Hard To Believe
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\"Every single win is important. Every single title is very special,\" Garcia said. \"It's always very hard to describe it. It's not happening so often, and you have to really like enjoy it. I'm really grateful for this great week of tennis, and to win another title, it's very special.\"
This raises a question: If Lib is so contemptuous of the Irish people, why did she agree to take the job in the first place \"[S]he'd be quite well paid for her trouble, and the novelty of the thing held some interest,\" Donoghue explains. But it's hard to believe that money would be a motivating factor for a character who trained with Florence Nightingale, the nurse not heretofore known for her pursuit of wealth.
It is hard to believe anyone would be so stupid, until we remember that that is exactly how many of us go about the business of Christian living. We are so busy pressing on to the next item on the agenda that we choose not to pause for fuel. Sadly, Christian leaders may be among the worst offenders. Faced with constant and urgent demands, they find it easy to neglect their calling to the ministry of the Word and prayer because they are so busy. Indeed, they are tempted to invest all of their activity with transcendental significance, so that although their relative prayerlessness quietly gnaws away at the back of their awareness, the noise and pain can be swamped by the sheer importance of all the things they are busily doing.
I find it hard to believeI find it hard to believeThat I'm embarassed at meFor being upsetOver acting so contemptuously (I find it hard to believe)Acting so contemptuously (I find it hard to believe)Acting so contemptuously (that I'm embarassed at me)Acting so contemptuously (that I'm embarassed at me)(For being upset over acting so contemptuously)Acting so contemptuously (acting so contemptuously)Acting so contemptuously (on me)I find it hard to believe
Yet while impostor syndrome can be a deeply frustrating condition to live with, I wonder if it might also be a blessing in disguise. Much of my research involves engaging with social justice issues. Writing for an academic audience, I know that my work is read predominantly by other scholars who share my views. Am I simply preaching to the choir, creating and sustaining endless echo chambers that validate my academic credentials but achieve very little else I firmly believe that academics are obliged to serve their communities as critic and conscience. But if we refuse to venture outside the academy to spend time in these communities, how can we fulfil this vital role 59ce067264