers of at least two former prime ministers were fatally wounded by big drops in the value of the pound as Britain struggled to come to terms with the decline of its once world-leading economy after World War Two.
She was an adult during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, when France began making an effort to come to terms with the Nazi Occupation and when her father was repeatedly brought to court for his Holocaust denials and historical revisionism.
"What made me most happy about coming was getting messages from kids saying that my article made it easier for them to come to terms with themselves or for them to talk to their parents about being gay," he says.
In the first episode of "The Conners," the family is shown struggling to come to terms with the death of Roseanne from what is first thought to be a heart attack but is later revealed to be an opioid overdose.
The lyrics go ... "Yesterday morning was crazy/I had to come to terms with the fact that it's not a maybe/That shit is in stone, sealed and signed/She not my lover like Billy Jean but the kid is mine."
"Going under the knife and having no idea what my body will look like after terrifies me, but if I want unbreakable self confidence, I have to come to terms with whatever I will look like after this," she added.
"She's still kind of confused that the babies are twins, but one is born in one year and the other in another," Rios' sister, Aurelia, tells PEOPLE, adding that Rios is still trying to come to terms with having twins.
I'd like those people who say that it's giving in to go through three years of bullying, to learn to accept their body, and go to a psychologist an hour a week, every week to come to terms with it.
Naoto is an assigned-female-at-birth detective who presents as male in their daily life, his struggle to come to terms with his gender identity a rare instance of empathy in a series that's needlessly cruel to LGBT people.
"As I try to come to terms with the devastating changes thrust upon me both physically and emotionally, I take one day at a time and want to help care for my Dad till his full recovery," Yulia Skripal told Reuters.
While the market has tried to come to terms with somewhat higher rates, $70 oil, a firmer U.S. dollar and a Fed determined to tighten policy steadily, any of these issues could cross a tripwire of concern before too long.
And it was only at that point where you couldn't pretend it wasn't happening anymore that I really had to come to terms with it and I ran out of the guys office and he tried to grab me three times.
The Thread RE: TRUMP Robert Draper traveled with the Trump campaign in the weeks before the Indiana primary as both America and Trump himself began to come to terms with the fact that he would most likely secure the G.O.P. nomination.
It's a short but dense novel of interconnected stories that shows the tragic lives of regular folks who don't understand their loneliness and despair, and how they struggle to come to terms with the drafts in their lives, at a bar.
Wilson died more than a decade ago, but you could believe he'd resurrected the film for just this cultural moment, a time when it's abundantly clear that America has yet to come to terms with its messy, often shameful racial inheritance.
While the deadline for franchise-tagged players to come to terms with NFL teams is still several days away, the chances of Jadeveon Clowney reaching an agreement with the Houston Texas are all but gone, according to the Houston Chronicle.
So I've come to The Ugly Conference in pursuit of a new strategy for moving through the world: one that might allow me to come to terms with my physicality—and perhaps even, and this seems unlikely—to like it.
Following a young black man as he grows from boy to adolescent to adult, Jenkins's camera and script dig deep into what it means to grow up amid inner-city poverty while also trying to come to terms with your sexuality.
I'm sure that if you're not in a big city, and that you feel scared to come to terms with who you really are, what happened in Orlando can scare you to become the person you were meant to be.
"It's hard for people who've had a lot of power to come to terms with the fact that there's actually very little you can do when you're not a candidate," said Jennifer Palmieri, a former top aide to Mrs. Clinton.
Friend arrested As the family tries to come to terms with the loss of Broussard, a source familiar with the case tells CNN that investigators are working to learn more about the particulars of Broussard's relationship with her friend Magen Fieramusca.
Encouraging white Americans to come to terms with both the country's history and their own complicity in perpetuating present-day injustice is precisely the goal of Robin DiAngelo's book White Fragility, which was released to much discussion and acclaim last year.
Like other countries, Canada has had to come to terms with a world in which the US is an unreliable ally on the environment, a skeptic of the United Nations and NATO, an aggrieved trading partner and a faithless friend.
Mashable has an exclusive clip from the series, which sees Chelo and his friends trying to come to terms with his new bulletproof status and figure out whether his new ability is a gift from God, or something else entirely.
But those Germans who do believe in the best of American values are struggling to come to terms with a world in which the United States, whose support has undergirded German foreign policy assumptions for 70 years, can't be trusted.
Their convention is happening at a point when both voters and pundits are beginning to realize who, exactly, they're stuck with as major party nominees — and trying to come to terms with a choice between two candidates whose approval ratings are underwater.
In Thompson's new memoir, A Little Thing Called Life, excerpted exclusively in this week's PEOPLE, the star opens up about the confusion and desperation she felt as she struggled to come to terms with Jenner's desire to transition from male to female.
In it, the Crain siblings must battle demons real and internal in order to come to terms with their grief (and a second installment of the series, based on the Henry James novella Turn of the Screw, is heading to Netflix next year).
And while I'm currently in a relationship with someone I really love, it's tough to come to terms with the idea that I won't be able to continue this routine of seeking validation through the various relationships that I knew and loved.
There's a strong contemporary American resonance in putting a black family at the center of the story, and in focusing on the tension between a white cop and a young black man who's trying to come to terms with his family legacy.
But as Sanders attempts to hitch himself to this inspirational group of teenage activists, he has a serious problem he needs to come to terms with: his track record voting in favor of some of the worst laws pushed by the gun lobby.
Throughout that time, it has been dogged by demons left from its violent birth and a culture of impunity left by its failure to come to terms with the fact that some of Kosovo's most powerful figures have been accused of major crimes.
Instead, it comes from a populace that has a political investment in reaping the spoils of a French win from "one France" but still fails to come to terms with an emerging spirit of self-determination brought about by a history of disenfranchisement.
She grew up in fairly provincial town where everyone spoke the same language and worshipped the same gods, and now she has to come to terms with the fact that the new Innsmouth, if it survives, will have to be much more cosmopolitan.
Although it was hard for her to come to terms with such a devastating loss — as she previously told PEOPLE she "could barely get through day" — Sandberg has encouraged women to not feel guilty about moving on after the death of a partner.
It wasn't until I started working with a therapist who specializes in eating disorders that I was able to come to terms with the fact that my own disordered eating was the product of a lack of self-esteem, rather than the cause.
In the weeks following, Cornell's family  — who have struggled to come to terms with the rocker's death — said that they didn't believe him to be suicidal and think that the prescription drugs found in his system may have impacted his mental state.
" Then, in 2012, the singer told Instinct magazine, "If you ask me am I gay, I say yeah... it's only through my music that I've found the strength to come to terms with my sexuality beyond the context of just my lyrics.
Questions about the name are well worn by now - his father is a boxing-mad taxi driver - and reporters were warned by a team official not to land any more as a distraught Ali struggled to come to terms with what had happened.
While trying to come to terms with the loss of her sister, Tanya suffered a mental breakdown in 2004, checking herself into a hospital for psychiatric care, spending 10 days as an inpatient and two months as an outpatient, undergoing intensive therapy.
But when I met her the first time and realized that she was a very genuine person and had no reason to lie about that, I had to come to terms with the fact that he was very capable and did do that.
If May has to depend on a band of hardline Tory MPs (think House Republican "Freedom Caucus" on this side of the Atlantic), she might find it impossible to make the compromises needed to come to terms with the other EU nations.
But I've been thinking about the idea that there's relief to be found in falling apart; that maybe I needed to come to terms with what was happening because I've been putting a brave-ish face on it for a long time.
Way earlier in the film, we learned there were only enough lifeboats to hold half of the people on board—the crew has to come to terms with the fact that their desire for aesthetics will likely have a thousand person death count.
The sooner we stop pretending cancel culture is a binding, comprehensive movement rather than an individual decision, the easier it might be to come to terms with the fact that gravity has a delayed (and sometimes nullified) effect on people like Logan Paul.
I'm sympathetic to the fact that this puts reporters in a tough spot, but at some point everyone objective needs to come to terms with the fact that the president and the people in his orbit are, nearly to a person, bad actors.
BRUSSELS — The European Union authorities proposed visa-free travel in the bloc for Turkish citizens on Wednesday, a significant step for the group of 28 nations as it struggles to come to terms with the migrant crisis and hew to its humanitarian values.
The Republican Party needs to come to terms with the fact that it is better to run as one herd to achieve more of their common goals than be trampled by Democrats which in turn tramples the fiscal future of the country.
At the end of 2015, I realized I was transgender, and going into 2016, I started to come to terms with everything to do with that, started my transition from male to female, and that leads me to where I am today.
Julie (Kathryn Newton) is effervescent, in love with her boyfriend Austin (Graham Phillips) and best friend to her single mom, Lisa (Leslie Mann), who's just starting to come to terms with the fact that when Julie goes to college, she will be alone.
Since then we've seen collages, Photoshop jobs, video art, Deepdream remixes, a tombstone, a hijacked bus, and a nude portrait of the Republican presidential nominee with a micropenis, all attempting to come to terms with the bigot who captivated so many Americans.
But while some members of Silicon Valley have chosen to dismiss the company as a fringe MAGA crew, the 35-year-old Schimpf embodies the more difficult questions and conflicting impulses that the tech industry is now trying to come to terms with.
"Race and the Enlightenment: A Reader," Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze One of my favorite reads from those fundamental years of art school, I first discovered this book when trying to come to terms with western Enlightenment culture's broad impact on ideation in artistic practice.
Fauci, a key member of the Trump administration's coronavirus task force, told Keilar that Americans will need to come to terms with the fact that life will begin to look much different as the country tries to slow the spread of the disease.
The next week, then — the Jayhawks open the N.C.A.A. tournament with a game against Northeastern on Thursday — is an opportunity for the Jayhawks to set aside the disappointment of falling from their perch, and to come to terms with more modest prospects.
We need to come to terms with the fact that we won't understand what the "other side" feels or believes, and maybe that's O.K. But that doesn't relieve us, as a freewheeling democratic public, of the responsibility to hash out thorny policy issues.
That's something that the obsessive reporter in me is going to have to come to terms with, as does any traveler to some degree: Try to do everything and you'll wind up missing the most magical parts of being far from home.
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Petra Kvitova took a while to come to terms with her heartbreaking defeat in last year's Australian Open final but the Czech says she can now look back on the experience as one of the top achievements of her career.
But I have to come to terms with the fact that all of the above very well may not happen: because I'm growing up in the early 21st century, a time when the world and all its life systems are falling apart.
Much the way that Offred struggled in "The Handmaid's Tale" to come to terms with the expectations of her radical feminist mother, in "The Testaments" Nicole and Agnes find their search for self-definition tied up in questions about their real mother's identity.
Couple and 3 daughters were aboard the boat Selga and Shinagawa are trying to come to terms with the news that their mother, Fernisa Sison, their stepfather, Michael Quitasol, and their three stepsisters -- Angela Quitasol, Evan Quitasol and Nicole Quitasol -- are likely dead.
The fact that Peele chooses to tell a story in which all the white people are villainous forced us to come to terms with the pervasive racism in seemingly liberal communities in the North, instead of focusing on the racism in the South.
Wheeler has been in government for a long time — taking a short hiatus to work as a coal lobbyist — and EPA employees now have to come to terms with their new boss, as well as his stated willingness to continue Pruitt's agenda.
It is part of what critics call a long-overdue attempt by the church to come to terms with a scandal that, because of the association with the former pope's brother, became one of the most troublesome to roil the Vatican in the last decade.
As we attempt to come to terms with John Cena and Nikki Bella's broken engagement, we're looking back at 17 of the most dramatic stories of called-off weddings, as shared by Reddit users who attended (or participated in) ceremonies that were abruptly halted. 1.
"It has taken me a long time to come to terms with the fact that actually there's a lot of pain associated with those moments in life where you didn't feel safe and you felt vulnerable in a way that felt dangerous," he said.
Tucker Carlson was one of the Iraq War's biggest cheerleaders, and only came out against the war a year after it started, as even conservatives had to come to terms with the fact that it was an obscene waste of money and human life.
With a supportive husband urging he to fight the Establishment for equal pay, the fiercely private king was also struggling to come to terms with her own sexuality, while Riggs gambled his legacy and reputation in a bid to relieve the glories of his past.
And Mangold has said in interviews that another touchstone was Darren Aronofsky and Robert Siegel's 2008 drama The Wrestler, starring Mickey Rourke as an aging bear of a man trying to come to terms with his past as his broken-down body betrays him.
Catcher In The Rye is interpreted as catharsis as he struggles to come to terms with the trauma he faced fighting in the war while attempting to publish the emblematic piece of fiction that would become a cornerstone of American literature for so many.
With a supportive husband urging her to fight the Establishment for equal pay, the fiercely private King was also struggling to come to terms with her own sexuality, while Riggs gambled his legacy and reputation in a bid to relive the glories of his past.
David and Alexis have to come to terms with their ever-shrinking clothing budget ("I have no money and an empty purse from two seasons ago!" she whines) and get jobs and learn firsthand what it's like to not have everything handed to them.
The "Roots" remake is, of course, but one occasion that gets people talking about how America has yet to "come to terms with" race, with an implication that a certain shoe has yet to drop, that some kind of judgment day is to come.
"The fact that Akie Abe has gone is a tremendous step forward for Japan to come to terms with its past," Shihoko Goto, senior Northeast Asia associate for the Asia program at Woodrow Wilson Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank, said in a telephone interview.
Dan Kildee, a Democratic congressman from Michigan, on Wednesday who said there are some real concerns that the party needs to learn to govern in the majority and both sides -- moderates and progressives -- have to come to terms with what it means to actually legislate.
The film is an adaptation of McCraney's play, In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue, which tells the three-part story of Chiron, a gay black man who grows up in Florida and attempts to come to terms with his masculine, racial, and sexual identity.
I think what you are hearing from a Kardashians here and Kanye before her, it&aposs a struggle to come to terms with being fair to the good things the president is doing while disagreeing in the areas where you think he&aposs wrong.
That was, however, almost two years ago and prosecutors have neither brought charges against Bookstaber nor have they seemingly made any headway into Barger's killing – a fact that has left her family both puzzled and still struggling to come to terms with her death.
While that element of the fascinating show — about an immersive theme park populated with human-like robots and frequented by rich vice and thrill-seekers — was difficult for some viewers to come to terms with, it's something the show's cast had to deal with too.
Saturday the 21st [of January] we are calling for mass demonstrations, peaceful demonstrations, in Washington, DC. We're gonna have to come to terms with the fact that we're going to lose a lot of fights, especially in the first part of the Trump years.
Mathis, a local peanut farmer, stood outside of the rally venue Monday night to bash Moore's history of anti-LGBTQ rhetoric in the name of his daughter Patti Sue, who he says killed herself at 23 while struggling to come to terms with her sexuality.
Demographers don't expect the reversal of the one-child policy to lead to a baby boom, meaning China will have to come to terms with the strains of an aging society: higher health and welfare costs, a shrinking workforce, and even lower fertility rates.
Clete Willems, a partner at Akin Gump who left the White House earlier this year, said the ruling exemplified some of the administration's most significant concerns about the W.T.O., — its failure to come to terms with the role of the state in China's economy.
After the fire, when everyone was going through a period of talking about it, trying to come to terms with it—a period that has not yet ended—Vanderree got the idea of recording as many survivors of the fire as wanted to participate.
The comments from the two top Republicans in the U.S. Congress, House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, came as many of the party's lawmakers struggle to come to terms with the growing possibility that Trump will be their nominee.
Hayne was included in the Fijian squad for the final World Sevens Series tournament in London in May and was used sparingly by Ryan as he struggled to come to terms with the intricacies of the shorter version of rugby and the fitness required.
Books of The Times J. K. Rowling's magical seven-volume Harry Potter series is the ultimate bildungsroman, tracing that young wizard's coming of age, as he not only battles evil but also struggles to come to terms with the responsibilities, losses and burdens of adulthood.
But, for many, the loss of a family member will take months, years or even decades to come to terms with, and all companies could and should be more cognisant of the long-term impact of grief, and the need for long-term workplace flexibility. 
The iconic Toronto collective has just released their first record in seven years, the decidedly extreme thinking face but sincerely titled Hug of Thunder, which tackles issues about how the world exists now and what they are doing to come to terms with it.
"The 1965 act really changed the look and feel of the country in a fundamental way, but it took 50 years for the country to come to terms with that," said Muzaffar Chishti, director of the New York office of the Migration Policy Institute.
As a result, the resonance of this package filled with all the information he needs in order to come to terms with his mother's departure is clouded by the fact that it has made its way there without any real action from Myshkin himself.
But for these or other worthy ideas to get a fair hearing, Congress will have to step in, and the president — and the electorate — will need to come to terms with the essential role of regulations in protecting the nation's food and drug supply.
But for these or other worthy ideas to get a fair hearing, Congress will have to step in, and the president — and the electorate — will need to come to terms with the essential role of regulations in protecting the nation's food and drug supply.
Based on the true story of Wang's own family, which the director first shared during a now-famous episode of This American Life, The Farewell follows Billi's journey to come to terms with her family's decision to conceal a terminal cancer diagnosis from her grandmother.
Much like residents in other communities across the northern Bahamas, Mr. Symonette and his neighbors in Treasure Cay, on Great Abaco Island, were only just starting on Thursday to come to terms with the scale of their loss and to make sense of it all.
The move from Cameraperson to Johnson's second feature, then, feels natural; it's called Dick Johnson Is Dead, and in it, Johnson zooms in on her aging father and her relationship with him as they both begin to come to terms with his inevitable eventual passing.
Related: 'Fixer Upper' coming to an end "While we are confident that this is the right choice for us, it has for sure not been an easy one to come to terms with," the pair wrote in a blog post on their official site.
The Vienna Philharmonic, which has worked in recent years to come to terms with its Nazi past, is displaying a 1941 letter, right, from its chairman, Wilhelm Jerger, asking Nazi officials to intervene on behalf of five Jewish musicians who had played in the orchestra.
It wasn't hard to stop buying fast fashion after that because I was already so much more of a vintage shopper, but it was sobering to come to terms with the way that Western consumption habits contribute to suffering in the rest of the world.
Rarely at home in their surroundings, they struggle to come to terms with who they are, wary of the possibility that there's another life out there someplace, some other reality they might have known, that would have fit them better and made them whole.
"Frankie" tells the story of a woman and her loved ones trying to come to terms with her impending death, explored over the course of a day as they clash, comfort each other, and question their own lives and relationships on their Portuguese vacation.
I am trying — as a man who reflects and apologizes and will almost certainly continue to do so — to come to terms with this: celebrating an album that is his best in nearly a decade, and also considering the pain that made it possible.
Planned Parenthood rejects Trump proposal to stop abortion services But the White House was not backing sweeping changes to the GOP bill's tax credits provision, which is crucial to the bill -- and conservatives opposed to the plan are beginning to come to terms with that idea.
When: Sunday, November 27, 2–5pm Where: 356 Mission (356 S. Mission Road, Boyle Heights, Los Angeles) Many in the art world have been grappling with ways to come to terms with the results of the presidential election and respond in an effective and meaningful way.
As the nation on Monday processed the news that the outdoor concert venue in Las Vegas had become the scene of the worst mass shooting in modern US history, victims and their loved ones were also left to come to terms with the life-altering events.
Both of them, as children, were thrust into the public eye as a result of their parents' split and their mother's subsequent relationships, and that experience obviously affected them — particularly Carrie, who took years to come to terms with being bipolar and living in her own spotlight.
For some surviving Ainu, whose exact numbers are unknown, the project underscores how Japan has failed to come to terms with its history - despite more than a decade of deliberation on how Tokyo could meet its commitments to an indigenous group it officially recognised in 203.
The trailer shows the aftermath of the Avengers: Infinity War, as we see the heroes that Thanos didn't vaporize — Iron Man, Captain America, Black Widow, and Thor, among others — begin to come to terms with what happened when half of all life disappeared from the planet.
The topic is a particularly thorny for Facebook, whose CEO Mark Zuckerberg took much of 2017 to come to terms with his company's influential role in the spread of misinformation, the mental and emotional well-being of its user base, and the functioning of Western democracies.
The rhetoric fueling his win has been used against my own brother, who has been bullied because he's mixed-race, and it has instilled fear in my little sister, who had to come to terms with the fact that an accused rapist is her new president.
The green lobby will have to come to terms with the reality that the election showed the failure of blanket calls to end all coal mining and natural gas exploration, without having convinced voters that low-cost alternatives are available and that jobs will be protected.
The tech industry is only just beginning to come to terms with its long history of ingrained sexism and discrimination, and some people might see sexualized robots at a tech fair as an example of the bro culture that has, in part, contributed to these problems.
"With a supportive husband urging her to fight the establishment for equal pay, the fiercely private King was also struggling to come to terms with her own sexuality, while Riggs gambled his legacy and reputation in a bid to relive the glories of his past," it continued.
When Outlander returns for Season 3 this September, we'll have to come to terms with seeing Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie (Sam Heughan) living separate lives — at least for a while — and a new featurette from Starz gives us a glimpse at what those lives look like.
Ray says he wrote the unnervingly upbeat "There Was a Time When I Needed It," from the perspective of a version of himself from "years ago," an addict sitting in bed trying to come to terms with the idea of getting clean and the pain that'll cause.
But unless Mr Bush makes a miraculous recovery or Mr Rubio graduates to become the establishment candidate, they may have to come to terms with having either a yellow-haired populist or a Mephistophelian demagogue (whose views are the lite-version of the populist's) as their candidate.
It was also perhaps a vain attempt to control the uncontrollable by letting Mr. Trump know that the campaign was not only about him and to make clear he had some responsibility to come to terms with down-ballot candidates on explosive issues like immigration and trade.
"While the family are still trying to come to terms with what happened," Annie Kendall, one of the donation page's organizers, writes, "they are so incredibly grateful for the outpouring of support from their family, friends and the wider community — many of you they don't even know."
Hayne was included in the Fijian squad for the final World Sevens Series tournament in London in May but was used sparingly by coach Ben Ryan as he struggled to come to terms with the intricacies of the shorter version of rugby and the fitness required.
Clinton may be much less destructive to the American people than Trump, but I would rather have the chance to vote for someone I really respect and admire than have to come to terms with someone who I know to be only the lesser of two evils.
"The Return" is, at once, a suspenseful detective story about a writer investigating his father's fate at the hands of a brutal dictatorship, and a son's efforts to come to terms with his father's ghost, who has haunted more than half his life by his absence.
Meanwhile, Jean's powers are growing beyond her control, which forces Charles to come to terms with a mistake he made years ago: Rather than let her deal with the trauma of her past, he built mental barriers in Jean's mind, which the energy is now eroding.
This means that you need to come to terms with what some psychologists call the shadow self, the part of you that consists of all of the desires and urges (both sexual and nonsexual) that scare you because you think you're not supposed to have them.
District Judge William Pauley on Tuesday turned down the request and gave Cohen a tongue-lashing for refusing to come to terms with the gravity of the tax fraud, campaign finance and false statement charges Cohen pleaded guilty to about a year and a half ago.
"I think the first step to understand and handle what is going on is to come to terms with the fact that the next three to six months of our lives are going to be changed and altered forever," Kedrowski wrote in a newsletter, addressing the pandemic.
As they struggle to come to terms with a motor neuron disorder that confined him to a wheelchair for the rest of his life, he develops his initial theories about the visibility of black holes — though there is not much time to get into scientific specifics.
Republican leaders in the House and Senate, in Pope's view, are struggling to come to terms with a hard truth: that much of the Republican electorate is not really interested in the conservative project as expressed by Paul Ryan or Mitch McConnell or the Freedom Caucus.
On the one hand, "My Family: Not the Sitcom" represents a son's attempt to come to terms with the legacy of an adored and adoring mother who died in 2014, leaving questions surrounding her extramarital, um, activities, specifically a long-running affair with a golf enthusiast.
For some surviving Ainu, whose exact numbers are unknown, the project underscores how Japan has failed to come to terms with its history - despite more than a decade of deliberation on how Tokyo could meet its commitments to an indigenous group it officially recognized in 203.
And while I am completely sober in my knowledge that it was the evil of white folks that kept my ancestors in bondage for centuries, I found myself struggling to come to terms with those who worked with white traders to move black bodies into chattel slavery.
"As Joey has had to learn to come to terms with what is happening to her body and what the future holds, it's been important to her to share some things that she wants me and our girls to remember after she's gone," Rory exclusively told PEOPLE this month.
Industry has had ten years to think about how it could give consumers the information they want to make informed decisions and ten years to come to terms with the mounting evidence that excessive sugar consumption can lead to adverse health consequences including heart disease, obesity, diabetes, and hypertension.
"As Joey has had to learn to come to terms with what is happening to her body and what the future holds, it's been important to her to share some things that she wants me and our girls to remember after she's gone," Rory exclusively told PEOPLE in January.
" In April of last year at a general audience in Rome, the Pope said, "I wonder if so-called gender theory may not also be an expression of frustration and resignation that aims to erase sexual differentiation because it no longer knows how to come to terms with it.
There's a lot of keen analytical hindsight on display in Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg's written testimony to Congress ahead of his appearance at hearings on Wednesday, but nothing that indicates Facebook is ready to come to terms with the problems rotting the core of the social network.
"As Joey has had to learn to come to terms with what is happening to her body and what the future holds, it's been important to her to share some things that she wants me and our girls to remember after she's gone," Rory told PEOPLE in January.
Columbus, who directed Harry Potter films and a plethora of classics, is producing the film, which alludes to the life of a young Jesus Christ, "is just a great story about a young boy of age 7 trying to come to terms with who he is," he said.
The diary is a candid and poignant examination of the sacrifices and struggles of a young actor and his family trying to come to terms with being at the mercy of a brilliant director who often went to extreme lengths to capture precisely what he wanted on film.
After Caitlyn publicly came out as transgender in 2015, Thompson opened up about their former marriage in her August 2016 memoir, A Little Thing Called Life — and the confusion and desperation she felt as she struggled to come to terms with Caitlyn's desire to transition from male to female.
What is convincing, beyond his consistently fine rendering of the details of time and place, is a new understanding and sympathy for his central characters, as father and son struggle to come to terms with who they are and what they have made of themselves and of each other.
"My heart is breaking as to why Pittsburgh is in the spotlight, that old friends are checking in as 'safe,' watching my former community struggle to come to terms with this horrific massacre and am simply devastated to see what is happening in my former home," she wrote.
"I think there will be some effort with certain elements of the conservative media, with the talk radio folks, that there will be some effort to at least try to come to terms with that, and to try to some extent reduce that influence," says GOP consultant Patrick Ruffini.
Undoubtedly, there would have been a time in the past when the boys' mothers would have found it more difficult to come to terms with their sons's choices either for personal reasons, or because they were worried that society would punish these men for breeching the boundaries of masculinity.
BARCELONA (Reuters) - Barcelona first struggled to come to terms with their shock 4-0 defeat to Paris St Germain in the Champions League last 16 first leg but have sparkled in their last two games and are daring to believe they can defy history by reaching the quarter-finals.
ROME — Italy mourned those killed in the collapse of a bridge in the northern city of Genoa with a state funeral on Saturday as the country struggled to come to terms with a tragedy that government officials, families of victims and some experts say could have been prevented.
For the last fifteen years, the songwriter and multi-instrumentalist has struggled to come to terms with changing times, feeling lost and restless in a world of fast food entrées, dial-up internet—finding an eventual outpost in an old Chi-Chi's at the end of the world.
As an art lover with no other qualifications but my own eye for what I like or don't, I felt it would be presumptuous of me to even try to come to terms with Mr. Chihuly's art in all its gloriously wild and inventive flights of color and form.
In July, one of Manhattan&aposs top real-estate brokers, Lisa K. Lippman, told Business Insider that a lot of sellers in Manhattan have to come to terms with the fact that their properties are no longer valued at the same prices they were a few years ago.
And unless Republicans in the Senate can find the moral courage and the sense of duty to come to terms with what they have seen and heard, I'm left wondering whether the president could smash someone with a helmet in the Oval Office and get away with that, too.
Every word in The Atlantic magazine article is thick with the tension of Tizon trying — but never quite succeeding — to come to terms with the atrocities his family committed against a woman he was so reliant upon and close to that he called her "Lola," Tagalog for grandmother.
"If hearing that the CEO of Apple is gay can help someone struggling to come to terms with who he or she is, or bring comfort to anyone who feels alone, or inspire people to insist on their equality, then it's worth the trade-off with my own privacy," he said.
So if hearing that the CEO of Apple is gay can help someone struggling to come to terms with who he or she is, or bring comfort to anyone who feels alone, or inspire people to insist on their equality, then it's worth the trade-off with my own privacy.
Although Amazon will likely accelerate gentrification in Long Island City, professor and senior research scholar at the NYU Marron Institute of Urban Management, Alain Bertaud, says the move will force New York City officials to come to terms with its poor infrastructure and be motivated to reform the transit system.
And the show validates that loneliness, to a point; it suggests the affected adulthood of Naota and others is juvenile, but it that there's no specific road map to adulthood and you pretty much have to come to terms with it on your own by getting out of your own head.
"Their Royal Highnesses have arranged the event as a way to acknowledge and honor the fact that a number of young children have had to come to terms with the loss of someone very close to them at a young age," a statement from the royals' office at Kensington Palace said.
Washington was still trying to come to terms with one of the most bizarre days in recent campaign history on which President Barack Obama slammed Trump as unfit for the presidency and the GOP standard-bearer effectively declared war on his own party by refusing to endorse Ryan and Arizona Sen.
As the world learned more about the man charged with the crime, Dylann Roof, and his racist manifesto, the nation, and particularly the South, tried to come to terms with the virulent racism that appeared to have inspired the attacks and the symbols associated with Roof and his toxic beliefs.
For example, when Parks and Recreation ended in 2015, millions of fans were left desperately trying to come to terms with the fact that Amy Poehler and Adam Scott were not actually involved in a passionate and wonderfully equal partnership, raising triplets, and helping each other with their respective political careers.
But in the aftermath of President Donald Trump's recent statements threatening North Korea with "fire and fury like the world has never seen," and his string of World Wrestling Federation-style taunts, we are all starting to come to terms with the implications of America being led by its own Kim.
There is no specific amount of time you should take between relationships, but you do need to come to terms with why your relationship ended and resolve any feelings (both positive and negative) you have about your ex, Susan Winter, a New York City-based relationship expert, previously told Insider.
Mr. Bains's raw, guitar-driven music challenges listeners to "come to terms with the wages of sin" that he's grappled with since he discovered, as a child growing up in Birmingham, that his family attended the same Methodist church as Bull Connor, the city's brutally segregationist commissioner of public safety.
Looking back at why dating Mariah stans was once important, it's because my fandom began as a manifestation of self, a vital escape from the precarious conditions of my real world at the time: My parents were divorcing just as I was beginning to come to terms with being gay.
Ireland took a long time to come to terms with these problems, but they have been more or less settled through an open economy, membership in the European Union and the Belfast Agreement of 1998 that ended the Troubles and, in the process, redefined Irish identity as flexible and plural.
During my tenure as self-proclaimed Colorado's marijuana czar, one of the more discouraging dynamics I dealt with was the public health community's inability to come to terms with this and focus on what really needed to be focused on: bringing viable solutions to the table to prevent youth usage.
But by winning the White House under the banner of economic nationalism, and carrying a series of Democratic-leaning Rust Belt states, Mr. Trump has left his adopted party struggling to come to terms with the reality of who are now voting for Republicans — and what they expect from their government.
Struggling to come to terms with the fact that her partner of three years was a rapist, Suzy explains that working with "monsters" helped her to realize that her ex-boyfriend was just one of many men who were just "normal guys" before they made the decision to rape someone.

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