“My heart aches for less divisiveness, less polarization Less mindless partisanship, which at times sounds almost hateful to the ear of Americans. How we conduct ourselves and how we treat you, Judge Roberts, can be a great start toward reconciliation in our country.” HeartCountrySoundJudgingMy HeartEarsTreatsOur CountryAcheReconciliationHatefulMindlessPartisanshipPolarizationHeart AcheDivisivenessMy Heart Aches Author:Tom Coburn
“I treat the act of making a record very much like working in a laboratory, experimenting with sounds and ideas. Whoever chooses to latch onto it, great; whoever doesn't, that's fine, too. The reaction always pales in comparison to the weight of the act of production.” IdeasSoundRecordsFineTreatsWeightProductionsReactionsComparisonPaleLaboratoryLatches Author:M. Ward
“A lot of my approach to the instrument, especially as I've gotten older, is to treat the piano in ways that are not very pianistic - to consider the sounds I'm after first, and to deal with technical considerations later.” WayFirstsSoundDealsTaughtApproachTreatsInstrumentsPianoConsideration Author:Michael Hersch
“What I like to do is treat words as a craftsman does his wood or stone or what-have-you, to hew, carve, mold, coil, polish, and plane them into patterns, sequences, sculptures, fugues of sound expressing some lyrical impulse, some spiritual doubt or conviction, some dimly realized truth I must try to reach and realize.” TryingDoeSpiritualSoundRealizingDoubtStonesTreatsPatternsConvictionWoodsImpulsePlanesSculptureSequencePolishMoldLyricalCraftsmanFugue Author:Dylan Thomas
“I'm a Christian. Years ago, I went broke, so I decided to run every part of my life according to the Bible. It sounds hokey, but it works. You run your marriage that way, and it works. It will work with business, too, and finances. Treat people like you want to be treated.” PeopleWayWantYearsRunningChristianSoundLike YouYears AgoDecidedTreatsTreatedFinanceBrokeWorking It Author:Dave Ramsey
“I don't like to treat words and sounds like objects. You have to penetrate deeply into their meaning.” SoundObjectsTreatsPenetrate Author:Eyvind Kang
“There are people we treat wrong and later we're prepared to treat other people right. Perhaps this sounds mercenary, but I feel grateful for these trial relationships, and I would like to think it all evens out - surely, unknowingly, I have served as practice for other people.” PeopleThinkingFeelsSoundPracticeTreatsGratefulPreparedTrialsMercenary Author:Curtis Sittenfeld
“I'll listen to you, but you need to treat me with a little respect. Because it doesn't sound like I'm a pawn. Sounds like I'm more of a queen." A vein in his temple began to throb, and she grew bolder, the sense of power emanating from the mark on her chest filing her with the mettle she'd lost after the break-in two years ago. Lowering her voice to a tense whisper, she nipped his earlobe. "Checkmate.” NeedsYearsLittlesTwoLostSoundVoiceBreakGrewYears AgoTreatsMarkQueensTemplesTwo YearsChestsVeinsTensePawnsFilingTwo Years AgoMettleCheckmate Author:Larissa Ione
“I've often been flabbergasted by modern pharmaceutical ads on television. The list of side effects for some maladies often sound worse than the condition they're supposed to treat. Once I even heard "heart failure" listed as a side effect, and I wondered how that happened. Heart failure sounds like a pretty major event to me, and if you're willing to risk heart failure in order to avoid the mild discomfort of some other condition, then may the gods shield you from harm, since you're obviously seeking it out.” IfsHeartMayOrderSoundSidesRiskHappenedHeardModernConditionsEffectsEventsTelevisionWillingMajorsTreatsSeekingHarmListsAdsDiscomfortShieldsSide EffectsMaladyPharmaceuticalHeart Failure Book:The Iron Druid Chronicles 6-Book Bundle: Hounded, Hexed, Hammered, Tricked, Trapped, Hunted Source: The Iron Druid Chronicles 6-Book Bundle: Hounded, Hexed, Hammered, Tricked, Trapped, Hunted