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To everything, there is a season and seasons do change. In this book, you will receive encouragement to go through the process and transition associated with your season. The Word of God helps you navigate your season and give you confidence, trust, and assurance that no matter the crushing of the season, God will not abandon you. This book ignites and stirs up strength for the believer in trusting the process of their season, for it is God who changes times and seasons. Embrace your process. Embrace your season. Don't avoid it, for seasons do change.
Today's Christian woman is faced with a dilemma, and its name is "multi-." While trying to serve the Lord, multiplicities of responsibility vie for her attention. She wrestles daily to handle it all and simultaneously understand her multifaceted nature. But unfortunately, helping others often prevents the healing of issues within her soul. An Anchor for My Soul Devotions addresses these issues, facilitates healing, and anchors Christian women who are dizzy and discombobulated from the whirlwind of multiple responsibilities, talents, and roles. Before a ship sets sail, it must be anchored and refueled. This twenty-one-day devotional is the multitasked, multifaceted woman's necessary daily dose of anchoring and refueling.
Little Jackson is a superhero who puts bad guys in jail until one day he finds out that his mommy is having a baby. In fact, she's having twins! This story shows how our little superhero prepared for his greatest adventure yet... becoming a big brother.
The story we tell ourselves is the one that becomes the most true . . . But what if that story is based on the wrong information?We're told that history tends to repeat itself. We're not told that unaddressed trauma and emotional wounds can be passed from one generation to the next. In very real ways-backed by science--we inherit the pain of our ancestors, creating generational patterns of trauma and dysfunction.In Generations Deep, author and licensed professional counselor Gina Birkemeier helps readers explore the impact of generational patterns and the dangers of passing dysfunctional and traumatic cycles from one generation to the next. She combines memoir, ancestry, questionnaires and inventories developed by trauma-informed mental health professionals, and journal prompts, along with Scripture and scientific research. The result? A practical, life-applicable book unlike anything else that's out there today. As you read, you will feel like you are "in the room" with Gina. She will speak to your story regardless of your faith orientation and perhaps challenge your definition of trauma along the way.If you are interested in the power of familial legacy and what it means to be a cycle breaker, this is the book for you. It will help you slay shame and find the freedom God wants for you, and for the generations after you.
A man mysteriously disappears in a lighthouse, as if dissolved by light, leaving behind a notebook filled with bizarre claims of a curse and a series of drawings entitled 'The Death of the Jubilant Child.' The investigation into the disappearance unearths hidden connections between the disappeared man, Helene and the strange figure of the Man With The Forks In His Fingers. Fifteen years later, the discovery of the detective's copy of the notebook by Helene's daughter seems to set in motion a repetition of the events of the past.Circuitously structured and intensely lyrical, The Autodidacts explores the mythos of friendship, the necessity of failure, the duty of imagination, and the dreams of working class lives demanding to be beautiful. It is a prayer in denial of its heresy, a metafictional-roman-a-clef trying to maintain its concealment, and an attempt to love that shows its workings out in the margins of its construction.
Boredom. Anxiety. A virus that''s ravaging anything and everything Human. Welcome to your new home!Man. Forties. Bushwick apartment. Compiling rants and recipes by the day. From a written log emerge unraveling strings of consciousness during the days of endless quarantine and a sickening new reality. 2020.Iron your money, kids!Played out in real time within the context of a rapidly crumbling economy and diseased political system, se-ques-tered is like a documentary series shot from the inside of one person''s brain, offering a kaleidoscope look at the increasingly transparent frailty of American life.
A compilation of essays on literature, ranging from bona fide scholarly interventions, to reflective articles and review-essays which I deem to be of substantial enough worth.
Daniel Day Lewis, Tilda Swinton, Kate Winslet and Alan Rickman star in Cinema, a novel that explores the hitherto unrecognized relationships between acting, writing, performance, being, office politics, restructures, and corporate thinking about new ways of working.Nick Clement, former small-time circus impresario, is resigned to his existence in a valueless bureaucracy where he learns the new languages of activity-based working, collaborative spaces and cross-functional engagement. Clement and his new colleague, Claire, are tasked by the company with undertaking a whole-of-business analysis of where operational improvements can be made. In the face of this opportunity to demonstrate his executive potential, Clement''s life takes a turn when he meets Claire''s film director boyfriend, James McNeil. McNeil has written a screenplay of such overwhelming complexity and beauty it seems it could never be realized.The screenplay is picked up and financed by a well-established and ambitious English film producer, who is able, because of the ground-breaking nature of the work, to engage four of the finest actors of their generation to commit to the project. There is one role in the cast that is unable to be filled, that of Friedrich Engels, the great comrade of Daniel Day Lewis'' Karl Marx. Nick Clement is, against his better judgment, thrown into a film production that will change the course of cinema forever.Cinema will take you to Sydney, London, the Sachsenwald Forest outside Hamburg, and Los Angeles as it explores the birth of Communism, Germanic-Gypsy history, and an invisible writing that foretold a great literature of the future. It will take you across the Atlantic in a medieval replica sailing boat hand-made by the the most admired actor of the last 40 years. In essence, Cinema outlines a never-ending performative process of being.
It''s 1998, and Jim Diffin is a charming, reckless, college sophomore with a unique moral code, a crew of wild friends, and no interest in serious relationships. That is, until he meets Diana Huntington, a precocious teenager who doesn''t fall for him so easily and embodies everything he''s ever wanted. The longer they date, the more her cool aloofness entrances him.His friends, a memorably eclectic mix of social outcasts offer no shortage of dubious advice and the usual relief of tea with his mother will lose its typical solace once he learns she has worse troubles herself.And while comforting his mother, weighing the insights of his friends, and agonizing over Diana, his mindset opens to a new way, but can his compassion, patience and burgeoning enlightenment ever win him the girl?In the course of The Way Rain Falls, blind hope and frenzied despair send Jim careening from candle-lit dinners to street fights, intimate camp-outs to a drug fueled road trip to Canada, and an indiscretion Jim may never live down.
Joey Truman, today's "poet of the appetites," pays tribute to food, and all who have eaten it, in Whiskey Tit's first foray into food writing, Cooking Cockroach. From dented cans and found foods to homemade spices, immerse yourself into methods, tips, and poor person's techniques in making delicious food without delicious amounts of dollars. From taco burgers and hot pot to campfire chicken legs, Joey wastes not a dime nor a morsel while charming the masses with his one-of-a-kind kitchen skills.Because starving to death is no excuse for a lousy meal.
When she met the best engineer of dams at the railway station, her inside pleasantly warmed to medium rare. At the end of a two-minute small talk, she sensed that Mr. Winter, skipping the intermediate phases, was already overcooked.
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