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"come to terms" Synonyms
covenant agree bargain contract engage undertake pledge arrange negotiate dicker make terms enter into an agreement sign commit settle work out details shake hands on it hammer out deal sign for enter into accept adjust to accommodate oneself to become accustomed to become reconciled to come to accept get used to reach an acceptance reconcile oneself to acclimatize oneself to become resigned to face up to reach an acceptance of learn to live with make the best of resign yourself acknowledge give in to reconcile oneself yield to meet halfway make concessions forgive and forget go fifty-fifty make a deal reach a compromise reach an agreement settle your differences shake hands come to an understanding find the middle ground give and take split the difference strike a balance find a happy medium concede arbitrate collaborate conciliate treat confer consult parley talk discuss terms have talks make a bargain discuss confab powwow confabulate counsel palaver advise speak deliberate confirm compromise agree on decide on reach terms settle on strike a bargain work out come to terms about thrash out arrive at hammer out hash out level be honest be frank be open tell the truth be upfront be straightforward tell all be above board be straight be up-front come clean keep nothing back be above-board talk straight hide nothing be on the up and up lay it all out lay all one's cards on the table put all one's cards on the table mediate intervene intercede interpose reconcile resolve placate smooth soothe make peace step in act as peacemaker bring to terms strike happy medium hammer out a deal work out a deal make up atone pacify redress recompense be reconciled become reconciled make amends atone for mend fences be friends again bury the hatchet declare a truce make good kiss and make up yield surrender submit capitulate bow cede relent succumb quit break buckle fold resign budge abdicate defer weaken give in cave in plan organise(UK) organize(US) schedule determine devise fix prepare decide set blueprint chart choreograph construct design frame project shape reach understanding reach an understanding come to an agreement establish a middle ground meet each other halfway More
"come to terms" Antonyms

957 Sentences With "come to terms"

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

Right now, she's trying to come to terms with the family change and surely she will come to terms with this complex transition.
Yeah, I think the whole thing helped me come to terms with it, just in the fact that I was trying to come to terms with it.
I had finally come to terms with letting him go.
For years, he couldn't come to terms with what happened.
The dogs help people to come to terms with trauma.
"It's a lot to grasp and come to terms with."
Has prison helped them come to terms with that fact?
That's something that you have to come to terms with.
Germany has done a lot to come to terms with
How would you suggest I come to terms with this?
It was a very slow evolution to come to terms.
"Chris had to come to terms with reality," the source says.
To unlock it, the hosts must come to terms with themselves.
Motherhood is helping Chrissy Teigen come to terms with her body.
So Jonathan is struggling to come to terms with his situation.
"It's still very hard to come to terms with," he says.
Often, I think about how to come to terms with this.
It took me a while to come to terms with it.
I needed to come to terms with this on my own.
He's still trying to come to terms with his friend's death.
People that have come to terms with privacy is just dead.
Stern's family is trying to come to terms with the arrests.
Especially trying to come to terms with it and my faith.
Here's where the two leaders could come to terms of agreement.
Only when Americans come to terms with that, and have a
I didn't expect to come to terms with my own sexuality.
"It took awhile to come to terms with it," she said.
"I will never come to terms with the past," she said.
Clinton has not come to terms with losing to Mr. Trump.
How will they come to terms with multiethnic diversity moving forward?
Basically, many conservative intellectuals have come to terms with income redistribution.
Brandt said he has come to terms with his brother's death.
Here's what both parties have to come to terms with first.
"I've come to terms with body dysmorphia and evolved," she said.
It's very difficult to help her come to terms with it.
It took my entire life up to that point to come to terms with my identity, so I think that allowing people time and space to also come to terms with it is totally fair and okay.
But experts are skeptical that they'll actually manage to come to terms.
And it's just a hard, hard thing to come to terms with.
T-Pain has come to terms with that in his newest track.
"Many startups still haven't come to terms with their size," she continued.
It took me a while to come to terms with being trans.
How did we come to terms with the bombing of Pearl Harbor?
It's definitely something you have to analyze and come to terms with.
I hope he's come to terms with his identity and feels comfortable.
Both countries have until early March to come to terms on trade.
Whoever has the upper hand has no incentive to come to terms.
I couldn't even come to terms with what a dick I was.
Americans need to come to terms with this shrewd but cynical move.
There's still this sense that he hasn't come to terms with it.
The Caribbean may have to come to terms with more destructive storms.
Whoever has the upper hand has less incentive to come to terms.
" Both presidents, the host said, "demonstrated a willingness to come to terms.
They may yet come to terms with the wreckage they have caused.
In addition, Kate (Chrissy Metz) helped Madison (Caitlin Thompson) come to terms with — or at least, start to come to terms with — with her eating disorder, something Kate suffered from, too, in the time leading up to Jack's death.
While friends come to terms with Alnahdi's sudden death, authorities continue to investigate.
Yoosung has to come to terms with the death of his beloved cousin.
That is just something you're going to have to come to terms with.
The US–Mexico trade deal puts pressure on Canada to come to terms.
Spotify and Warner had been in licensing discussions but couldn't come to terms.
"I can come to terms with my daughter becoming my son," she said.
But once you just breathe and relax, you come to terms with it.
Our thoughts are with them as they come to terms with their loss.
It's not really gossip, it's more trying to come to terms with it.
It also takes a few years to really come to terms with it.
James Milner will never be able to come to terms with this moment.
"It's new things we are learning to come to terms with," Baruah said.
For three months, I struggled to come to terms with the unalterable truth.
We haven't at all come to terms with whatever this new reality is.
He wanted to throw himself into it and come to terms with it.
But he could not come to terms with these elements of American politics.
The Palestinian leadership is divided between two governments that cannot come to terms.
"[Trump and I] parted ways unfriendly, we couldn't come to terms," Peter said.
PEOPLE CAN LEARN FROM THAT, FRANKLY, I HOPE THE CANADIANS COME TO TERMS.
"I don't know if I have come to terms with it," he said.
The struggle to come to terms with these tensions is constant and inescapable.
Britain's political parties now need to come to terms with the Powell question of national identity in much the same way that they once had to come to terms with the Jenkins question (social liberalism) and the Thatcher question (economic liberalism).
Republicans seem to already have come to terms with bypassing border wall funding. Rep.
Weeks after the election, this woman still hasn't come to terms with Trump's victory.
He told the station the family has come to terms with their difficult reality.
That's an issue she'll have to come to terms with in her own time.
Oreo Hot Cocoa Mix exists — and we've suddenly come to terms with summer's end.
Society has yet to come to terms with this kind of invasion of privacy.
Going to an unfamiliar place helped me to come to terms with my feelings.
"We did not come to terms that we needed to do more," said Federighi.
Bukowski believes certain environments may help one better come to terms with latent feelings.
Nevertheless, the work is critical for Guatemala to come to terms with its past.
Can the conservative leader come to terms with an interloper taking over his party?
Was that hard for you to come to terms with playing someone like that?
Following the event, Kline spent years struggling to come to terms with Patrick's death.
The French and the Germans will come to terms and begin to work together.
And I'm sorry its taken me so long to come to terms with that.
Almost all countries struggle to come to terms with dark periods in their histories.
Stories end, friendships end, relationships end, and we must come to terms with it.
The sooner Saudi Arabia's rulers come to terms with this, the better for all.
Manu, though, had come to terms with some of these pressures earlier in life.
We need time to recover and come to terms with everything that has happened.
This is dangerous because it will make more difficult to come to terms later.
I had to come to terms with the fact that it's not a maybe.
"It took us some time to come to terms with these organizations," he says.
How did you come to terms with deciding what to do about your marriage?
There remains skepticism that the country will come to terms with its colonial past.
Physical  This is easier to identify, but still hard to come to terms with.
I've not yet come to terms or really assessed the implications it really has.
Once again, our elected leaders couldn't come to terms and the government shut down.
The biggest surprise would be the announcement that both parties have come to terms.
Writing it down helped me come to terms with what I was actually feeling.
That was what really helped me come to terms with identifying as non-binary.
Once they come to terms with stuttering, people who stutter can be assertive and outspoken.
Speaking to spirits is not denial—it is a soothing way to come to terms.
It's happened and we have to move from it and come to terms with it.
It was confusing and sad and very difficult to come to terms with this diagnosis.
Patterson's relatives said they are devastated and struggling to come to terms with the loss.
Come to terms with this reality and fully provide every resource possible to prepare travelers.
Is this why so many people think that America hasn't "come to terms" with slavery?
In recent episodes, Leigh's character has come to terms with her homosexuality later in life.
But the actress said she's come to terms with the show moving on without her.
To make matters worse, the patient didn't want to come to terms with his addiction.
He also credits the show for helping him come to terms with an internal struggle.
It took me a long time to come to terms with what my father did.
We broke the story ... 'Idol' wanted Luke badly, but couldn't come to terms on money.
Barrett genuinely believes that companies like his will help people come to terms with loss.
This approach to understanding life and death helped me come to terms with my pain.
How did you come to terms with becoming this recorder-playing figure in the community?
It's something that a majority of nations are still trying to come to terms with.
McBride: I think he represents a difficult thing for her to come to terms with.
Casey Affleck stars as a janitor trying to come to terms with a personal tragedy.
Successful men are often driven by a need to come to terms with their fathers.
The industry is trying to come to terms with the factors contributing to these declines.
It is time to come to terms with reality: "maximum pressure" on Iran has failed.
"She had to come to terms with what sacrifices she would make," Ms. Salibello said.
He cannot come to terms for the National Guard to patrol and protect the Border.
But it still took me a long time to fully come to terms with bisexuality.
It's hard for me to come to terms with vulnerability, which is what sex requires.
That took me a few years to really come to terms with all of that.
An eight-year old cousin, Joshua, is struggling to come to terms with the loss.
Keeping it easy while I come to terms with my experiences over the last year.
What does it mean to come to terms with history, according to Ward's bracing book?
For the second type, help them come to terms with the things they cannot control.
Debra Winger plays the mother, who has never quite come to terms with Kym's past.
He struggles, he says, to come to terms with the fleeting quality of human experience.
As Mr. Isaac explained, performing has always helped him come to terms with his emotions.
It took extensive therapy for Shulman to come to terms with what happened, she said.
How the two sides come to terms could lay out new rules for public companies.
I've struggled with that for years and finally, I think, come to terms with it.
It's hard to come to terms with events like Fort Hood, Sandy Hook or San Bernardino.
We're told Louis would like to avoid a court battle if they can come to terms.
If I can come to terms with my mom voting for Trump, why can't everyone else?
As we come to terms with this new reality, our grand hopes become cries of desperation.
"I have had to come to terms with that and make peace with that," he said.
In the meantime, she's come to terms with her recent past as a poster party girl.
AUSTRIA'S far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ) is finding it hard to come to terms with defeat.
" Of Chris' decision to plead, the source explains: "Chris had to come to terms with reality.
"Fashion has yet to come to terms with it" — or for that matter, with nonstandard sizing.
This is difficult for both halves of the titular innocent couple to come to terms with.
Home is the place where she really had to come to terms with a new life.
Others in the Valley struggled to come to terms with the vote tally as it stood.
Most traditional psychotherapy involves talking through powerful emotions in order to come to terms with them.
See Galifianakis come to terms with his bizarre disguise in the clip (below) debuting on Mashable.
Or does its theology rob us of the opportunity to come to terms with our suffering?
Now they're struggling to come to terms with what his presidency will mean for their industry.
And yet even he struggled to come to terms with the fate of his childhood friendship.
She said that the family was struggling to come to terms with what Carlos had done.
Perhaps it's best we give him some time to come to terms with this difficult revelation.
I've mostly come to terms with it, but the tooth aches and I'd like to know.
I hope that she'll be not sad and be able to come to terms with it.
But if folks like Hillary want to "come to terms with hard truths," let's start now.
That's an idea that's really hard for a lot of people to come to terms with.
Yet leading Republicans are starting to come to terms with the Trump candidacy as an inevitability.
I struggled to come to terms with it myself while I powered through episode after episode.
If Mr. Trump is the nominee, many in the party will come to terms with that.
Struggling to come to terms with his sexual identity caused him many years of crippling depression.
It's been very difficult and I don't think I'll ever completely come to terms with it.
Anyway, and then you come to terms with something and you come up with a deal.
For one thing, the nation can't come to terms with a tricky five-letter word: merit.
Trump and Putin, and Germany needs to come to terms with the concept of European power.
The one way for me to try and come to terms with it was embracing spirituality.
PROFESSOR HILL Because I think we had to come to terms with a number of facts.
The struggle is over, you come to terms with who you are because there's no alternative.
Britain and the European Union, they say, both have a strong incentive to come to terms.
A group of misfit superheroes come to terms with their powers in this comic book adaptation. 
It's self-evident that men like me almost never come to terms with who we are.
Now I just have to come to terms with the fact that my cat likes vaporwave.
Plus there are jiggles in places that are honestly just hard to come to terms with.
There's so much about the past we really haven't fully come to terms with and resolved.
In November 2014, Zayn was struggling with an eating disorder, which he's since come to terms with.
The program expired in January when real estate executives and the unions failed to come to terms.
George W. Bush's presidency was conservatism's most ambitious attempt to come to terms with its internal contradictions.
Ultimately ... he and ABC couldn't come to terms, so the network decided to make a replica instead.
Still, even months after the diagnosis, the Nuttalls are struggling to come to terms with the illness.
"Today we continue to struggle to come to terms with what happened," the statement read, in part.
Nico has to come to terms with this his own way and hopefully, Schmitt can respect that.
The leaders are trying to come to terms over what the Trump administration calls unfair trade practices.
Now, burdened with a memory he is struggling to come to terms with, Madasani's words are heartrending.
As she struggles to come to terms with the event, Emad becomes obsessed with finding her attacker.
We, as allies, have to come to terms with how we have enabled this environment to persist.
Many will argue today -- and with good reason -- that we still haven't "come to terms" with slavery.
Humans have always impacted their environment, and we're just starting to come to terms with the consequences.
Congress and the president must come to terms with the next round of spending before Sept. 30.
Liev Schreiber has come to terms with the inevitable: his preteen kids officially don't find him cool.
And she wouldn't disagree — though she's come to terms with her role as the so-called villain.
For Japan truly to become a normal power, it needs to come to terms with its history.
Everything happened so fast, and I hadn't come to terms with the fact that I was famous.
Now, the family is struggling to come to terms with Kelly's death as they make funeral arrangements.
But just as he had come to terms with his fate, two Delta Force operators, Master Sgt.
But now, as adults, they have come to terms with what they endured, though it was difficult.
But once she had come to terms with her mother's family, she sought out her father, too.
It's an unpleasant truth for many progressives, but one with which we'll have to come to terms.
You can find Emma trying to come to terms with the realities of this video on Twitter.
The FPÖ epitomises Austria's failure fully to come to terms with its complicity in the Third Reich.
Rakel credits the recent #MeToo movement for helping her come to terms with some of these experiences.
We are trying to come to terms with this tragedy and to understand why this has happened.
On the other hand, the app might help adults come to terms with their eventual old age.
You somehow have to come to terms with what is ugly as well as what is precious.
We have to come to terms with where our own red lines lie and make them clear.
I think today, even now, a lot of conservatives have not come to terms with that problem.
By the time we meet Robert (Annette O'Toole), he has already come to terms with his illness.
It was decades before I could come to terms with the shame and stigma of his death.
Even so, it has been difficult for many to come to terms with the trauma of Feb.
By the time she turned 22, Ms. Morillo said, she had come to terms with her disability.
At the same time I've tried to come to terms with my role in this gigantic clusterfuck.
The renaming of the square is Belgium's latest effort to come to terms with its colonial legacy.
The coronavirus outbreak has forced many retailers to come to terms with their absence and leave policies.
" Ms. Walls said: "I'd come to terms with the idea that I would never fall in love.
The ballet was a way to "come to terms" with her own mother's condition, Ms. Marston said.
Historians agree that Spain still needs to do much to come to terms with its past century.
Our clients filing today were devastated and needed considerable time to come to terms with their losses.
But the two sides failed to come to terms about that plea deal, according to the Journal.
Lizzie: It's rough to come to terms with the fact that we're living in the final days of One Video, but perhaps it's even rougher to come to terms with the fact that music videos do not seem to have measurably improved since we started this godforsaken column.
Survivors struggle to come to terms with Manchester terror attack Survivors struggle to come to terms with Manchester terror attack MANCHESTER, England — Manchester was a city in shock on Tuesday, after a terror attack at an Ariana Grande concert the night before left 143 people dead and 59 injured.
That subverts Peru's decades-long struggle to come to terms with its dark past of crimes against humanity.
And so she kinda took a step back and left and then, it did not come to terms.
But it gained around 50 percent in 2017 as it's come to terms with its new business approach.
Speaking to USA Today, Handler, 44, said she was recently forced to come to terms with the loss.
The child's family struggled to come to terms with the abduction as police searched for the little girl.
"WWE has come to terms on the release of Eric Arndt (Enzo Amore)," WWE said in a statement.
You come to terms with the fact that you don't watch this sport to see people get hurt.
More than four decades after Mao's death, Chinese society has not fully come to terms with his legacy.
I've come to terms with the fact that if a zombie apocalypse transpired, my utility would be nil.
After you've come to terms with your new life, it's time to move on to updating your résumé.
The thought is excruciatingly painful, but it's just something we're going to have to come to terms with.
More than a year later, Arndt still struggles to come to terms with what he saw that night.
I've come to terms with it, and that's a whole other thesis, but man, I felt for Ross.
A source tells PEOPLE the disgraced news anchor has struggled to come to terms with his new normal.
Maybe we've just finally come to terms with the fact that owners, not athletes, are the real enemy.
That also means having to come to terms with the things that you need to let go of.
However, the two sides have yet to come to terms on key structural issues like intellectual property theft.
PREPA announced late on Wednesday the agency and creditors had come to terms on an extension through Feb.
And so he sits on the market, waiting for his agent to come to terms with this fact.
The university, like many other institutions, is working to come to terms with its past ties to slavery.
But I do not think that social democracy has the analytical skills to come to terms with this.
In theory, there's still time for Trump to come to terms with the realities of power in Washington.
"Everyone is working long hours and trying to come to terms with horrible loss of life," Buschow said.
How does one come to terms with one's own complicity in evil, even if that complicity is "innocent"?
By now, losing the port isn't really unbearable; we've had years to come to terms with this reality.
The hope is the two sides will come to terms before the Giants open the regular season Sept.
Now his story is helping parents across the world come to terms with problems in their own life.
"Moneyed interests in both parties don't want to come to terms with it," he told the New Republic.
"They have to come to terms with what they created," said Laura Ingraham, the conservative talk-radio host.
I've come to terms with my failures, and I know they don't make me "less" of a gamer.
You have to come to terms with them in a different way, when you're constantly confronted with them.
I can't come to terms with it, because I loved Woody and had a wonderful time with him.
We had to come to terms with the fact that people really didn't know that this was illegal.
But the improbable rise of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has added pressure to come to terms now.
They are still trying to come to terms with their new president — friends and foes, for different reasons.
That's something that Biden may have to come to terms with if he doesn't win in South Carolina.
"I've learned to live with it, but I still haven't come to terms with it," he told me.
Gender equality minister Marlene Schiappa said French cinema had not "fully come to terms" with the #MeToo revolution.
People always talk about when is white America going to come to terms or whatever with their history.
"[I had to] fully come to terms with the fact that I can't teach it anymore," he says.
How did you come to terms with yourself and your new life when it was happening so fast?
He has already had to come to terms with two other moves made by the President last week.
And Peters, who wants to attend the University of California, Davis, has come to terms with her loss.
How do they come to terms with something that is, basically, one giant question mark, or a mystery?
He believes the device will let him see what happened in the accident, and come to terms with it.
"One minute you're telling yourself, 'I have to come to terms that my best friend is gone,'" Wolf said.
Both struggle to come to terms with a changing Hollywood industry — at the height of Charles Manson's killing spree.
Spring may officially be here, but I haven't come to terms with the fact that winter did me dirty.
Toronto still has to come to terms with the alienation that Ford exploited and worsened, but did not create.
It's time to come to terms with what a Trump administration is going to mean for all of us.
You have to come to terms with the fact that no matter what you do, people will dislike it.
She is now a novelist, after finding that writing in journals helped her come to terms with the attack.
Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan are struggling to come to terms with the end of their eight-year marriage.
That's because dairy is the major sticking point that the US and Canada need to come to terms on.
That 100% did not work, and if anything it really helped me come to terms with my gender identity.
Just think back to the Degrassi period where Liberty and J.T. come to terms with the former's pregnancy announcement.
In her teens, Zhenya had identified as a lesbian and struggled to come to terms with her sexual orientation.
For him, politics and heroics faded beside the simple struggles of ordinary people to come to terms with fate.
As the family struggled to come to terms with the death, they donated Taylor's organs and saved five lives.
It is time to come to terms and design a safety net that is personal, portable, modern and flexible.
"The family asks for prayers and privacy right now to come to terms with this tragedy," the statement reads.
This special report is about their struggle in the past 19903 years to come to terms with this transition.
It took a while for me to come to terms with that and have really open discussions about money.
Jared shares his story and experiences with his parents, who come to terms with it in their own ways.
But if the Freedom Caucus can't come to terms with those who want to govern, that's a serious division.
At first, it's funny, with Freeman's signature voice of God trying to come to terms with the nascent technology.
That's a much bigger problem, though, than these companies or even the U.S. government has come to terms with.
Raisman continued, elaborating on how difficult it is to come to terms with being a survivor of sexual abuse.
A source recently told PEOPLE the disgraced news anchor has struggled to come to terms with his new normal.
Eight months may have passed, but Meghan McCain is still struggling to come to terms with John McCain's death.
It was like, 'Well, I'm still trying to come to terms with what this is and I feel bad.
We watch as people connect with others and generally try and come to terms with life before everything ends.
A source recently told PEOPLE that Lauer has struggled to come to terms with his new low-key lifestyle.
That means workers are in a position to walk off the job if the parties cannot come to terms.
"It would have been a miracle if they had come to terms," a source close to the matter said.
Look, I've come to terms with the fact that I'm probably not going to be a NASA astronaut, okay?
This doesn't make much sense, but it's a fact, and we have to somehow come to terms with it.
Have you come to terms yet with the strong indications that the next iPhone won't have a headphone jack?
Since then, I've come to terms with the friend fling, and I don't let disappointment or distrust cloud potential.
These televised hearings took place in 1973 and allowed the public to come to terms with the shocking facts.
But the rest of Franken's speech suggested that he hasn't really come to terms with the accusations against him.
Mississippians, regardless of party or race, must also come to terms with the state's history rather than fearing it.
Some developers were rather nervous about the acquisition (though it feels like most have come to terms with it).
If we're going to actualize this promising future, we need to first come to terms with our difficult past.
Aguirre-Sacasa admitted in March the cast and crew were still struggling to come to terms with Perry's death.
Maybe they figure it took me a while to come to terms with my disability (spoiler alert: It did)?
The essay served as a way for Martin to work through and come to terms with who she is.
Disoriented and trying to come to terms with what I'd witnessed, I make my way to the train station.
Dyck said it won't bring cures or reduce pain, but it will help people come to terms with dying.
A personal war on two fronts that I am still fighting to come to terms with two years later.
I have tried to come to terms with the idea of putting all this "out there," and I cannot.
Speaking of reparations, Jason has some thoughts on how our country should come to terms with its slave history.
He said he had agonized in a moral and mental struggle to come to terms with his own betrayals.
How do you come to terms with the person that you are and the things you've done and do?
What about the young woman struggling with self-esteem issues, desperately trying to come to terms with her disability?
"We'll move ahead," said Bobrovsky, who has not come to terms on a contract extension and may be traded.
Neither has come to terms with the ways in which his party's rhetoric and tactics have enabled Trump's rise.
But, he argues, ISIS was also born out of a history that Americans haven't fully come to terms with.
If you're single, the eclipse will bring a breakthrough that causes you to come to terms with irrational behavior.
"We have not come to terms with that issue especially as it relates to black and white relationships," he said.
We request space and time for them to appropriately grieve and come to terms with this latest impact of violence.
"I was at a loss to psychologically come to terms with how it was that this was possible," he says.
Unilever had rejected Kraft's approach, but Kraft initially was hopeful the two sides could come to terms on a deal.
" Luckily, Hall has since come to terms with the "fed is best" mentality, versus the oft-touted "breast is best.
The id and the superego, having to accept and come to terms with our nature, in a culture of rationality.
Aguirre-Sacasa admitted in March that the cast and crew were still struggling to come to terms with Perry's death.
"It's really important to come to terms with your preferences, and then be able to ask for them," Guichet says.
Recently, in March, Metz revealed to PEOPLE that she's finally come to terms with her status as the breakout star.
Watching host James Delos repeatedly try and fail to come to terms with his artificial nature was heartbreaking and fascinating.
When we catch up with her and Danny, she really hasn't come to terms with what's happened emotionally and mentally.
Mr Inslee blames "the oil and gas industry, that had not yet come to terms with this need for transition".
How will India come to terms with the reality that it is set to be the biggest home of Islam?
Williams tweeted, "I've come to terms with the fact that I look like an emoji," along with six emoji faces.
The smart ones doing a lot of time have come to terms with the fact that that's what they are.
Having now come to terms with her experience, Dawn said she wants to help empower other victims of sexual assault.
Leaving LGBTQ experiences out of sex ed curriculums further ostracizes teens that are learning to come to terms with themselves.
It puts their total value at $113 billion, although any estimate remains notional until buyers and sellers come to terms.
Investors need to come to terms with the reality that overall weak growth is turning out to be quite persistent.
Seeing a grief counselor after a death in the family also helped him come to terms with his childhood trauma.
"We now have to come to terms with the fact that his chair will forever remain empty," Reiss-Andersen said.
Now at the Leda refugee camp in Teknaf, southern Bangladesh, Alam is struggling to come to terms with what happened.
"Campaigning for change for other women was something I did to come to terms with my loss," she told Broadly.
Congress and President Obama are yet to come to terms on a capped amount of debt for an individual borrower.
In August, the two studios couldn't come to terms on a new deal to continue making Spider-Man movies together.
So when we realized we weren't going to come to terms with [Hooft], we said let's let the dust settle.
"They have to come to terms with what they created," said Laura Ingraham, a conservative activist and talk-radio host.
The European Union could, eventually, enact sanctions against Poland if the two sides cannot come to terms on the issue.
The Republican Party has never come to terms with the dismal intellectual and institutional failures that produced the Iraq War.
I struggled so much to come to terms with what felt like a constant uncertainty, but I finally got there.
They would be in a position to walk off the job if the parties cannot come to terms by Sept.
"They are all struggling to come to terms with the conditions and context they find themselves in," Ms. Kirby said.
"I wouldn't say that this project has helped me reconcile or come to terms with any of this," Murff said.
But Rovera said much more is necessary for the coalition to fully come to terms with what happened in Raqqa.
Such revelations forced American citizens to come to terms with the military's "kill anything that moves" approach to the war.
As parents come to terms with their child's diagnosis, issues like treatment options, life expectancy and benefits can seem daunting.
I used to be skeptical of the idea that Britain hadn't come to terms with the loss of its empire.
But then he forced me to come to terms with how that idea of masculinity poisoned his life — and mine.
Now, oppositional voices "have to come to terms with the existing, 'new' and much more balanced media landscape," he said.
The band is continuing "to struggle to come to terms with what happened," the statement added, before asking for privacy.
Negan must come to terms with the humiliation, with the emasculation, with the undeniable fact that he is the inferior.
"Giovanni's Room," on the other hand, is an attempt by the young writer to come to terms with just being.
Journalists are trying to come to terms with Moscow's ability to steer Western news coverage by doling out hacked documents.
With Quick slowly working his way back, Budaj has come to terms with his tenuous place as the Kings' starter.
The questions Chin poses have never seemed more urgent, as Europeans (and Americans) attempt to come to terms with diversity.
It is that America — and especially the Republican Party — is going to have to come to terms with organized labor.
Yet a reckoning with the reality of our changing earth must also come to terms with the exigencies of language.
Analysts say the prospect of a third party deciding the deal's fate could pressure both sides to come to terms.
"We need to come to terms with a past that has an ugly side, a wicked side," the Very Rev.
Mr. Trump came along just as the mainstream media, especially newspapers, were trying to come to terms with the internet.
" While Juli is doing her best to come to terms with Jarrid's death, she admitted, "Our hearts are broken here.
A source tells PEOPLE that the Facts of Life actress is struggling to come to terms with the unimaginable loss.
And at Downton, people tend to chafe at first but then come to terms with life the way it is.
Instead I found a litany by creative folk struggling to come to terms with an unpleasant year that ended badly.
And if your friend can't come to terms with this oncologist, the oncologist is ethically required to find him another.
Six years after leaving the Army, Soto still spent nights awake, trying to come to terms with his Korengal tour.
Or does she want to clear his name because she can't come to terms with how this reflects on her?
Their continued public prodding has left Silicon Valley no choice but to come to terms with its own business practices.
The Awami League, currently leading the government, say the tribunal is helping the country come to terms with its past.
Give the two of you time to be apart and come to terms with not being one another's person anymore.
So Trump may just have to come to terms with the fact he lost the popular vote fair and square.
"I had to come to terms with the fact that it's not a maybe," he sulks at the song's opening.
On the contrary, most of our moral and political inquiries are superficial, and we rarely come to terms with history.
Meanwhile, Dylan and Tank's community of adoring fans are still struggling to come to terms with Tank's death — and its implications.
I am teased on my ketchup usage and finally come to terms with the fact that I am addicted to ketchup.
Their real problem here is, they can&apost come to terms amongst themselves about what does acceptable immigration legislation look like.
Briana DeJesus struggled to come to terms with her ex-boyfriend Luis' reluctance to help her raise their newborn daughter Stella.
You can't adopt them all — that's the sad reality you must come to terms with when you enter an animal shelter.
I was in an abusive marriage before—perhaps that helped my parents come to terms with the fact that I'm gay.
Growing up as a devout fundamentalist Mormon in a polygamous family, Mariah Brown struggled to come to terms with her sexuality.
As hundreds of people queued outside the morgue, Amaya said Freetown was struggling to come to terms with its latest disaster.
I'm trying to come to terms with the fact that I'll probably spend the rest of my career covering the consequences.
Helen's daughter Mireille works to come to terms with forming her own identity as an actress away from her mother's fame.
I've come to terms with the fact that I'll never meet the Jim Halpert from my television screen in real life.
As they come to terms with living the rest of their lives on board, they begin to fall for one another.
It took me a long, long time to come to terms with the fact that it was him, it wasn't me.
After all those years of hurtling skywards, Vardy was forced to come to terms with some form of deceleration at last.
Some of those things are still hard to come to terms with, but everything starts to settle when you grow up.
She says she and her family struggled for years to come to terms with their son's identity as a gay man.
YNH: In essence, I think that we need to come to terms with the fact that we can't prevent it completely.
Things will end, the game seems to say, and the best thing you can do is come to terms with it.
But a source says it hasn't been easy for Kardashian to come to terms with her brother's relationship with Blac Chyna.
The family had more or less come to terms with what they thought was a terminal situation when Laura woke up.
That gave us several generations during which people could come to terms with how society was being changed by that technology.
He's right: We should be having a debate over how to come to terms with Boston's Colonial (and slave-connected) history.
The young woman has come to terms with her deadly illness and accepted she has about a year left to live.
This, I think, is the hardest thing to come to terms with: that the normal you've been chasing doesn't exist anymore.
CS failed to come to terms with Ally on a new US$11bn warehouse lending facility that was announced in March.
The government argues that Gersdorf and her fellows are communist holdovers who have not come to terms with the new Poland.
However, lawmakers have failed to come to terms on where to allocate the money amid disagreements over immigration and military funding.
Believers in the power of bankruptcy to provide a fresh start say the company must come to terms with its reality.
If the two companies don't come to terms by 5 pm ET on December 31, Verizon will stop carrying Disney channels.
"People have to come to terms with the reality that 'we really are different people,'" says Ellyn Bader, a couples therapist.
But it is the close-knit wrestling community that is struggling most to come to terms with its sense of betrayal.
It's about trying to come to terms with her identity after a lifetime spent trying to quash her most basic impulses.
Paris, December 31, 2018: Now 60, Dupont must come to terms with the fact that his investment strategy has misfired horribly.
I cried all the time because I couldn't come to terms with it, so I made myself over into Baddie Winkle.
The other side: Social media companies are maturing, the NYT wrote, as they come to terms with their reach and power.
If Rick Scott can't come to terms with what happened or speak up for his state after what happened, that's ridiculous.
The effort must come to terms with the fact that the United States economy benefits from workers of many different backgrounds.
But while Trump is still a clear favorite in Arizona, his campaign seems to have come to terms with losing Utah.
It's both helped me come to terms with the legacy in my family and also realize just how prevalent it is.
It is a growing threat that Facebook and similar companies have begun to come to terms with only in recent months.
Why should North Korea come to terms with a president who has no regard for a commitment made by his country?
"And as soon as you can accept that and come to terms with all of that, you can be really happy."
It's also a book about how Danticat and other writers have tried to come to terms with the fact of death.
But still, mature people should come to terms with the fact that they are not likely to be included in everything.
I think there is baggage that every American player carries, to a certain extent, that they've just come to terms with.
I was unable to come to terms with the fact she was no longer a part of the world around me.
"I haven't come to terms with everyone wanting a black and white answer of where Carter and I stand," she added.
But compelling for anyone who has struggled to come to terms with the loss of loved ones, no matter the circumstances.
But when evidence surfaces suggesting otherwise, they must come to terms with the fact that the murderer is still among them.
"We have to come to terms with the fact that this is going to cost a lot more money," O'Leary says.
And the adversaries are treated like competing mafia families you have to come to terms with to ensure your own security.
While it's easy to say beauty comes from the inside, many women won't ever have to come to terms with the idea.
After being in labor for 36 hours at home, I had to come to terms with having to go to the hospital.
"While they could be in a good emotional place, financially they have to come to terms, which is very difficult," she explains.
It took me a couple of years to come to terms with not being able to do music anymore at that time.
Although Horstmann has come to terms with the fact that his relationship with Kufrin is over, he wanted clarity on their split.
In the midst of the civil war, Nigerians were struggling to come to terms with the lingering after-effects of colonial rule.
As she struggled to come to terms with the illness, Colgan says it was late her grandmother's words that helped her through.
It took me over a year, actually, to come to terms with the fact that this work is really about mental illness.
And Ralph, despite a lifelong devotion to facts, must come to terms with an explanation that doesn't conform to the natural world.
This has buoyed global stock markets, as widespread expectations, including mine, are that the president will soon come to terms with China.
" He says attacks on CA are mostly by "the liberal press" supporting Hilary Clinton: "Hilary simply cannot come to terms with it.
Both sides clearly couldn't come to terms on a location, as you can hear in a heated phone convo between the parties.
Ryabkov proposed "that we come to terms and agree not to interfere in each other's internal affairs," said the senior US official.
Then there was the fact that Messer had to come to terms with losing custody of her twins after her rehab stint.
" They also asked for privacy as they "come to terms with the impact this horrendous crime has had on us as families.
But Kendrick says she's also come to terms with Pitch Perfect 3 being the last time she sings alongside the Barden Bellas.
"Regardless of what we had, I've come to terms with the fact that we were not right as life partners," he says.
As years passed, they began to slowly come to terms with the realization that a new baby wouldn't be in their future.
Even if the two sides could come to terms on tariffs, that might not mean an end to trade friction, Green added.
After her husband, Gordon, is arrested for securities fraud, the Kleins have to come to terms with losing their seemingly perfect lives.
But her son Jack could not come to terms with what had happened and took his life at the age of 16.
"I had to come to terms with what my real issues were, and it wasn't about going to the gym," she says.
Marroquin, now 22, was forced to come to terms with a staggering contradiction: He adored his father but hated what he did.
This is a feeling most moms must come to terms with after the blood, sweat and tears we put in, in retrospect.
Kasara: Yeah, so when I tell guys about my relationship, watching their faces as they come to terms with it is hilarious.
I was devastated last week but have now come to terms with her leaving and I'm able to feel excited for her.
Alan's husband now lives with another woman, and they have not been able to come to terms on child support, she says.
In about a month, the UK and EU will formally sit down to come to terms on how the negotiations will work.
Lorenz Larkin and Rory MacDonald, top ten welterweights by anyone's reckoning, recently failed to come to terms with the UFC as well.
But Kendrick says she's also come to terms with Pitch Perfect 3 being the last time she sings alongside the Barden Bellas.
I hope that they find some peace in knowing that I'm just genuinely -- I can't even come to terms with what occurred.
As she tries to keep her secret, wishes are piling up and she must come to terms with her abilities and past.
People seem to have come to terms with the idea that there is no government effort to take away guns, he said.
So I think all of my characters in the contemporary section are struggling to come to terms with life after the fire.
When it comes to managing your money, it can be difficult to come to terms with the choices you have to make.
With things like cloud storage and wireless accessories, it's actually pretty easy to come to terms with a USB-C-only laptop.
The two companies had until 5 pm ET on December 31, to come to terms before Verizon would stop carrying Disney channels.
As her parents come to terms with her sexuality, Jenny becomes more certain that her fiancée is the love of her life. 
It has taken me years to come to terms with the fact that nothing I ever do will make up for it.
The latter came out of nowhere, so Sydney spent much of the season trying to come to terms with what was happening.
"The biggest thing to come to terms with was that my entire childhood was kind of bought with stolen money," she said.
Stop the fighting and sideline JFS, and theoretically the government and the main rebel factions might be able to come to terms.
So Democrats might actually be less healthy because we weren't really forced to come to terms with a lot of these issues.
Yet he refuses to come to terms with his disability, including refusing to use assistive devices and skills he learned in rehab.
"We can't outsource our responsibilities, as difficult as it may be to come to terms on some of these issues," he said.
My family have largely come to terms with my sexuality, or at least understand what they can and can't say about it.
My husband and I had to come to terms with the most brutal outcome for a parent: We could not save him.
And I knew that I was going to have to come to terms with what happened and chart a path going forward.
The psychological and cultural inability to come to terms with that reality results in many victims being disbelieved, and treated quite badly.
Anyone still asking that question simply hasn't come to terms with why Donald Trump won the 2016 election in the first place.
In Tony Blair's day, Thatcherites reconciled themselves to opposition by arguing that they had forced Labour to come to terms with capitalism.
But he added that making "Warsaw Is My Name" has helped him come to terms with his conflicted feelings about his homeland.
Another speaker noted that she'd needed six hundred hours of counselling just to start to come to terms with her family history.
After all, the Germans had already come to terms with the Bolsheviks and sealed a treaty that knocked Russia out of the war.
"Being a proud feminist helped me come to terms with who I am and what my beauty stands for," Chopra tells Refinery29 exclusively.
Knowing your limits is a big part of being an editor and a journalist, and it's one that I've come to terms with.
We have to come to terms with the fact that embracing AI is rapidly becoming be a prerequisite for excelling in many fields.
David admitted he too struggled to come to terms with the death of his siblings and wanted to "confirm it" on his own.
I think it took some time to come to terms with even calling myself gay … I just simply started living as a lesbian.
Over the course of eight episodes, the show explores Ryan's sexuality, independence, and what it means to come to terms with his disability.
I'd have to come to terms with the fact that I can't control how other people feel, can't hold out for universal approval.
There is huge hole in our hearts as we come to terms with the loss of a great person and a good mate.
"A Calabrian mobster considering turning state's evidence has to come to terms with betraying maybe 200 of his relatives," Gratteri told the Guardian.
One such clone is assigned to man a distant outpost, and has to come to terms with a terrible incident in his past.
Relationships Gay supporters of May have compared her to a parent who has "come to terms with" her gay child, BBC Newsbeat reported.
And, while you're at it, take some time to come to terms with the fact that there are eight months left in 2018.
Winterkorn, who has taken no public role since leaving VW, said he too was still attempting to come to terms with the scandal.
The cheating scandal was just one catalyst for Getty, now 41, to overhaul his life and come to terms with his self-perception.
After a four-year hiatus from rapping, Awkwafina has come to terms with the fact that her music may not be for everyone.
But over the years, I've come to terms with the fact that The Walking Dead will never again be better than a cartoon.
There is a case to be made that in the 1970s, "Roots" did indeed push the U.S. to "come to terms" with slavery.
And it was really only through the discovery of gay porn that he was able to come to terms with his own sexuality.
EU member states must come to terms with what is realistically, and morally, needed to deal with the continuing exodus towards its shores.
The two countries are trying to come to terms so that Canada can join a trade deal struck between the U.S. and Mexico.
It's kind of beautiful to watch Chris come to terms with his early Survivor flameout, when he had daydreamed about a perfect game.
She's clearly come to terms with it, which is almost too bad — I'd love to hear what an enraged and jilted Cabello sings.
As they come to terms with living the rest of their lives on board the spacecraft, they begin to fall for one another.
And you've come to terms that your daily driver doesn't need to look like a race car, you'll absolutely fall for the M2.
Having missed out on Leonard, the Lakers used the cap space they had amassed to reportedly come to terms with five players Saturday.
Despite knowing he was gay since he was seven or eight, Michael struggled to come to terms with his sexuality as a teenager.
As an avid reader, he realized that the only way he would come to terms with being gay was to read about it.
The Mummers must come to terms with the parade's racist past, and instead of glorifying it in the present, they must denounce it.
So it was unsettling to watch Glenn shed that persona and come to terms with just having stabbed a Savior in the face.
Putin seems to have come to terms with the fact that, in the West, at least, he is unlikely to make any friends.
Typically both parties, the distributor and the content provider, come to terms about next steps before a signal is removed during a dispute.
More than that, the family — and those outside of it — continues to come to terms with Empire's pending heir, Hakeem's baby with Anika.
Many Western leaders have yet to come to terms with this new reality, hoping that anti-immigrant sentiment is just a passing phenomenon.
Sexual harassment isn't just a problem Hollywood is currently trying to come to terms with — it's "epidemic", one award-winning actress told CNBC.
Although, unlike me, he deals with a curable disease, he resembles all cancer patients who must come to terms with the term remission.
And in that hospital room and in the days and weeks that followed, I had to come to terms with that fear myself.
"I haven't come to terms with it — I am not sure there is a way I ever can, really," said Mr. Kristoff, 73.
Every nation, and the public, is being forced to come to terms with this imperialist past and the old institutions from that era.
In the same way Melo struggled to come to terms with his sexuality, each queen keeps their drag persona hidden for various reasons.
That's not something that they are interested in throwing away now that they have come to terms with their more ambiguous gender identity.
The market is trying to come to terms with what the virus fallout will be and what values do we assign to that.
In the time since that day, Game said he has struggled to come to terms with the pain he has caused so many.
Western powers have always been adamant that Kosovo, like other countries in the region, has to come to terms with the Balkan wars.
Now that Ehrenreich has come to terms with her own decline (she's 76), she says, she has grown deeply skeptical of modern medicine.
Carmakers have balked at the prospect, calling for the Trump administration and California to come to terms to avoid a messy legal battle.
The speed of the economic shutdown, the emptiness of major cities and a few other realities with which we must come to terms.
As the communities come to terms with the aftermath, civic groups are mobilizing to help those affected cover medical, funeral and other costs.
People in this generation often have an "agnostic" or "questioning" period where they come to terms with their own spin on their worldview.
Indeed, he said, he and Mr. Jorling would come to terms as they car-pooled to Capitol Hill together in a pickup truck.
Worth noting ... Sheila and Cleopatra have been at odds recently, so it's good to see they could come to terms on this issue.
Investors have to come to terms that "market choppiness is here to stay," said Wasif Latif, vice president of equity investments at USAA.
D.B.: I'm always very conflicted … that I've come to terms with myself, I'm not too much filled with deep shame all the time.
As in Canada, Mr. Eligon found that much needs to be done to eliminate prejudice and come to terms with the past there.
That is a curious fact, and, as we come to terms with the consequences of Snowden's actions, it may be an underappreciated one.
This nice pink book cover might help you come to terms with the fact that you try incredibly hard to never upset anyone. 
A devastated community mourns Back home in Kenya, a devastated family is trying to come to terms with the loss of three generations.
Having met his hero, Lee was – for a moment, at least – forced to come to terms with the reality of idolising Jamie Vardy.
Machine-guided, numbers-obsessed fund managers may keep selling pressure on stocks this week as they come to terms with the market's wild trading.
While that doesn't give you perfect peace of mind, it does help you come to terms with the fact that you're exercising due diligence.
It's HOT outside, and we've officially come to terms with the fact that we can't live off of iced coffee and ice cream alone.
However, I do think the company should gives users choice, especially while the market and the world come to terms with self-driving cars.
He's also passionate about helping young people understand and come to terms with their experiences, rather than feeling defined by them for a lifetime.
Odds are Spotify and Warner will eventually come to terms, and Warner's recorded catalog will come to Spotify's app in India at some point.
It had taken me years to come to terms with my own death sentence, with the fact that I would one day be executed.
Struggling to come to terms with the election of Donald Trump, many tech leaders faulted their own insulation from the concerns of Middle America.
As Russia approaches the centennial of the uprising, it has struggled to come to terms with the legacy of those who remade the nation.
By virtue of his success, the late monarch has left behind a modern country that now has to come to terms with his passing.
When a beloved artifact — a science fiction novel called The Pyronauts — goes missing, she has to come to terms with what she's really lost.
You see Jamie go through a multiple of personalities trying to come to terms with losing the person he loves and his unborn child.
Second, let's come to terms with what political science has known for decades, some of which my colleague Chayenne Polimédio has written about here.
People who drink ayahuasca typically want to go on a spiritual and emotional journey through their thoughts, and come to terms with traumatic events.
Ali says if Conor was serious about fighting Frankie -- he's had PLENTY of time to come to terms on a deal over the years.
In fact, they've reached out and told me how important this video has been in helping them come to terms with their own identities.
The participants were drawn from soldiers with spinal cord injuries, all of whom were having to come to terms with some form of paralysis.
"It was a real shock and, yes, it took me a while to come to terms with it," she told the Mail on Sunday.
Hawke plays Toller, an ex-military chaplain struggling to come to terms with the loss of his son, who he had encouraged to enlist.
Sherry Benson, a 57-year-old graphic designer from Marshalltown, said she is still trying to come to terms with Trump's evolution on abortion.
U.S. stock futures were set to extend Friday's gains on optimism that the Trump administration can come to terms on a China trade deal.
When will people like House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady and the rest of the Republicans come to terms with two simple facts?
The 27-year-old posted on Instagram about what it's like to come to terms with her new "post-baby" body — without a baby.
Knowing what victims and their caregivers will face in the days, months, and years after the shooting is difficult to come to terms with.
Some avoid succession planning because they don't ever expect to fully retire or, like many people, haven't come to terms with their own mortality.
Is Hillary ready to come to terms with why from 28503 to 22019, 93 percent of black homicide victims were killed by other blacks?
Although not all retailers have come to terms with the company's presence on their turf: new Amazon devices are still blocked from Walmart's stores.
If the parties involved do not come to terms, the country could default, and the markets could be put through another summer of tumult.
Her anger at the world when losing a loved one helped me to come to terms with death when it hit close to home.
At the same time I could see him struggling to come to terms with what he'd done and what his role in history was.
Trump has also recruited strong support from those who have not come to terms with the women's rights, reproductive rights and gay rights movements.
"It took Germany the longest of all partners to come to terms with someone like Trump becoming President," another senior German official told me.
The series plays out as a thought experiment — what will the Norwegians do as they gradually come to terms with their loss of sovereignty?
But Republicans who had opposed Trump had to come to terms with the fact that these warnings had not been heeded by their voters.
But for anyone who can come to terms with the irritation factor and get to work on the food, the rewards will be abundant.
After a week, my eye gradually and grudgingly has come to terms with what Toyota is trying to do, though larger wheels would help.
But the shakeup has thrown fans into a frenzy, with some struggling to come to terms with the sight of a human-like Pikachu.
Now, the mom of four says that although she knew Tony would die, she is still struggling to come to terms with the death.
"They're going to have to come to terms and lay off each other," said Erick Erickson, an influential conservative commentator, who convened the meeting.
On Friday, when the sun meets Pluto, planet of obsession, you come to terms with your own power and make some pretty hefty demands.
I find Instagram unbelievably boring and I've come to terms with the fact that I'll never understand its already large, and still growing, appeal.
But as much as I enjoy commanding a premium rate, I've struggled to come to terms with allowing myself to be fetishized so blatantly.
But even for people who have admired a public figure from a distance, it can be difficult to come to terms with negative revelations.
Those efforts clearly failed, and Republicans have to come to terms with the fact that the rot was far more advanced than we understood.
Ms. Bruce said it took a long time to come to terms with the notion that her father's comedy would be interpreted by others.
And the story of sexual abuse, while harrowing, appears not to have ruined its victim; Victor has come to terms with it at last.
It was only after 2012 that I managed to come to terms with Asmara and its countless murky stories of war, exile, and colonialism.
The Jeju killings remain a sensitive topic in South Korea, which is divided over how to come to terms with its tumultuous modern history.
We have long ago come to terms with the trade-off that to participate in social media, we must first give up our privacy.
For more than 30 years I've wrestled with how to come to terms with all that it embodies — and how to talk about it.
In essence, any deal between Trump and Kim comes down to three questions: Can Trump come to terms with Kim continuing to have nukes?
In the upcoming superhero horror flick The New Mutants, a diverse group of young mutants are forced to come to terms with their powers.
After seven months of negotiations, thousands of airport workers in New York and New Jersey have come to terms on their first union contract.
"But eventually, Saudi will come to terms with the fact that having Egypt on its side is more important than these islands," he said.
The process has been fraught with legal disputes in a show of how Spain still struggles to come to terms with its dictatorship past.
"Calypso" chronicles his latest attempts to come to terms with the slings and arrows of truly outrageous fortune that life has flung at him.
Shortly after her divorce, she decided that she needed to understand her mother's volatility to come to terms with her own depression and rage.
It was part theatre, part therapy, part séance—a measure of just how far Germans will go to come to terms with their past.
These clashes are likely to continue, and perhaps worsen, as America tries to come to terms with the deep emotions invested in our past.
Was it wrong to try to understand her own body, morphing in pubescence, and to begin to come to terms with her nascent sexuality?
Your ruling planet Jupiter squares off with hazy Neptune, finding you in a sensitive and emotional mood as you come to terms with disappointment.
But with each new negative test result, I began to come to terms with the fact that I would never have a biological child.
"When you walk into the vineyard and see everything just blackened and everything gone, it's pretty hard to come to terms with," Henschke said.
You watch as Johansson and Driver's characters navigate a divorce and come to terms with what that means for themselves and for their child.
You have to come to terms with the fact that this conversation will be upsetting for both of you and push through it anyway.
Whatever that suggests for the long term, in the short term it's clear that she is trying to come to terms with what happened.
It has grown in popularity among African Americans as an occasion to celebrate and help them come to terms with the legacy of emancipation.
A new regime will need to come to terms with creditors in order to be given access to international credit markets again and start rebuilding.
A poignant obituary for a young mother is starting conversations about opioid addiction, as the woman's family struggles to come to terms with her death.
The short-term resolution would leave open the possibility that lawmakers fail to come to terms and end up at another impasse in mid-February.
Even if the United Kingdom and Europe can come to terms, uncertainty will linger, said Andrew Pilgrim, who runs EY's government practice in financial services.
It also marked Facebook's first real election security test since the company has fully come to terms with the widespread political misinformation on its platform.
As Granger and Amber continue to come to terms with River's sudden death, they are doing their best to find the "good" in the situation.
As they come to terms with living the rest of their life on a spaceship, they realize they are starting to fall for one another.
He was really uncomfortable, and struggling to come to terms with the fact that he's not going to grow big and strong, just like daddy.
Therapy has helped a lot—it's pushed me to come to terms with accepting that this is my body and that I should own it.
In the early weeks of 1997, I was a high school sophomore just starting to come to terms with my identity as a queer woman.
"This is a difficult time for our people, their families and the Moranbah community as we come to terms with the tragic loss," he added.
As tough as it may be, we've come to terms with the fact that acne is a part of life that extends far past puberty.
It went dark on the satellite TV provider last night after the two sides were unable to come to terms on a new distribution contract.
While watching Ruth come to terms with her big move to Vegas, it's impossible not to think of the infamous closing scene in The Graduate.
If Trump's words emerge, as Drimmer and Fleming argue, "from our cultural legacy," then it is our responsibility to come to terms with that legacy.
Sometimes it means getting clients into therapy, or sitting with them as they come to terms with all the ways they'll never be the same.
"There is no more fuel in the engine," he says, adding that it is time for the country's leaders to come to terms with this.
Is this a happy ending where she's come to terms with technology and lack of privacy, as long as the evil overlords aren't behind it?
He has family friends around, but they've had to come to terms with the fact he's striking out on his own at a young age.
Over the intervening months the world has been forced to come to terms with—and repeatedly adjust to—having Mr Trump in the White House.
Becky Carter Phillips, Mykala's mother, told the AP that she's come to terms with the idea of never being able to properly bury her daughter.
Because at the end of the day I think if people watch the show, they will see people come to terms with their own insides.
Guatemalans are still struggling to come to terms with what happened in their civil war between US-backed rulers, left-wing rebels, and indigenous communities.
But then, we had to come to terms with the fact that there would be no more new vampire births or bed-breaking sex scenes.
Artist Anicka Yi's work rejects the traditional art making tools and forces the viewer (and sniffer) to come to terms with some otherwise gross things.
Markets had already come to terms with a U.S. rate rise, so they calmed down after an initial flurry following the release of the data.
"Once you put something on the internet, you have to basically come to terms with the fact that it's not necessarily yours anymore," Bogart admitted.
What issues do you think society as a whole needs to come to terms with and what ways would you suggest we fix these problems?
Analysts with ties outside China see major obstacles, notably on how both sides can come to terms over the treatment of Chinese telecom giant Huawei.
Perhaps now the men's team will finally come to terms with the fact that being just good or decent enough isn't an option any longer.
Through therapy, the lawyer learned to come to terms with her diagnosis, and now, she's excited to get to work on her mental wellness workbooks.
It also shattered her faith as she struggled to come to terms with how God could have allowed this to happen to her, she said.
Justice had sought a much higher fine at the time and, when the two sides could not come to terms, the department filed a lawsuit.
So we'd come to terms with that and decided to just do what we liked and forget about making it happy or poppy or whatever.
They say they want to end Obamacare, but haven't been able to come to terms, at least in public, about what that end would mean.
The movie shows Jackie in the first week after the assassination as she struggles to come to terms with the tragedy and her own grief.
The victims of 22018's Camp Fire might be experiencing solastalgia at this very moment as they continue to come to terms with their losses.
Though the fighting is over, the war has continued to impact Sri Lanka because the public has yet to come to terms with what happened.
As viewers, we've waited over two seasons for Kimmy to come to terms with the sexual and emotional abuse she endured while in the bunker.
Another portion resisted calls for change by turning inward and embracing a past that refused to come to terms with a national history of inequality.
Ullman recounts struggles to define herself in the boys'-club atmosphere of technology companies and to come to terms with the implications of her work.
But to do so, they need to come to terms with whom they are falling in line behind and what that says about their party.
"The children need time to come to terms with this, to get their bearings and find their feet," the royal palace said in their statement.
But doubts over the broader outlook for global growth and President Donald Trump's willingness to come to terms with Beijing over trade continue to weigh.
This is the first step to recovery and one the majority of those at the heart of this issue just can't come to terms with.
On election night, Mike Capuano appeared as a man who long ago had come to terms with the fact that demography would determine his destiny.
Even as Republicans prepared to leave Cleveland, they were still straining to come to terms with the views and personality of their newly minted nominee.
All these people are living double lives and are struggling to come to terms with their situation, but "Shab" is happy giving them lip service.
The governor left it up to the developers and the unions to come to terms on wages, but no compromise materialized, and the program expired.
He was 26 and struggling to come to terms with his sexuality when he climbed a hill near his home and over-dosed on painkillers.
"This step allows us to come to terms with the ill-conceived legacy of Meciar amnesties," leftist Prime Minister Robert Fico said before the vote.
I knew from our first interaction that she wasn't going to come to terms with there being another woman in Nate's life any time soon.
People think they know you -- they stop you and talk to you in a way that is sometimes quite difficult to come to terms with.
My breath hitches, not from the smell of manure but just from a sort of vertigo as I come to terms with the vast unboundedness.
My dad was such a believer, so I couldn't come to terms with how someone with such a deep relationship with God could be gone.
But having placed Fantastic Beasts within the context of the Potterverse has helped me come to terms with the movies glut of unsolved story elements.
It's been a lot to digest, and if we're being honest here, we might not ever fully come to terms with what it all means.
I've had to come to terms with a lot in my roughly 25 hours with Rage 2, id Software and Avalanche's new open world shooter.
It must come to terms with the fact that the anti-Trump sentiments its supporters feel so keenly are not a guarantee of electoral success.
Here we would expect the individual to come to terms with or neutralise the stressor, or even spontaneously improve across all clinical parameters after weeks.
It's hard to come to terms with death, even if said death is the end of a television program that loomed large in your imagination.
Having worked in the media, I knew it could help people come to terms with their sexuality by letting them know they are not alone.
Plus, Floyd told us he'll make a 9-FIGURE payday if he can come to terms with Khabib Nurmagomedov for a boxing superfight in 2019.
Watching her come to terms with her own vulnerability is as moving, and central to the story, as watching her and Eyulf fall in love.
Ingvar Kamprad's image and Sweden's continue to reflect each other: without shadows, without disgrace, and without any ambition to come to terms with their past.
Two Iraq veterans, Tom Voss and Anthony Anderson, decide to come to terms with their wartime memories by walking from Milwaukee to Santa Barbara, Calif.
Germany has yet to come to terms with its violent colonial legacy in Africa, which laid the groundwork for and inspired Nazi atrocities, they say.
I wonder if you had quite come to terms with your father's new life, and whether you weighed his feelings enough when you spoke up.
Justice had sought a much higher fine at the time and, when the two sides could not come to terms, the department filed a lawsuit.
Right now, lawmakers and the White House are attempting to come to terms on a plan to protect young undocumented immigrants while ensuring border protection.
Hensarling has a bit more leeway to push Senate Democrats to come to terms on a deal, and his minor concession today makes that easier.
Freeport and the finance ministry must come to terms on the requirement for the company to divest a 51 percent stake in its Indonesian unit.
"If you are woken up, you are shocked, and people struggle to come to terms with what has happened," she said of the residents' reaction.
I feel like I've finally come to terms with the responsibility I have as a creator — about 100 million subs too late, but you know.
The film follows a death row warden as she's forced to execute an inmate and come to terms with the psychological stress of the job. 
In a courtroom surrounded by other veterans, including Judge Dugan, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, Tim started to come to terms with his experience.
Is Brexit partly happening because Britain didn't come to terms with the empire, which is what kept Scotland, England, and Wales together over the years?
A lot of people, depending on any number of circumstances, have to come to terms with the Truth at earlier points in life than others.
As officials work to solve the case, Lauren's family works to come to terms with the death of the woman remembered as "sweet" and kind-hearted.
While the dispute in question has not yet been resolved, it will result in a significant windfall for Petrobras when the parties finally come to terms.
It wasn't easy, but I've come to terms with the idea that every woman becomes a mom in her own way and in her own time.
Philip, on the other hand, must come to terms with the idea that he won't be able to have the career or life he's dreamed of.
That's "Tootie" Smith (Margaret O'Brien) trying to come to terms with her family's impending move to New York, away from the family home in St. Louis.
You have to come to terms with that and find new ways to process things," Brimm told CNBC Make It. "It's an incredible source of resilience.
So he's going to have to come to terms with losing a lot of money and hoping that he's gonna regain it back in the future.
Joe Giudice is struggling to come to terms with an immigration court's ruling on Wednesday to deport him to his native Italy after his prison sentence.
Not until two additional single—"Beer Money" and "Hey Pretty Girl"—also exploded on the charts did the singer come to terms with his newfound success.
But it was only through beauty that I was able to come to terms with my own identity and self-acceptance as a Korean-American man.
Instead, there were the flat, controlled voices of those trying to come to terms with disappointment, while hoping against hope that their worst fears are wrong.
YouTube is too big to fail at this point, and labels have largely come to terms with Spotify's free tier due to its high conversion rate.
For some reason, the studio couldn't come to terms with the idea of Aziraphale owning a bookshop, so he had to work in the British Museum.
If this is true, it is bad news for a state that may have to come to terms with perpetual drought, particularly in its southern regions.
PlayStation Vue lost Viacom channels as a result, and Hulu couldn't come to terms with Viacom in advance of launching its live TV offering, for example.
She says these positive thoughts and well-wishes have been furnishing her with strength, which is helping her come to terms with the losses she's suffered.
So I think one of the human challenges is to come to terms in one way or another, with our inherent state of impermanence and mortality.
"I really had to come to terms with the fact that maybe it was going to be just Ricki and me forever," admits Maynard Johnson, 31.
Besh said that relationship was consensual, but has been working to "rebuild my marriage and come to terms with my reckless actions," according to a statement.
Since diving into the late French photographer's archives last year, I've come to terms with the fact that I don't live in his glamorous, supersaturated world.
The actress said her experience with Ratner stuck with her for several years and haunted her as she tried to come to terms with her sexuality.
But no matter how many pages it lavishes on worldbuilding and philosophy, it never manages to own that darkness — let alone come to terms with it.
Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure star Alex Winter has spoken about how filming the cult '80s movies helped him come to terms with his childhood sexual abuse.
But only recently did she come to terms with how pregnancy and delivery changed her body—which she detailed in a powerful new post on Instagram.
Christopher discovered his own skill as a writer, and published three volumes of an autobiography, which also helped him come to terms with his own identity.
But Russia and the US are on opposite sides of so many issues that the White House would certainly have to come to terms with it.
Now, Wagner is struggling to come to terms with news that the couple reportedly died in a helicopter crash shortly after saying "I do" on Saturday.
Once the embassy was taken by followers of Islamic leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Vance sought Carter's backing for an attempt to come to terms with Khomeini.
While we are confident that this is the right choice for us, it has for sure not been an easy one to come to terms with.
According to the CDC, before the retraction, Hawaiians were mostly trying to come to terms with the threat and searching for information about what to do.
Two months ago, Ruth Scully had to come to terms with the most devastating thing that could happen to any parent: losing her child to cancer.
Democrats not happy with her leadership have to come to terms with the fact that they aren't going to ever knock her out of her job.
Wahlberg, who has four children total with wife Rhea, says he has come to terms with the fact that his daughter will one day be dating.
Some users have seemingly come to terms with the fact that this constant switching between sites is now an established part how dark web marketplaces operate.
And as someone who has had friends who've come to terms with their own body image issues and eating disorders — I know this all too well.
"The entire film is filled with all different kinds of imperfections and failings, and it's always something you have to come to terms with," he says.
But as Ally's stardom begins to eclipse Jackson Maine's (Cooper), the struggling artist must come to terms with the fact that his spotlight might be dimming.
After all, I'd come to terms with other parts of my body — the faint stretch marks on my breasts and hips, my large hands and feet.
The children have come to terms with the split, more or less, and they are all entranced by Echo, their half sister, who is almost two.
In the aftermath of the slaying, Hugelmaier's family is struggling to come to terms with the death of a woman remembered as "sweet" and kind-hearted.
Although this isn't new information or even the first time this has come up, people are still struggling to come to terms with the shocking revelation.
Cantor said that while America boasts the largest economy in the world, Washington was yet to come to terms with a "very unconventional" and "disruptive" leader.
It's best not to make grand predictions about the midterms before we come to terms with what could happen well before the polls open in November.
Broken windows isn't just a phrase — this city and nation must come to terms with the continuing harm it inflicts on our communities and end it.
Formerly "bad foods" I'd come to terms with, like cereal, suddenly became the evil enemy again – and they were the only things I could keep down.
Austin is out this week due to a Dental Procedure, which leaves Patrick, Rob, Cado, and Danielle to come to terms with their own oral hygiene.
It's an elaborate scheme of who can make the other person the most jealous, although neither one really wants to come to terms with their feelings.
Mr. McCoy has spent the past few years exploring such vulnerability through his lens as he struggles to come to terms with his own war experience.
In other words, Ms. Holmes's mistake was that she refused to do what so many other entrepreneurs do every day, and come to terms with failure.
If the novel seems unrelentingly cheerless at times, its tone reflects Gavin's struggle to come to terms with his family's particular history of displacement and loss.
He notes that, in forcing Denmark to come to terms with its true size, 1864 was the foundation of the small but successful contemporary Danish state.
Two-thousand eight was an epic moment in history for us, and it really felt like America had come to terms with being an aspirational country.
Though his university environment was more liberal, Watson said he was still too shy and reluctant to come to terms with that part of his identity.
There and in other small villages, survivors gathered on Monday outside their houses, looking at one another dazed, struggling to come to terms with this tragedy.
Mr. Abe's visit will be one of a series of efforts by Japan to come to terms with its wartime history, without engaging in direct apologies.
Last month, Roku and Fox got into a brief-but-acrimonious public spat after the companies failed to come to terms on a new carriage agreement.
I ask if Silicon Valley needs a reckoning, if there's something the technology industry needs to do to come to terms with what it actually is.
"The inability to face up to a more modest royal family gels with our inability to come to terms with Britain's diminished role in the world."
I had to learn to become comfortable in front of the camera and to come to terms with letting myself be seen without dissecting every part.
In a world that treats them as invisible or cannot come to terms with their humanity, the internet allows them to affirm a sense of self.
At long last, we thought, America's greatest museum had come to terms with the art of its time, which it had formerly either marginalized or ignored.
Since its inception in 1969, "Sesame Street" has blended music, puppetry and animation to educate children worldwide and make them come to terms with hard truths.
The decision deals a blow to momentum in the investment community to coax fossil fuel companies to come to terms with the realities of climate change.
The party's leaders gave little indication that they would come to terms with the president if he simply changed the materials used to construct the wall.
"But the inability for metropolitans to come to terms with the shamanistic power of populism is as relevant here as it is over there," he added.
The investment comes after Target and Casper could not come to terms on an outright acquisition after Target offered to buy the startup for $1 billion.
And how do you frame that explanation in a way that allows victims to verbalize and come to terms with their own grief and, sometimes, anger?
Recently, however, more lawmakers around the country have come to terms with the need to account for race when putting together the details of marijuana legalization.
Minogue, who is engaged to 29-year-old British actor Joshua Sasse, said that she's come to terms with the "saddening" prospect of never becoming a mom.
I definitely don't get enough sleep, but it's something I've come to terms with because staying up late to watch reruns of The Office brings me joy.
We know it's tough to come to terms with, but if you don't believe us just check out this video of the Biebs throwing punches after church.
It's safe to say many Germans—and my Syrian refugee friends—will take some time to come to terms that kind of party doing so well nationwide.
Ham-fans must come to terms with the fact that the record-breaking musical is not likely Kellyanne Conway's — or any Trump supporters' — cup of colonial tea.
But I'm still trying to come to terms that we played a few festivals last year—Northside too, and we played this Revolution Brewery Festival in Chicago.
Mexico said on Wednesday it had to be ready to pursue a bilateral deal with the United States if Ottawa and Washington did not come to terms.
But I have come to terms with my body and that I'm not the kind of person you would see walking on a runway during fashion week.
While the world continues to come to terms with Donald Trump Jr.'s deplorable and inaccurate Twitter meme, even more issues about it are coming to light.
And it will be some time before all sides come to terms with this sudden and dramatic change in the political landscape and the balance of power.
Speaking from personal experience, I know just how hard it is to come to terms with sexuality and gender identity while being part of a religious community.
And we would be inside of Kevin (Justin Hartley), for instance, not being able to process his father's loss, or really come to terms with his grief.
Ultimately, though, we're not sure what is harder to come to terms with: Tom Schwartz putting a steak in his butt, or Tom Sandoval's braid/ponytail situation.
I was 37 when I met my husband – and had started to come to terms with the fact that it probably wasn't going to happen for me.
It takes time to come to terms with the loss of youth, to accept what is coming, and to figure out what to do in the meantime.
Dear fans, because I'm "toxic", I'm going to negotiate a contract for 6 months, not come to terms, then say I never wanted to do it anyway.
And that's something I've even had to come to terms with because I am conservative, but am I going to support a guy who is more moderate?
Serbia, an EU membership candidate, and its war-time foe Croatia, an EU member, are still struggling to come to terms with the aftermath of the conflict.
I know the date and time my child is going to die and we haven't even had time as a family to come to terms with this.
The aim of the Stoke Mandeville Games was not only to distract and entertain the veterans, but also to help them come to terms with their injuries.
Here are some other places around the South where communities have had to come to terms with the physical reminders of segregation: This photo taken Monday, Jan.
" He continues, "We are all sitting here trying to get our heads around the whole thing, just trying to understand and come to terms with it ourselves.
To make sure it doesn't control us, we should come to terms with the fact that it's more than the technology itself that's responsible for our habits.
Trump will come to terms with the spymasters, because in the end, they all serve at the pleasure of the president, and they will do his bidding.
St-Pierre himself teased a return many times but could never come to terms with the UFC over its single sponsor deal with Reebok among other issues.
A state of emergency is still in place in France, and people there are still struggling to come to terms with the horrendous events of last year.
Cramer has been saying for a month that until President Donald Trump and Congress come to terms, investors should not count on tax reform or infrastructure stimulus.
Asian shares were steady as investors tried to come to terms with a sharp shift in U.S. bond markets and the implications for the world's top economy.
I have had to come to terms with the reality that many people will not embrace the kind of work I am doing—even other professional historians.
" He continued: "Going forward, my having come to terms with my past conduct will inform all my future interactions not only with women, but with all individuals.
A similar failure to come to terms with the past, perhaps, explains, why Confederate flags are on sale at most car-boot sales in the Deep South.
Policymakers, advocates, and Washington insiders must come to terms with Trump's mindset if they want to have any hope of successfully convincing the president to shift course.
When it comes to shaping Pyongyang's calculus on its nuclear program, it is important to come to terms with some inconvenient truths that have hampered U.S. policy.
It may be worth noting that Mr. Murphy has long had ties to the Republican establishment, which has struggled to come to terms with Mr. Trump's ascendancy.
Since a coup attempt in 2016, many of the liberals who encouraged Turkey to come to terms with the genocide have been silenced or forced into exile.
But when he himself vanishes, she ventures in to find him, and in doing so, must come to terms with her mysterious powers and her own ancestry.
The show focuses on Cardellini and Applegate's characters as they come to terms with their grief, while also unraveling a mystery at the center of their friendship. 
Nearly four years later – and after writing a memoir titled Loving Amy: A Mother's Story – Janis says she has come to terms with her daughter's tragic passing.
Naturally, their age difference — and the jokes Charlotte cracks about it during a standup comedy set — is something Lee has to come to terms with as well.
But, between the lines, it was easy to discern the pain of a party still struggling to come to terms with Trump's victory over Clinton last November.
She has no money, no food, no shelter, no friends, and she must survive and also come to terms with this violent past and keep her sanity.
It's clear that the Clinton camp has been unable to come to terms with its defeat, just as many of its supporters continue their mantra of #NotMyPresident.
Months after Peter's botched proposal, it looks like his mother still has not come to terms with the fact that Hannah Ann will never be her daughter.
But the closest he ever came to hockey's highest level was when the Rangers offered him minor league contracts; the two sides could never come to terms.
But sooner or later we all must come to terms with the fact that not everybody is going to like us for both understandable and irrational reasons.
Season 2 picks up with its two-hour Christmas Special, as the eight protagonists, known as "sensates" in the show, come to terms with their new reality.
Once again we have to come to terms with being one of the Caribbean peoples on the hurricane highway, who, through slavery, colonialism and hurricanes, invented resilience.
The greatest vulnerabilities, Mr. Stewart said, lie in individual political campaigns, few of which have come to terms with the threat posed by foreign actors like Russia.
In August, the bishop replaced the congregation's lay leaders after failing to come to terms on $4003 million that he offered to advance for the repair work.
"In 1972 my mother was diagnosed with a terminal illness, and I had to come to terms with the fact that we're all mortal," Ms. Ford wrote.
Both sides could come to terms on whether there will be a sit-down interview in the coming weeks, according to a source familiar with the matter.
But after long weeks of work, Daniel was tired on weekends, maybe even more than usual, as he tried to come to terms with his wife's diagnosis.
But she was encouraged that the Fed signaled a more dovish stance on Wednesday, and she believes China and the United States will come to terms soon.
Bill Baxley's four sons — two of whom are physicians — struggle to understand what happened to their father and to come to terms with their own inherited risk.
Only days before Arconic shareholders are to gather in Purchase, N.Y., the company and Elliott, which controls some 13 percent of Arconic's stock, have come to terms.
We cannot come to terms with the Vietnam War until we acknowledge the story of the generation who served there and understand the emotional complexity they confronted.
Harry Potter fans around the world will have to come to terms with Johnny Depp as Grindelwald in Fantastic Beasts, and Daniel Radcliffe himself is among them.
Taking office in 2012, he still wasn't open about his sexuality, and didn't come to terms with publicizing it until he was deployed to Afghanistan until 2014.
But clearly the stock market has been trying, fitfully, to come to terms with the steady upward march in the 10-year Treasury, now at 2.85 percent.
The most recent episode showed Mia and Oliver struggling to come to terms with the Green Arrow&aposs death, since he&aposs not expected to survive "Crisis."
And finding someone who makes up for what you lack is better in the long run, even if it's hard to come to terms with at times.
The tiny East African nation is struggling to come to terms with a violent past, characterized by suffered colonial occupation, civil war and decades of intermittent massacres.
Do you think self-marriage receives criticism because it's a form of radical self-love too great for a lot of people to come to terms with?
Not only were they the victims of the most shocking political upset in generations in 2016, but they can't come to terms with the reasons for their defeat.
Former Secretary of State John Kerry warned that BDS could end up being a real problem for Israel if it fails to come to terms with the Palestinians.
But when an encounter with a budding Black girl magician turns her 13 again, she must come to terms with herself in a way she never has before.
I spoke with Mallory about being an advice columnist in the #MeToo era, and how men are finally starting to come to terms with their culpability in harassment.
Once outside again, however, I felt the chill of a nation unable, or unwilling, to come to terms with the demons of its own internal contradictions and strife.
The new U.S. administration should be given the courtesy "to come to terms" with their trade policy, McClay said, adding that Washington needed to show leadership in trade.
In a candid Instagram post last month, mom Kristelle Morgan admitted that she had to come to terms with a difficult reality after giving birth to her daughter.
As anyone who has ever come to terms with being remotely "different" from what society deems "normal" will tell you, no one wants a difference to define them.
Skip to 3:10 in the clip above for a top-down view of a man who clearly hasn't yet come to terms with the prospect of drones.
I had more or less come to terms with the fact that I wouldn't be able to do the work I do and stay in NY long-term.
Kasich cannot come to terms with the fact that President Trump is so popular, he can come to Ohio and draw crowds measured in the tens of thousands.
Mr Putin is probably right to reckon that the world will come to terms with the fall of Idlib, just as it acquiesced in the fall of Aleppo.
After you come to terms with the fact that October is somehow over already, Freeform's head start on the holidays gives you a lot to look forward to.
This is the point in every summer where we all have to come to terms with what is possible and shake off whatever is just dehydration-induced delusion.
At the time of her Tumblr relationship, Jordan was just 18 years old, and struggling to come to terms with her sexuality, as well as her mental illness.
Following a massive interplanetary war in a distant solar system, a veteran of the side that lost the war works to come to terms with what comes next.
One clone among many sent out to the colonies, he's forced to come to terms with his past if he has any hope of escaping from his posting.
It turns out that Bob and Mews are together, wherever they are, and that they've done some soul searching and come to terms with their violent, dramatic deaths.
Newly engaged couple Nikki Bella and John Cena don't plan on starting a family – and the Total Bellas star tells PEOPLE Now she's come to terms with it.
At the end of the most recent batch of episodes, Dunham's newly single Hannah had come to terms with her best friend Jessa's (Jemima Kirke) romance with Adam.
Global bond yields are on the rise, as traders come to terms with the idea that the easy liquidity from central banks may be coming to an end.
It's important that we all come to terms on history and our individual roles within history — and is there anything more important than race relations on planet Earth?
Now that I've praised the auditory experience of Bower & Wilkins' P7 wireless headphones, it's time to take it down a notch and come to terms with its shortcomings.
The workers were unable to come to terms with Wabtec, the western Pennsylvania-based rail transport company that took over the facility in its merger with GE Transportation.
The conference rooms alone where Trump and Kim couldn't come to terms cost $316k, and things like lights, stereo systems, drapes and awnings ran about $100k all together.
Since news of the scandal first broke in March, Loughlin and Giannulli's daughter Olivia Jade has faced intense backlash, which she's still struggling to come to terms with.
The experience of being reclined on is especially bad if it comes suddenly, mid-flight, after you've settled in and come to terms with your already cramped existence.
"Our thoughts are with all of those who died or were injured, and their loved ones as they try to come to terms with what happened," Crowther added.
I think my way of trying to come to terms [with my childhood] is to deal with the memories and come to some sort of understanding through examination.
We also know that many of the actors have come to terms with their characters potentially dying, considering the bittersweet realization that the show is wrapping very soon.
And I started wondering if they have been able to come to terms with the fact that this man may walk out the door and never come back.
His success was all the more noteworthy in that he had had to come to terms on his own with the inscrutable behemoth that was his chosen instrument.
It wasn't until the end of the Cold War that the nation began to come to terms with the enormous legacy costs of cleaning up the weapons laboratories.
The United States is about to enter its eighth round of bilateral negotiations with the Taliban to come to terms that would facilitate the withdrawal of U.S. troops.
"In the wake of his dramatic escape from captivity, Jesse must come to terms with his past in order to forge some kind of future," the description reads.
And it occurs to me that my grandmother's nightly cataloging of towns back then was her way to come to terms with Lebanon's own history of violent displacements.
Our defenses have been circumvented, and our cyber strategy is being put to the test as we come to terms with a growing cyber talent and technology gap.
Over the last five years, however, he's has started to come to terms with the fact that he actually likes superheroes, medieval battles, and nonsense involving magical lizards.
But if, before trial, you come to terms with it, and you agree to it, you can create more systemic change in an agency than a lawsuit can.
Six years later, he's still "trying to come to terms with his Korengal tour," Chivers writes, wondering if there would be "accountability" for those that sent them there.
Female Trump voters: It's fine if you've come to terms with not being a full human being in the eyes of your party, but what about your daughters?
That said, given the particular flavor of the current political turmoil, there's obviously an authentic phenomenon that we have to come to terms with, however tricky to define.
Fissures Splinter a Family's Suburban Facade In this dark, seething debut, 13-year-old Colin struggles to come to terms with his father's suicide and his own sexuality.
It will even let you rate how you feel about certain expenses after the fact, helping you come to terms with some of your less favorable spending habits.
Eighteen months into the trade battle with President Donald Trump, China has come to terms that it's fighting a forever war as conflicts have spread well beyond trade.
Welshman Owens, who came out as gay in 2007 after a long struggle to come to terms with his sexuality, gave "all (his) support" to Thomas on Twitter.
United has scrapped and struggled to come to terms with life at the end of empire, making little impact on the competition, if it has qualified at all.
If Republicans come to terms with their total lack of a reasonable repeal plan, more of them will be open to a bipartisan compromise to fix Obamacare's flaws.
Valerie is corralled into being a bridesmaid for a wedding she can't come to terms with, especially with Alex and Judy in the throes of new relationship bliss.
Doris Stevens is struggling to come to terms with the mysterious death of her son Ronald Wayne White, who she said had been missing since 2016, WFAA reports.
While there has been some willingness by liberals to come to terms with aspects of the conservative critique, the same cannot be said for the social issue right.
In addition to pain management, she would receive social, emotional and spiritual support, which would help my great aunt and our family come to terms with her illness.
Germans, who have prided themselves for generations in an orderly society that requires only gentle policing, are beginning to come to terms with change on a vast scale.
"I think the market's starting to come to terms with these higher rates," Mihir Worah, PIMCO's chief investment officer for asset allocation and real return, told CNBC Wednesday.
CNBC's Jim Cramer reveals a list of stocks that he thinks would be worth buying if the United States and China come to terms on a trade deal.
If we learn to celebrate life for its ephemeral beauty, its coming and going, appearance and disappearance, we can come to terms with and make peace with it.
Still, he held out hope that the United States and Russia could come to terms, suggesting that Mr. Tillerson's talks with Mr. Putin had gone better than expected.
As Hurricane Dorian began to lash the Carolinas on Thursday, people in the Bahamas were beginning to come to terms with the with the scale of their loss.
And to see you willing to come to terms with you who you are in a room full of thousands of people you never met, that's really something.
But what McConnell and the rest of the establishment still can't seem to come to terms with is that it is this very "element" successfully elected a president.
Our society must come to terms with the fact that people will have to be given the means to a happy, healthy and productive life without paid jobs.
With lawmakers home in their districts for a two-week holiday recess and Mr. McConnell and Mr. Schumer unable to come to terms, the proceedings are in limbo.
But, you might argue, even if social evolutionism is offensive it might nonetheless be right, a harsh truth we need to come to terms with about "human nature".
But sources familiar with Sessions' thinking say he has come to terms with the fact that his relationship with Trump won't end well one way or the other.
It could be with India, if he and Prime Minister Narendra Modi can come to terms during Trump's official trip to the country in less than two weeks.
Reports of terrorists carrying out attacks despite having been under surveillance are hardly new in Europe, as security services struggle to come to terms with each new threat.
The EU insist Britain come to terms on its withdrawal treaty, notably now on the Irish border "backstop", before Barnier enters into talks on a future trading relationship.
The first half of the month finds the Sun in your sign challenging Mars in Scorpio, forcing you to come to terms with some difficulties concerning these themes.
Beyond the practical difficulties of being a national team member without the accouterments of a national team, gymnasts are struggling to come to terms with a harsh spotlight.
In the past ten years, George and Cindy Anthony have struggled to come to terms with the death of their granddaughter and the subsequent murder trial of Casey Anthony.
We will be providing specialist support for our pupils and staff and we ask to be given the time and space to come to terms with our huge loss.
Few of them ever expected to share the same feelings as those across party lines, and must now come to terms with finding themselves in the same big boat.
But as a result, I'm still trying to come to terms with what it means to me and I hesitate to describe a reaction to audiences in the stands.
This would be a much more direct challenge to Moscow's authority, forcing it to come to terms with its lack of positive support and real soft power in Eurasia.
Wilkinson also took to Twitter to thank fans for their support and condolences, and she didn't hide the fact that she's struggling to come to terms with the loss.
Photo: GettyAmericans have soured on Facebook in the past year, as more people come to terms with the toxic role that the social media platform plays in their lives.
The main job of their successors was to come to terms with these twin revolutions: Tony Blair converted Labour to Thatcherism and David Cameron converted the Tories to Jenkinsism.
Roanhorse shows him trying to come to terms with the mess he made of the Resistance, and going to extraordinary lengths around the galaxy to make up for it.
In the weeks since Prince's death, people who loved his music struggle to come to terms with reports that opiate drugs may have played a part in his death.
Both sides had for a time been talking up progress but many Brussels diplomats and officials have questioned whether May could appear to come to terms quite so quickly.
A year and a half later, the survivors try to come to terms with their survival and imprisonment, while the missing heir to the family, Lucas, is still missing.
As Jessa struggles to keep her family afloat, she realizes she must come to terms with who these people are — and how they've made her who she is, too.
More of his insights would have been welcome; he has announced himself here as a voice to be listened to as Turkey struggles to come to terms with itself.
Olivia Jade is struggling to come to terms with the backlash she's faced since her parents Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli were charged in the nationwide college admissions scam.
The two sides failed to come to terms in a prior round of talks last December, when they concluded by saying they had made progress but needed more time.
"I really had to come to terms with the fact that maybe it was going to be just Ricki and me forever," Maynard Johnson told PEOPLE in December 2017.
In especially poignant scenes, Alex and Anna must come to terms with their grief at losing their young children and also with their children's future grief at losing them.
As the state struggles to come to terms with the devastation — while continuing efforts to put out the fires — investigators are working to determine the cause of the blazes.
Months after the traumatic incident, Tammy Lawrence-Daley finally feels comfortable to share her story and come to terms with what happened during her trip to the Dominican Republic.
"All around the world people are trying to come to terms with the horrific events that took place in Orlando this morning," Corden said at the top of telecast.
I was just thinking of when I was in eighth grade, and I was trying to come to terms with myself, but I wasn't also competing with people online.
Realizing how much pain she was in for how many years, and how deeply she suffered, was really something that was hard for me to come to terms with.
The company had lost sight of its branding, partly due to conflicting demands from retailers, and partly because Jones hadn't come to terms with his mother's death in 2012.
While Cotton's gender identity has clearly been difficult for Carlotta to come to terms with, it's not the only thing that has driven a wedge in the pair's relationship.
While talk of football has been muted as fans, players and officials come to terms with the tragedy, starting afresh would not be a new experience for the club.
Watching George come to terms with his own unhappiness keeps that final beat of reuniting with his family, which practically bubbles over with grateful joy, from being too saccharine.
Brenna told Glamour that she was inspired to share her inner thoughts because she's an actress, and finds it helpful to come to terms with what's in her head.
" "Before it is too late, Washington must give up the misguided notion that our relationship can be asymmetrical and come to terms with the fact that Turkey has alternatives.
Tisha Campbell-Martin and Duane Martin have finally come to terms -- at least temporarily -- on how they'll handle exchanges of their kids ... a promising sign in their nasty divorce.
"Dear fans, because I'm 'toxic', I'm going to negotiate a contract for 6 months, not come to terms, then say I never wanted to do it anyway," he wrote.
A recent profusion of personal narratives, best-selling books and social entrepreneurs' projects suggest that, as a culture, we are finally starting to come to terms with our mortality.
In 2003, Jan and her mother, having come to terms with Berchtold's manipulation and abuse, collaborated on a book about her ordeal titled Stolen Innocence: The Jan Broberg Story.
When dealing with Putin, President Trump's vaunted deal-making ability will be of little use, as he will be attempting to come to terms with a fundamentally amoral man.
Schwab was the son of Kansas State Representative Scott Schwab, who said in a statement that the family was devastated and trying to come to terms with their loss.
But CBS and Viacom have not been able to come to terms on some aspects of the merger, and CBS was fighting what it called interference by the Redstones.
CBS and Viacom have not been able to come to terms on some aspects of their merger and CBS is fighting what it calls interference by the Redstone family.
McCain doesn't really come to terms with that series of decisions in his book, although he does distance himself from many of Trump's policies, and from his mind-set.
The show gives them the space to come to terms with how oppression and violence remain ingrained in people, haunting them in the decisions that allow their daily survival.
Aikman says you must come to terms with the challenges you are facing while unemployed, but showing the employer why you are motivated and want to work for them.
The Man in Charge: Adam Nawałka, a stony faced 58-year-old who looks like a university lecturer who's never quite come to terms with the death of postmodernism.
Well, I think self-love and self-awareness are things that I've really had to come to terms with and figure out through a lot of trial and error.
" A former Trump Administration official said, "For a lot of people in that room, it was the first time they had to come to terms with Trump being President.
At the Quebec mosque, its windows still pocked with bullet holes, the Muslim community is still struggling to come to terms with the attack and their fear and grief.
"Witte de With has 'failed' to come to terms with its own internal contradictions, and has yet to reckon with the historical figure it symbolically embodies," the letter read.
Those returning must come to terms with an island that is still crippled, where power outages are frequent, businesses remain shuttered and hillsides are pocked with blue roof tarps.
"I think those that are arguing for a long extension are doing it because they think Britain needs a long time to come to terms with itself," he said.
" Playing a hot elf wasn't necessarily the catalyst for Amy to come to terms with her gender identity, but she sees the experience as a "piece in the puzzle.
Before it is too late, Washington must give up the misguided notion that our relationship can be asymmetrical and come to terms with the fact that Turkey has alternatives.
I've come to terms with the great peace and satisfaction I now find in fully unpacking — but only if I'm in the same place for more than three nights.
"It was one of those things where we struggled a little bit to come to terms with whether or not we wanted to brand ourselves as keto," Pulida said.
Of course, this is to be expected since Everybody is everybody, and everybody — as you surely know, whether you've come to terms with the idea or not — is mortal.
"Well, I think we've only scratched the surface of what it means to come to terms with living with yourself, living with the world, living with others," he says.
On the Lower East Side, Hana McGrath, 34, a licensed real estate agent at TripleMint, has come to terms with the ups and downs of living above a bar.
Fiction will have to come to terms with its complicity with the status quo, and will hopefully stop trying to tell stories without looking directly at who inspires them.
But it strikes me that before you decide to give away some of your power to outsiders, you first have to come to terms with how powerful you are.
But I now realize that I did the best I could at the time, and I had to come to terms with my new reality at my own pace.
According to his interview, that's when he realized how "untenable the situation was," and felt he needed to come to terms with his identity in a more public way.
The new wave of anti-LGBT measures is forcing many to come to terms with contrasting views: Blacks who disapprove of homosexuality who also strongly reject anti-gay discrimination.

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