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55 Sentences With "all in the mind"

How to use all in the mind in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "all in the mind" and check conjugation/comparative form for "all in the mind". Mastering all the usages of "all in the mind" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's All In The Mind VCs are humans like anyone else.
There is a lesson to be learned from this, and that is that porn is all in the mind.
"It isn't trickery, wishful thinking or all in the mind," Ms. Marchant writes, when explaining the biology of the placebo effect.
His crime was believing that astrology is all in the mind and doesn't reveal a causal relationship between the stars and events on Earth.
Following the release of Spiritualized's debut album, Lazer Guided Melodies, and Verve's debut single, "All In The Mind," in 20083, the two bands toured the UK together.
The sneakers are meant as a symbolic bridge between these two warring groups, demonstrating that this perceived differentiation is all in the mind, two halves of the same whole.
In the first part, you trace the intellectual history of these attitudes toward endurance, from the notion that the body is just a machine to the "it's all in the mind" saying we hear a lot today.
' He went on to say that although none of the events or characters from his previous novel had survived in All in the Mind, many of the themes have. 'The limits of the human mind. Depression. Pressure. Breakdown. Family. Fracturing relationships. Forgiveness.' Campbell has admitted that All in the Mind is autobiographical, '. . .
"All in the Mind" is a song by the English rock band the Verve. It was released as the band's first single in the United Kingdom on 9 March 1992. "All in the Mind" and its B-sides "One Way to Go" and "A Man Called Sun" were recorded at Blue Bell Hill Studios in Kent, England in November 1991 with producer Paul Schroeder.
Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez (pictured in 2014) fused house music with disco and funk on All in the Mind. All in the Mind fuses contemporary house music with 1970s-style funk and disco funk, with many of the tracks containing modern tribal house beats and bass lines alongside prominent disco horns and funk elements. The album is largely instrumental, and also incorporates instrumental hip hop according writer Colin Larkin. Flick echoed these comments, writing that the album developed upon numerous house and hip hop ideas.
He has appeared on various science programmes (e.g. Equinox, ScienceNow, All in the Mind) and documentaries (e.g. Heart of the Matter, Everyman) as well as numerous discussion programmes (e.g. Esther; The Time, The Place; Kilroy; This Morning).
All in the Mind received positive reviews from critics. Gareth Grundy of Select wrote that All in the Mind would "induce a rapid rethink" in those assuming the Bucketheads project dissolved after the success of "The Bomb!" He felt the album's "edge" was provided by Gonzalez mixing his capable hip hop skills with disco music, and highlighted "Time and Space" as the album's best track. Leigh Anne Fitzpatrick of Spin felt that the album offered a "refreshing break" from the high-speed sound of techno and rave music.
"One Way to Go" was featured as a B-side to "All in the Mind", The Verve's first ever single release, in 1992. The song remained in the band's playlist for only a short period, being dropped before the Gravity Grave Tour of October 1992.
Upon release, All in the Mind reached number 74 on the UK Albums Chart, and received positive reviews from music critics. In 2000, it was named the 31st best dance album of all time in the final edition of the book All Time Top 1000 Albums.
Feeling disgruntled at the council's interference, she then rendered Alfred Tennyson's drawing-room ballad "Come into the Garden, Maud" with leers and nudges to illustrate each innuendo. The committee were left stunned at the performance,Pope, p. 141 but Lloyd argued afterwards that the rudeness was "all in the mind".
Garfinkel has been involved in number of radio and TV shows. She was a guest on 'All in the Mind' and 'The Shock'. She also gave a talk at TEDxBrighton in 2017. In 2018 she was featured in a short film by the BBC, where she talked about her research on interoception and autism.
Maya is a 2010 novel by Alastair Campbell, the former communications director to Tony Blair. It is Campbell's second novel and third book, after The Blair Years and All in the Mind. Maya drew generally favorable reviews and some claimed that it was, in part based on his relationship with Blair, however Campbell has denied this.
All in the Mind is a half-hour magazine radio programme about psychology and psychiatry, broadcast in weekly episodes on Radio 4 and produced by the BBC's Science Unit. It is currently presented by Claudia Hammond. Former presenters have included Dr Raj Persaud, Dr Kwame McKenzie, Dr Tanya Byron, and the first presenter of the series, Professor Anthony Clare.
Morgan wrote the pilot for the popular Canadian sitcom, King of Kensington. Prior to founding the Jest Society, he and writing partner Bronstein created and starred in the CBC radio series, Funny You Should Say That. He also had his own BBC Radio series called It's All in the Mind of John Morgan. In 2000, he was nominated for a Canadian Comedy Award.
After the completion of All in the Mind, Gonzalez showed the album to his friend Johnny "D" DeMario, who ran the house label Henry Street Music. The label released "Whew!" as the album's first single in 1994 to a favourable reaction from other DJs. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall Into My Mind)" was released as the second single shortly afterwards.
However, the file containing the book was accidentally erased. He did not revisit the novel again until he was recording a 2008 BBC documentary about his breakdown. His inspiration for All in the Mind came while cycling past a cemetery in Golders Green where a funeral was in progress. In 2008 Campbell wrote, 'There seemed to be hundreds of mourners.
The Spirit of Things,"Transcending Difference Together", The Spirit of Things, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 12 December 2010. All in the Mind, and Tony Delroy's NightLife. From 1995 to 2004, she was "On the Couch" presenter on ABC Radio National's Life Matters. From 2001 to 2010, she was the "Inner Life" columnist for Good Weekend Magazine (The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age).
All in the Mind is the sole studio album by American house music act the Bucketheads, released in August 1995 by Big Beat Records in the United States and shortly after by Positiva Records in the United Kingdom. Unimpressed with what he perceived to be fellow producers copying his characteristic style, producer Kenny "Dope" Gonzales launched the Bucketheads as a stylistic detour to explore influences such as disco, hip hop and Latin music, hoping to throw his audience a 'curveball'. He recorded All in the Mind over a period of three days in his Brooklyn home studio, using an E-mu SP-1200 and Akai S950 for the production of beats and samples. The record combines house music with disco and funk, and is characterised by its use of contemporary tribal beats and bass lines and 1970s-style horns and related influences.
All in the Mind is a weekly ABC Radio National program, hosted by Australian science journalist Natasha Mitchell, exploring the mind, brain and behaviour. The radio program has won a number of awards, including the Grand Medal at the 2008 New York Radio festival for a series of shows entitled The Brain Under Siege. Host Natasha Mitchell was an MIT Knight Science Journalism Fellow in 2005–6.
"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" is a house music track by The Bucketheads, released in 1995. "The Bomb!" was later dubbed into the project's sole album All in the Mind. It was a commercial hit in the UK in winter/spring 1995, reaching number 5 on the singles chart, while it peaked in the US at number 49 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Madness (Is All in the Mind) is a song by British band Madness from their fourth album The Rise & Fall. It spent 9 weeks in the UK charts, peaking at number eight in February 1983. It was released as a double A-side with "Tomorrow's (Just Another Day)", with the latter being the side which got most airplay. Unlike most Madness songs this features Chas Smash on lead vocals.
In Sheffield, a simultaneous event did take place, although as on 1 April, a planned attack on a barracks was apparently aborted. About 200 armed men assembled, marched, split into two groups then reassembled in the Haymarket. They chanted ‘Hunt and Liberty’, ‘The Revolution, the Revolution’ and ‘All in the Mind for the Barracks’. Their leader, John Blackwell, symbolically fired off a pistol, but this was the only shot fired.
Sporting bodies, such as the Professional Footballers' Association, and the British Racing Drivers' Club, are also supporting the work. Each supporter has appeared on the network's website and shared their own favourite memories contributing to the 'memory bank' on the company's Replay Websites. In turn, these are used by group facilitators. On 3 June 2014, the use of sporting memories was featured by BBC Radio 4 All in the Mind.
Dobelli advises his readers to "avoid news consumption" Avoid News - Towards a healthy news diet Guardian News is bad for you – and giving up reading it will make you happier print and online edition of 13 April 2013. He cites "fifteen reasons to avoid news" in a 2013 blog post."All in the Mind" on BBC Radio 30 April 2013, starting at 15:00 min. Why you should stay away from news - published online.
AllMusic editor John Bush wrote that the song is a "great-sounding fusion of disco-funk and house that works well" on his review of the All in the Mind album. Larry Flick from Billboard described it as "an unassuming li'l jaunt back in time that is packed with more than a savvy twist or two." He added it as "retro-happy". John Hamilton from Idolator called it a "eccentric" dance track.
Buddy teaches the girls a song called "Typical Girls Next Door". During a backstory flashback, British physicians sing "Cut Them Apart" while the girls sing "I Will Never Leave You" for the first time. Harry Houdini teaches the girls to tune out all distractions around them in order to get some private time ("All in the Mind"). When the girls are being brought to the US, Sir sings "Come See a New Land" (Come Look at the Freaks reworked).
In early 2015, she took part in the ITV series Bear Grylls: Mission Survive and was the runner-up after a 12-day survival mission. In 2017, Holmes presented episode 5 of the BBC One television series Women at War: 100 Years of Service. In December 2017, Holmes spoke about her 2003 mental health issues in an episode of All in the Mind on BBC Radio 4 and in 2018 was one of the judges of the programme's awards.
Saro-Wiwa was a BBC reporter, researcher, presenter and producer. She worked freelance all over the network on BBC Radio 4, Radio 3, World Service Radio and on BBC2. At the age of 20 she began contributing reports to BBC Radio 4's All in the Mind and In Living Colour programmes. She went on to work on a variety of BBC Radio 4 programmes including You & Yours, Woman's Hour, Home Truths, The Long View and also World Service arts programme, The Ticket.
"One Way to Go" predates the rest of the songs on the album and is taken from the B-side to the band's first single, "All in the Mind" (it was omitted the Verve's first U.S. release, Verve EP). "Gravity Grave" is also of a slightly earlier vintage, with the version included here having been recorded live at Glastonbury Festival. This version of "Gravity Grave" is closer to the protracted single release than it is to the earlier U.S. EP version.
All in the Mind is a 2008 novel by Alastair Campbell, the former Director of Communications and Strategy for the British Prime Minister Tony Blair. The book is Campbell's debut novel and draws heavily on his own experiences of depression and alcoholism. The story concerns a few days in the life of a psychiatrist, and a selection of his patients. Campbell has admitted that the story is partly autobiographical, although in an article in The Times on 30 October 2008 he wrote, '. . .
Persaud regularly appeared on radio and TV programmes, as either interviewee or presenter and was resident psychiatrist on the well-known daytime television programme This Morning. In addition to writing regularly for The Daily Telegraph and The Independent, Persaud also had columns in the Times Educational Supplement, Cosmopolitan and Canary Wharf City Life magazine. He is a former presenter of the BBC Radio 4 psychology and psychiatry programme All in the Mind. He was a presenter for Travels of the Mind for BBC World Service.
The subject of "food intolerance", including gluten sensitivity and elimination diets, was discussed in 1976.Richard Mackarness (January, 1976), Not All in the Mind, Macmillan, Patients with symptoms including abdominal pain and diarrhea, which improved on gluten withdrawal, and who did not have celiac disease were initially described in 1976 and 1978 with the first series in 1980. Debate regarding the existence of a specific condition has continued since then, but the three consensus conferences held since 2010 produced consistent definitions of NCGS and its diagnostic criteria.
In October 2008, he broadcast the personal story of his mental illness in a television documentary partly to reduce the stigma of that illness. He has written a novel on the subject entitled All in the Mind. Campbell appeared as a mentor in the BBC Two series The Speaker in April 2009 offering his advice on persuasive speaking. Campbell famously clashed with Adam Boulton on Sky News about the result of the 2010 general election, with the latter being reduced to shouting over both Campbell and the show's presenter.
Reviewing the reissue, Kris Needs of Record Collector wrote that the "cut-and- paste beats and sample-based rough house" would become "a major influence through to the next decade." He concluded: "In today’s laptop-and- autotune quagmire, it’s time to hear again from a real master at work." In the 2000 third edition of the All Time Top 1000 Albums, All in the Mind ranked at number 31 on a list of the all-time top 50 dance albums.All Time Top 1000 Albums, 3rd Edition, Virgin Books, 2000, ed.
He then became a reporter on The AM Alternative presented by Johnnie Walker on BBC Radio 5. In the early 1990s, he produced documentaries for BBC Radio 1, such as Pinkpop, which was the BBC's first ever programme about gay pop music, presented by Laurie Pike. While making programmes for Radio 1, he interviewed Take That, Mark Wahlberg and East 17. Peacock went on to report on Radio 4 programmes such as The Afternoon Shift with Laurie Taylor, Front Row, Word of Mouth, Home Truths, All in the Mind and Loose Ends.
Cathal Joseph "Carl" Smyth (born 14 January 1959), also known as Chas Smash, is an English singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. In a career spanning more than 40 years, Smash came to prominence in the late 1970s as the backing vocalist, trumpet player and dancer for the English band Madness. In addition to trumpet, Smyth plays the bass guitar (having initially joined Madness as a bassist), acoustic guitar and other various percussion instruments. He occasionally performs the lead vocals, such as on the songs "Michael Caine", "Wings of a Dove", "One Step Beyond" and "Madness (Is All in the Mind)".
On 16 August 1962 the BBC began broadcasting its long-running Scottish medical drama Dr Finlay's Casebook, with an episode called "It's All in the Mind". Simpson played the title role of Dr Alan Finlay, and was supported by Andrew Cruickshank as Dr Cameron, his older partner at the Arden House surgery in Tannochbrae, and Barbara Mullen as their housekeeper, Janet. With locations at Callander in Stirling, Scotland, the show ran for eight seasons, the final episode, "The Burgess Ticket", being shown on 3 January 1971.Dr. Finlay's Casebook (TV series, 1962–71), as Dr Alan Finlay: IMDB.
In 2020, Tanya Byron presented "Word of Mouth", on BBC Radio Four, featuring an investigation into the benefits of 'Talking to Strangers'. Previously, she presented All in the Mind, a BBC magazine radio programme about psychology and psychiatry. In October 2013 she was the guest for BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs. Her choices were "Absolute Beginners" by David Bowie, Baba O'Riley by The Who, Take Five by Dave Brubeck, "I Want That Man" by Debbie Harry, Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps by Doris Day, Uncertain Smile by The The, Canon in D Major by Johann Pachelbel and That's Life by Frank Sinatra.
One day, working in Cairns, Kast fell into a trench onto a hard steel pipe. The 30-year-old started to make claims about severe back pain and visited local doctors, but accused them of discrimination after they failed to substantiate his injury complaints. He refused to work, claiming he could not raise his arms past his waist and all his toes on his right foot had turned black and green, and demanded a pension for the rest of his life. Even a well-respected and sympathetic orthopaedic surgeon, Dr Arthur Meehan, concluded the pain he claimed to suffer was all in the mind.
"Got Myself Together" is a house music track by The Bucketheads, released in late 1995. It was the commercial follow-up to global hit The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind), and was the third single taken from the project's sole album All in the Mind. While unable to reach the worldwide chart highs of its predecessor, the single was a club hit, reaching #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart in January 1996, and a moderate commercial hit, reaching the top 10 in Finland and Sweden, and the top 20 in the UK. The track is considered a 1990s house classic.
In addition to his writing and campaigning on miscarriages of justice, Kennedy campaigned on a number of other issues. A lifelong atheist, he published All in the Mind: A Farewell To God in 1999, in which he discussed his philosophical objections to religion, and the ills he felt had come from Christianity. He was a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association, he contributed to New Humanist magazine, he was an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society and a Distinguished Supporter of the Humanist Society Scotland. He was also an advocate of the legalisation of assisted suicide, and was a co-founder and former chair of the Voluntary Euthanasia Society.
Madigan took a strong stance for implementing refugee and protection conventionsAsylum seeker advocates claim Government has hidden 'retrograde' laws, ABC, 16 September 2014 and gambling reforms.Parliamentary Joint Select Committee on Gambling Reform , Fifth report, The advertising and promotion of gambling services in sport, Broadcasting Services Amendment, (Advertising for Sports Betting) Bill 2013 Madigan campaigned against wind turbines, chairing the 2015 Select Committee on Wind Turbines, advocating the removal of government incentives from the industry, and promoting the idea of "wind turbine syndrome".Wind turbine sickness 'all in the mind': study, The Sydney Morning Herald, 15 March 2013.The junk science of wind turbine syndrome, Business Spectator, 9 November 2012.
An E-mu SP-1200, as used in the album's production. Brooklyn-based producer Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez, one half of house duo Masters at Work, founded the Bucketheads in the mid-1990s as a studio project that would allow him to fuse his populist musical influences: house, hip hop, freestyle, disco and Latin street music. Larry Flick of Billboard reported that the project emerged from a "burst of inspiration" in Gonzalez's home studio. The producer said the catalyst for the Bucketheads project and All in the Mind was his desire to change direction and "throw a curveball" to other producers who he felt were copying his sound as a solo producer and as part of Masters of Work.
Both were clean-shaven, and Lennon had begun to grow his hair longer with accompanying mutton-chop sideburns. The original story was written by Lee Minoff, based on the song by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, and the screenplay was penned by four collaborators including Erich Segal. George Harrison's character's recurring line "It's all in the mind" is taken from The Goon Show. As with many motion-picture musicals, the music takes precedence over the actual plot, and most of the story is a series of set pieces designed to present Beatles music set to various images, in a form reminiscent of Walt Disney's Fantasia (and foreshadowing the rise of music videos and MTV thirteen years later).
Reaction to All in the Mind was mixed. Of the book, The Times said, 'a serious subject addressed with compassion, intelligence and sensitivity...this is an emotionally engaging and thought-provoking book', while the actor Stephen Fry said, 'I have rarely read a book where the agonies and insecurities of mental trauma have been so well chronicled'. However, Sahmeer Rahmi, writing for the Daily Telegraph took a diametrically opposing view stating, "Because Campbell has spent his life barking orders – broadcasting not receiving – he has none of the skills needed in a novelist: curiosity, observation, interest in the human condition or in another human's opinion other than how it impacts on himself or his career." Byron Rogers of The Spectator wrote, '. . .
Fitzmaurice was born in Shropshire, England, in 1963. He studied painting at Leicester Polytechnic, Liverpool Polytechnic and Manchester Metropolitan University. After leaving college Fitzmaurice moved away from pure painting and his practice eventually focussed on a strategy of intervening in already existing objects, materials and situations, a way of working which continues to this day. Some of his earlier work was shown at EASTinternational in 1995 where one of his pieces was purchased for the Arts Council Collection. Also after graduating Fitzmaurice developed an interest in working in non-gallery situations by co- organising a number of 'artist-led' projects such as All in the Mind (1998), with artist Patricia McKinnon Day, which took place inside a disused mental asylum; and Up In The Air/Further Up In The Air (1999–2004) with artist Neville Gabie, which used tower blocks as contexts for art and writing.
R V Mary Kidson 2014 Worcester Crown Court -defendant accused poisoning her child by allegedly administering illegally obtained prescriptive drugs to her daughter who was removed from her care by social services. Defendant was acquitted by direction of Judge at end of prosecution. Lancashire Barrister Hind and Blackburn Solicitors Simon Farnsworth, Deborah Morgan of FMB took on the case of Mary Kidson a local woman from Nelson, who had moved to live in Herefordshire and secured her acquittal in a landmark case that could have long term impacts on suffers from thyroid and cortisol hormone deficiencies throughout the NHS. Mary Kidson's daughter suffered with a number of physical problems, primarily she was constantly fatigued, had low blood pressure, lack of energy, pain in muscles and joints plus other problems. She was seen by 5 endocrine paediatric consultants in the NHS – 4 of whom discharged her saying there was nothing wrong with her as it was all in the mind.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy All in the Mind, BBC Radio, July 2009 Marzillier grew up initially in Cumbria in the north of England, where his parents established a successful business in the chemical industry after having left Germany in the 1930s. When he was 12 the family moved to the south of England, a change that Marzillier recalls had a big effect on him, as he began commuting with his brother to the City of London School for Boys. He graduated from the University of Oxford then trained in clinical psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry.About Me John Marzillier, retrieved 2 August 2016 He started off as an enthusiastic behaviourist and was involved in the founding of the BABCP,The Development of BABCP Howard Lomas, first printed in Behavioural Psychotherapy in 1985, updated 27/10/08 but eventually became skeptical of the claimed scientific foundation for the behaviour therapy in which he had trained.
'Student Performances', Opera Magazine, London July 1990.'Teenage rock 'n' troll', The Times, London, 3 April 1990'New role for Peer', The Times Educational Supplement, London, 25 May 1990 This production travelled to the US.'Student opera project is impressive in scope', Press & Sun, Binghamton NY, 27 October 1990 The chamber opera Caedmon based on a play by Christopher Fry was produced by the Royal Opera at the Donmar Warehouse in May 1989 with Christopher Gillett in the title role.The Independent, London, 20 May 1989, p.33: Robert Maycock wrote that the opera's music was 'spare and intensely lyrical... providing opportunities for long spans of concentrated and beautiful singing...'This event was the product of a crowdfunding campaign by The Independent: 'The Garden Venture comes into bloom', The Independent, London, 15 May 1989, p.19.'Beside the seaside', The Sunday Telegraph, 28 May 1989: Malcolm Hayes wrote that the opera took 'a cripplingly slow half-hour to get going, but which brought rewards when it did...' All in the Mind (2004) was commissioned by W11 Opera, also to Lambert's own libretto, and performed at the Britten Theatre in London.
The 2009 festival focused on three themes – Thirty years of Thatcherism; Darwin and Darwinism; and Arts and Science, fifty years after scientist C. P. Snow's influential lecture, The Two Cultures. Bristol Evening Post, Bristol Festival of ideas is all in the mind, 4 July 2009 Events during the main Festival featured speakers Aravind Adiga, Tariq Modood, Peter Singer, James Lovelock, A. C. Grayling, Christopher Caldwell, John Gray, Richard Holmes, Paddy Ashdown, Nick Cohen, Wayne Hemingway, Susan Blackmore, Christopher Brookmyre, James Harkin, Tariq Ramadan, David Aaronovitch, Bruce Hood, Geoff Dyer, Tristram Hunt, Marcus du Sautoy, Ben Goldacre, Ruth Padel, Richard Fortey, and Gillian Beer. A programme of events was also held throughout the rest of year. Speakers included Clay Shirky, Michael Shermer, Ken Robinson, Leonard Susskind, Steve Jones, Misha Glenny, Daniel Dennett, John Armstrong, Chris Anderson, Edward de Bono, Karen Armstrong, Amartya Sen, Margaret Atwood, Richard Dawkins, Sarah Dunant, John Kampfner, Hugh Fearnley- Whittingstall, Simon Schama, Tristram Stuart, Rose George, Zac Goldsmith, Gillian Tett, Neal Lawson, Michael Mansfield, Vic Reeves, Shappi Khorsandi, Alan Davies, Bruce Hood, John Micklethwait, Madeleine Bunting, David Attenborough, David Puttnam, William Waldegrave, Raj Patel, Vince Cable, Virginia Ironside, and Suzanne Moore.

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