What A Feeling
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Irene Cara - Flashdance ... What A Feeling (from 'Flashdance'), 1983Writers: Irene Cara, Giorgio Moroder, Keith ForseyProducer: Giorgio MoroderVocals: Irene CaraLyrics:First when there's nothing But a slow glowing dream That your fear seems to hide Deep inside your mind All alone, I have cried Silent tears full of pride In a world made of steel Made of stone Well, I hear the music Close my eyes, feel the rhythm Wrap around, take a hold of my heart What a feeling Being's believing I can have it all Now I'm dancing for my life Take your passion And make it happen Pictures come alive You can dance right through your life Now I hear the music Close my eyes, I am rhythm In a flash, it takes hold of my heart What a feeling, being's believing I can have it all Now I'm dancing for my life Take your passion And make it happen Pictures come alive Now I'm dancing through my life What a feeling What a feeling (I am music now) Being's believing (I am rhythm now) Pictures come alive You can dance right through your life What a feeling (I can really have it all) Being's believing (Pictures come alive when I call) I can have it all (I can really have it all) Have it all (pictures come alive when I call) (Call, call, call, call, what a feeling) I can have it all (being's believing) Being's believing (take your passion)www.giorgiomoroder.comwww.facebook.com/GiorgioMoroderOfficial www.twitter.com/giorgiomoroder
Anxiety is a feeling of fear, dread, and uneasiness. It might cause you to sweat, feel restless and tense, and have a rapid heartbeat. It can be a normal reaction to stress. For example, you might feel anxious when faced with a difficult problem at work, before taking a test, or before making an important decision. It can help you to cope. The anxiety may give you a boost of energy or help you focus. But for people with anxiety disorders, the fear is not temporary and can be overwhelming.
The victim has a subjective feeling of having been irreparably damaged and having undergone an irreversible personality change. He or she has a sense of foreshortened future without expectation of a career, marriage, children, or normal lifespan (Istanbul Protocol, 1999, p. 47).
The song is about someone who misses a girl they once had. \"Through the wire\" means going through hell but still somehow making it. They're sad because the girl has moved on ie \"You've got stars they're in your eyes, and I've got something missing tonight\". The girl is happy but they are still caught up on her. They reminisce in what once was (\"but I can't hold you too close now\" and \"what a feeling to be a king beside you, I wish I could be there now\")
For me it feels like a song about a person who is so deeply in love with another person but for some reason they are not together right now. He knows that it is the best feeling when he is with her and just remembers how it feels. It is also not nice that they can't be together right now and hence he is going through the wire.
It's about a guy who is in a complicated relationship with a girl and inspite off all his efforts he cannot make her \"His\" and thus the song says that \"What a feeling to be a king beside you somehow I wish I could be there now.\"
Could be wrong but feels as if it's about someone (celebrity), that he or she can't have \" threw the wire\" could mean watching someone you like threw the tv. \"Threw the wire threw the wire I'm watching her dance\". \"Everybody needs someone around but I can't hold you to close now threw the wire\" his implying he can't have her threw the wire because she's no where near him probably don't know he exists either. \"What a feeling to be right beside you now holding you in my arms when the air ran out and we both started running wild the sky fell down what a feeling to be a kind beside you somehow I wish I could be there now\" implying what a feeling it'll be to be beside her holding her in yours arms but his only imagining it as he says later in the verse somehow I wish I could be there now. \"Through the wire through the wire I'm watching you like this (threw the tv) imagining your mine (watching her threw the tv imagining she was his) it's to late am I too late tell me now am I running out of time (could mean is it to late has she got a boyfriend Or something else) hope you enjoyed my theory he could be obsessed with a celebrity of some sort who knows I would just like to think of the song about a celebrity you want but can't have
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When a person continually has a sense of impending doom, they might have a medical condition known as impending doom anxiety. Symptoms of this condition include constantly feeling like something awful is going to happen or that the world is coming to an end.
Sometimes a person experiences feelings of impending doom when they have a heart attack. Additional symptoms of a heart attack include looking sickly and pale, sweating profusely, difficulty breathing, vomiting, and feeling nauseous. The symptoms of a heart attack can look different in different people, and the stereotypical signs of a heart attack are usually more applicable to men. As a result, heart attacks in women are often more overlooked. The common symptoms particularly of women experiencing a heart attack include trouble breathing, vomiting, and nausea.
People dealing with fear and anxiety often experience strong feelings of dread and doom. These feelings can be especially intense when they occur for seemingly no reason. As these feelings seem to stem from no logical reason or threat, some people respond to them with fear, which makes the worry worse. The fear of impending doom is often described in some of the following terms:
The intense feeling of impending doom may come before, during, or after other anxiety symptoms or sensations, or it may occur on its own. The feeling can occur with feelings of anxiety, fear, nervousness, elevated stress, a panic attack, or an anxiety attack. Feelings of impending doom can also happen out of nowhere, for no obvious reason or threat.
The intensity of the feeling of impending doom can range from slight to moderate or severe. It can also come in waves, feeling incredibly intense in one moment and becoming more mild the next. The feeling can change from moment to moment or from day to day.
The reaction can be particularly strong when the feeling comes during a quiet, undistracted moment; for example, when a person is trying to sleep, when they are awakened by the feeling, or when they wake up in the morning.
Although nutmeg is a common spice found in most households, it also has hallucinogenic properties. Medical literature over the last century has documented that less than one tablespoon can produce symptoms similar to those of an anticholinergic toxic episode and is known as acute nutmeg intoxication. Typical symptoms of an overdose of nutmeg include palpitations, hallucinations, and feelings of impending doom.
Irukandji is a type of jellyfish commonly found in tropical Australia, the Caribbean, and the Indo-Pacific region. Stings from this jellyfish are a leading occupational safety and health issue for marine industries in these areas. A sting from the Irukandji jellyfish starts off relatively mild. However, the accompanying symptoms that often occur include debilitating illness, excruciating pain, nausea, sweating, vomiting, hypertension, a feeling of impending doom, and sometimes acute heart failure or pulmonary edema.
If the sense of impending doom stems from an anxiety condition, stress management techniques, medication, psychotherapy, or a combination thereof may help. A therapist can help you learn how to cope with these feelings when they come on.
Adding precision to our understanding of community can help funders and evaluators identify, understand, and strengthen the communities they work with. There has been a great deal of research in the social sciences about what a human community is (see for example, Chavis and Wandersman, 1990; Nesbit, 1953; Putnam, 2000). Here, we blend that research with our experience as evaluators and implementers of community change initiatives.
First and foremost, community is not a place, a building, or an organization; nor is it an exchange of information over the Internet. Community is both a feeling and a set of relationships among people. People form and maintain communities to meet common needs.
Although not in every case, feeling empty could also signify some mental health conditions, such as depression, bipolar disorder, or post-traumatic stress disorder. Only a mental health professional can diagnose your condition accurately.
If you acknowledge that your feelings are linked to a loss you experienced, consider allowing yourself time and space to grieve openly. Grief looks and feels different to everyone, and there are no right or wrong ways to do it.
Case: Thirteen year-old boy twists his leg at school. He presents to the emergency department with a laterally displaced patella. Prior to reduction of the dislocated patella, you wonder what you can give the child for pain management. 781b155fdc