pick oneself up off the floor
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]pick oneself up off the floor (third-person singular simple present picks oneself up off the floor, present participle picking oneself up off the floor, simple past and past participle picked oneself up off the floor)
- (figuratively) To resume normal activities after a period of being incapacitated by grief or circumstances.
- 2012, Lisa Cypers Kamen, Harvesting Happiness for Heroes:
- There will be a time when you need to pick yourself up off the floor and get moving, but that time is not right away. If you did not let yourself have a time to grieve, you would cripple the sadness and loss within you, stifling the natural healing and your ability to progressively repair.
- 2016, B.J. Scott, The Connected Seven, page 10:
- Now, pick yourself up off the floor and be a man about it.
- 2017, Jon Hershfield, Shala Nicely, Everyday Mindfulness for OCD:
- How do you pick yourself up off the floor when you feel so stuck?
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see pick up, off, floor.
- 2013, Erik Yeager, The Narrow Road: A Pilgrim's Progress, page 89:
- More maniacal laughter ensued as John quickly picked himself up off the floor and scooted on hands and knees back to a sitting position against the rough stone face.
Translations
[edit]Translations
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See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “pick yourself up off the floor”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.