Group chanting and prayer is very powerful. It can bring important changes.
You have to let your music be true and then people who want to adopt it as that, they take it on and they love it, and it changes their world.
Then I saw it, and it just grabbed me. That moment, that breath just before destiny, between innocence and power. He'll pull the sword free. You know it. And in that moment, the world changes. Camelot's born, Arthur's fate is sealed. He'll unite a people, be betrayed by a woman and a friend, and sire the man who'll kill him. In this moment, he's a boy. In the next he'll be a king.
Well I live in Vienna with my wife and son, and I teach in Hamburg, there will be no changes in that respect.
The joy of reading with our children doesn't stop as they, and we, get older; it simply changes.
Though prayer doesn't change God's mind or God's purposes, prayer does change something- It changes us.
The only thing that does not change is that at any and every time it appears that there have been great changes.
Eminem's rhyme patterns are super dope and he can squeeze a million words in a couple bars. Crazy creative. His voice changes alot though.
Often those who are denied rights are least empowered to bring about the changes they seek.
Every physical system registers information, and just by evolving in time, by doing its thing, it changes that information, transforms that information, or, if you like, processes that information.
When someone changes your world, that's when you know he's important to you.
It is culturally constructed, but not unnecessary. A crisis is a period in a person's life that lasts at least a year during which there is an unusual level of emotional instability, negativity, and crucially, major changes. This is important because right now, when you diagnose mental health problems, where you are in life doesn't really come into it. Psychologists are saying that it should.
I just think it's ridiculous to be dogmatic and be caught in the past. You have to be open, aware, nimble and flexible about changes in the world.
When the audience comes in, it changes the temperature of what you've written.
Changes happen when we go against everything we're used to doing.
Something fundamental changes when people begin to ask questions together. The questions create more of a learning conversation than the normal stale debate about problems.
. . Critically intervene in a way that challenges and changes.
There are two types of pain: pain that hurts you and pain that changes you.
I want to remind people of the great and profound joy that can be found in stories, and that stories can connect us to each other, and that reading together changes everybody involved.
The ways in which a book, once read, stays (and changes) in the reader's mind are unpredictable.