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Most of our time is spent with the outer life -- our jobs, our friends and families, our hobbies, or our health. We spend much less time with the inner life, that place of feelings and thoughts, anger and love, hopes and dreams. When we do spend time with the inner life, it can often be overwhelming and disruptive, taking over our lives with feelings of hopelessness and fear or with endless ruminations about our past and worries about our future. In the practices of this book, we learn how to make friends with our inner life, to reconnect with ourselves, others, our world, and with God. We learn to have productive conversations with three specific inner voices: our separated self who lives in a world of scarcity and fear, our connected self who lives in an expansive world of abundance and compassion, and the watcher who stands apart from all the conflicting conversations going on in the inner life. The watcher decides how then shall we live. With a little time and some practice, we can bring our inner turmoil to a peaceful resolution and live a life that is safe, joyful, focused, and filled with compassion.
Money-saving advice from Canada's leading consumer advocate In this book Ellen Roseman distills the financial advice she gives in her columns and blogs into 81 quick tips that all Canadians can use to help them spend sensibly, save money, and avoid costly consumer traps. This book of "personal finance greatest hits" is filled with illustrative examples and cautionary advice from Roseman and stories from her faithful readers. Filled with a wealth of information, the book includes the low-down on dealing with banks and car dealers, cutting costs of communication services, improving your credit, buying and renovating a home, fighting online fraud, ensuring you have the right insurance, and more. Offers an easy-to-use guide for being smart with your money Includes how to advice on handling the most common financial pitfalls Contains the best advice from Ellen Roseman's columns and blogs Written by Canada's most popular and savvy consumer advocate Don't spend another dollar until you read Ellen Roseman's best-ever tips for saving money and making wise financial decisions.
How can a girl become the most powerful magus when she can’t even cast the simplest of spells? This is the destiny and dilemma of Max Quigley. When a prophecy foretells her death, Max must learn how to be impervious to spells and prevent the prediction from coming true. Readers can follow her journey as she struggles to find her way out in Spellbind, the new novel authored by Clare Cherikoff. Mixing ancient Sufi wisdom, mysticism, western folk lore and quantum science, Cherikoff creates a magical world filled with unusual characters who impart hints and clues to empower both Max and the reader to break free from spells of negative illusion. Everything in Max’s world could be a spell to delude her or awaken her potential to become the powerful magus she is meant to be. Battling both, the spells thrown at her and the spells from within, Max must fight the professors conducting heinous experiments on children. Complications arise in her rescue attempt when the authorities want her dead. They know she is different from everyone else. They know she can see bird spirits attached to everyone when they cannot. All she knows is that she has to uncover the mystery of the bird spirits to survive. In a world where magic, illusion and deception reign, Max needs to realize the truth before time runs out. Readers will find themselves engrossed in this enchanting tale as they fall under the magical spell of Spellbind.
This book contains 275 reproductions of black velvet paintings. It traces the roots of the art form from ancient China and Japan through to Victorian England, the Pacific, Southeast Asia and the Americas.
Sudan's post-independence history has been dominated by political and civil strife. Most commentators have attributed the country's recurring civil war either to an age-old racial divide between Arabs and Africans, or to recent colonially constructed inequalities. This book attempts a more complex analysis, briefly examining the historical, political, economic and social factors which have contributed to periodic outbreaks of violence between the state and its peripheries. In tracing historical continuities, it outlines the essential differences between the modern Sudan's first civil war in the 1960s and the current war. It also looks at the series of minor civil wars generated by, and contained within, the major conflict, as well as the regional and international factors - including humanitarian aid - which have exacerbated civil violence. This introduction is aimed at students of North-East Africa, and of conflict and ethnicity. It should be useful for people in aid and international organizations who need a straightforward analytical survey which will help them assess the prospects for a lasting peace in Sudan. Douglas H. Johnson is an independent scholar and former international expert on the Abyei Boundaries Commission.
A forced landing is a pilot's worst nightmare. The forced landing of an airliner, on the desolate ice fields of Antarctica, is unimaginable. As winter draws its white cloak over the continent, rescue becomes impossible; hope slips away, and the ice entombs its victims. Years pass, generations come and go: alien contact is made, and the world is subjugated. Now the future depends on one man, and a young girl.
My poetry covers a great range in verbal style, tone and subject matter. It is often markedly ironic and/or satirical, particularly when dealing with social or political issues. The poetry also tends to want to explore spiritual and/or philosophical questions, and can be seen to reflect the poets English ancestry (and literary heritage), his sense of the history and changing political landscape of South Africa, and to raise the great conundrums regarding the place of human beings in a cosmos that science is revealing is far stranger than we thought, perhaps stranger than we ever could have imagined. Lastly, the poems particularly those written over the last few years -- can show a somewhat playful, even irreverent, attitude to the idea of poets and poetry that we can characterize as postmodern, but which for all their playfulness and reference to popular culture raise concerns about the future of poetry and the human values with which poetry has always strongly identified, in our globalized, mass-media world of the sound bite and the visual image.