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She and experiences
She ascribed her delight with both experiences to the effect they seemed to have of temporarily removing from her the controls which she felt so compulsively necessary to maintain even when it might seem appropriate to relax these controls.
She returned to Haworth in January 1844 and used the time spent in Brussels as the inspiration for some experiences in The Professor and Villette.
She may grow up learning all about the scientific facts of colors, but has no way of experiences colors other than black or white.
She reflected on her employment experiences to a group of children in 2003, saying, " I worked as a teacher and librarian and I learned how important reading is in school and in life.
" She has undertaken a signature personal element of traveling around the country and talking to women at hospital and community events featuring the experiences of women who live, or had lived, with the condition.
She found it " striking " that many women who had no lesbian experiences indicated they were interested in sex with women, particularly because the question was not asked.
She later expanded her work with the organization after arriving in Washington, and wrote about her experiences in her 1982 book To Love a Child.
She noted that although most people " hold their belief in reincarnation quite lightly " and were unclear on the details of their ideas, personal experiences such as past-life memories and near-death experiences had influenced most believers, although only a few had direct experience of these phenomena.
She suggests attending to the intersections of race, gender, and U. S. citizenship in order to both understand the restraints of such a historical tendency and make visible Chinese female immigration experiences, including the Page Act of 1875.
She was anchored at the yard, and the plebes lived on board the ship to immediately introduce them to shipboard life and experiences.
She was influenced in using native plant species from: her many successful Reef Point experiences ; studying the contemporary books from the U. S. and abroad advocating the advantages of native palettes ; and from visiting the influential British garden authors William Robinson at Gravetye Manor in Sussex, and Gertrude Jekyll at Munstead Hall in Surrey, both in England.
She set many other records, wrote best-selling books about her flying experiences and was instrumental in the formation of The Ninety-Nines, an organization for female pilots.
She wrote magazine articles, newspaper columns, essays and published two books based upon her experiences as a flyer during her lifetime:
She later overcame this and wrote a memoir describing her experiences.
She was raised a Protestant, but lost her faith due to battlefront experiences during her time with the US Army as an entertainer after hearing preachers from both sides invoking God as their support.
She comments that Alzate simply dismisses women's subjective experiences in favour of rigorous scientific proof, and is typical of male sexologists withholding the validity of experience from women.
She later experiences her first kiss with a vampire named Justin, whom she is reluctantly forced to stake ( her first vampire kill ) when he tries to turn her.
She told Laestadius about her spiritual experiences on her journey to a truly living Christianity, and after the meeting Laestadius felt he had come to understand the secret of living faith.
She had lost her brother in action, while her husband suffered effects of combat experiences, and she believed that the onslaught of the war indirectly caused the death of her child with Aldington: she believed it was her shock at hearing the news about the RMS Lusitania that directly caused her miscarriage.
She initially wrote about her African experiences.
She argues that traditional understandings of globalization over-emphasize the power of global capital flows, the uniformity of globalization experiences across all populations, and technical and abstract economic processes, and therefore depict the political economy of globalization inappropriately.
She wrote a memoir of her experiences there entitled Winfield: Living in the Shadow of the Woolworths.
She published her Japanese experiences in the form of a diary, called Journal from Japan: a daily record of life as seen by a scientist, in 1910.

She and some
She had to move in some direction -- any direction that would take her away from this evil place.
She had been picked up by the Russians, questioned in connection with some pamphlets, sentenced to life imprisonment for espionage.
She gave me the names of some people who would surely help pay for the flowers and might even march up to the monument with me.
She tried to find some way to draw him out, to help him.
She experienced none of the suspense of some poor stranger selling encyclopedias.
She was forty-nine at this time, a lanky woman of breeding with an austere, narrow face which had the distinction of a steeple or some architecture that had been designed long ago for a stubborn sort of prayer.
She walked back to the house and entered, feeling herself returning, sensing some kind of opportunity in the empty building.
She made him sad some days, and he was never sure why ; ;
She hesitated, she hopped, she rolled and rocked, skipped and jumped, but in some two weeks she started to pace, From that time to this she has shown steady improvement and now looks like one of the classiest things on the grounds.
She patronized Greenwich Village artists for awhile, then put some money into a Broadway show which was successful ( terrible, but successful ).
She had been moving in cafe society as Lady Diana Harrington, a name that made some of the gossip columns.
She seemed so anxious to go on the stage that some of her friends in the cocktail circuit set up a practical joke.
She teamed up with another beauty, whose name has been lost to history, and commenced with some fiddling that would have made Nero envious.
She told police about the prospective tenant she had heard quarreling with her father some weeks before the murders, but she said she thought he was from out of town because she heard him mention something about talking to his partner.
She discussed in her letters to Winslow some of the questions that came to her as she studied alone.
She might have been talking to some of her friends about her husband if they've been having any trouble ''.
She had caught him off guard, no preparation, nothing certain but that ahead lay some kind of disaster.
She put the violin away and took out some linen, needles and yarn to while away the long, idle days in Budapest.
She said, `` Well, those are the really interesting things, but if you don't like any of those I can turn over some of my extra typing jobs to you, if you think you can type well enough ''.
She looked as if she were accusing me of some fraud.
She had some amusing scandal about the Farneses in the old days.
She felt as if some dark, totally unfamiliar shape would clutch at her arm ; ;
She was wearing some sort of gray blazer.
She lived alone in the older part of the city, in one of those renovated houses whose brick facade some early settler had constructed.
She seemed to work to grow close to her son in the few days he spent at home, talking to him about some of the more pleasant moments of his childhood and then trying to talk to him about those things in which he alone was interested.

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