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Whether next door or in the next time zone, our friends provide some of our most important relationships. We cherish time spent with them, endure time spent apart, and look forward to the next time we can have coffee or rush to greet them as they walk toward our door. And nothing warms our hearts like reading stories of true friendship. Collecting over fifty true stories from some of today's best writers, Dawn Camp offers readers a chance to sit back and experience the gift of friendship. With its beautiful photographs and poignant prose, this collection is a great gift for a dear friend and the perfect pick-me-up any time you need a boost. Contributors include Crystal Paine, Liz Curtis Higgs, Tsh Oxenreider, Myquillyn Smith, Jennifer Dukes Lee, Lisa-Jo Baker, Jessica Turner, Lysa TerKeurst, Bonnie Gray, Holley Gerth, Renee Swope, and many more.
Written by Lisa-Jo Baker of the (in)courage women's community, Never Unfriended, is a step-by-step guide to friendships you can trust with personal stories and practical tips to help you make the friends, and be the friend, that lasts.
After the tragic events Monique and Razzle over came in The Price of Love Monique brings a secret back with her from the island. She is pregnant with Roger's baby. When Razzle finds out, he is full of jealousy and Monique is full of joy. Now a part of Roger will be a cloud over them forever. Razzle's career takes a downslide and he spends all of his time on the road, leaving Monique with her child (Chance) as her only love and friend--an unconditional love. As years passed Chance loved life and his Mama, and he never failed to tell her so. Chance was Monique's heart and soul. She knew she would die without him, he was her reason for living. When Carlton and Lucy try and take over, they cost Monique everything, including Chance. Unconditional Love is the story of a mother and son and their life together. When it ends in disaster, it leaves not only Jennifer dead but also, Monique's heart and soul. This was one disaster from which she would never recover.
"He rocked my foundation! Greg Baer touched me deeply. He's got the answer to finding happiness in life."—Tony Trupiano, Talk America Why do most of us search our entire lives for loving and happy relationships but rarely find them? What is the "secret something" that all relationships need in order to thrive? Dr. Greg Baer found the answers to these questions while working with thousands of individuals and couples. In Real Love, he shares his enlightening and practical blueprint for creating successful relationships and reveals the secret to finding and keeping what he calls "Real Love." In Real Love, you'll discover: · The difference between Imitation Love and Real Love · How to eliminate conflicts with spouses, children, parents, friends and colleagues · How to put an end to destructive “Getting” and “Protecting” behaviors · How Real Love can eliminate anger, resentment, and fear · The four steps to finding Real Love With Real Love as your guide you can begin to heal the wounds of your past and create rewarding and fulfilling relationships in every area of your life.
Enjoy the antics of two very "freed-up sentient beings" who have taken hilarity to a precarious level as they wing their way into your heart. (Jim is a flight attendant and Charlene is. . . well, she's just flighty). Share their joy, laughter, and even a few tears as they warm hearts and open minds in this straightforward account of true friendship. With honest conversations, humor, probing, accepting, sharing, and understanding, they quite possibly could knock down even more barriers involving discrimination, ignorance, bigotry, and inequality. James Pauley, Jr. was a flight attendant from 1978 to 2023, a career he loved. It gave him the opportunity to see the world, meet thousands of interesting people, witness things not for the faint of heart, and get lots of material for future writing endeavors. He lives in Indiana with Rich, his spouse of forty-two years. He is the author of Bumpy Rides and Soft Landings. Charlene Potterbaum is the mother of six, who is still scratching her head, wondering how she and her husband, Gene, raised them. She has loved writing from an early age. Through it, she could create characters or be whoever she wanted to be. Now in her ninth decade, she lives in Indiana and is the author of Joy of Six and the best-selling Thanks Lord, I Needed That.
Offers actual examples of unusual animal friendships, including a camel and a potbellied pig, a giraffe and an ostrich, and a bear and a cat.
This work represents a view of the world through the eyes of one who lived through an age of changing attitudes towards many areas of morality, particularly sexuality, abortion, prostitution, drinking and gaming. The chapters describing the London of the 1960's are illuminating. The author has removed the rose-tinted spectacles through which the decade is so often projected and inverted them; the veneer of good times is therefore in the background to the decade's true sordidness and squalor. A number of the scenes whilst not gratuitous are certainly not for the prudish. Although autobiographical this is a modern story about Peter and Vincent's life together, portraying a homosexual relationship without sensationalising and could be about any couple. At the beginning of the story, Peter is in Australia where his partner committed suicide. In 1961 this was still a mortal sin for a Catholic. Devastated by the loss Peter decides to return to England and his family thinking that his life was over, not realising that it would be the beginning of a life full of events. London in 1961 was not the place it is now. Friendships between Black and White men or women were not altogether acceptable. However things were changing, the old order was being challenged in the UK, Caribbean and Africa and Vincent and Peter were part of those changes. The book spans 28 years with all the changes that have occurred in our society, highlighting the ups and downs of a relationship.
Unconditional friendship
"I intend to be among the first generation that survives this disease." That was former New Republic editor Andrew Sullivan's first public statement about his HIV diagnosis. Speaking to heterosexual and homosexual audiences alike, this book is about the first steps in that journey of survival. If Sullivan's acclaimed first book, Virtually Normal, was about politics, this long-awaited sequel is about life. In a memoir in the form of three essays, Sullivan asks hard questions about his own life and others'. Can the practice of friendship ever compensate for a life without love? Is sex at war or at peace with spirituality? Can faith endure the randomness of death? Is homosexuality genetic or environmental? Love Undetectable, then, refers to many things: to a virus that, for many, has become "undetectable" in the bloodstream thanks to new drugs, and to the failed search for love and intimacy that helped spread it; to the love of God, which in times of plague seems particularly hard to find and understand; to a sexual orientation long pathologized and denied any status as an equal form of human love; and to the love between friends, a love ignored when it isn't demeaned, and obscured by the more useful imperatives of family and society. In a work destined to be as controversial as his first book, Sullivan takes on religious authorities and gay activists; talks candidly about his own promiscuity and search for love; revisits Freud in the origins of homosexuality; and makes one of the more memorable modern cases for elevating the virtue of friendship over the satisfactions of love. Scholarly, impassioned, wide-ranging, and embattled, Love Undetectable is a book that is ultimately not about homosexuality or plague, but about humanity and mortality.
How do we cultivate the life-long relationships we are longing for, whether within marriage or friendship? Psychologist Kelly Flanagan shows how each of us can enjoy the deeply satisfying, transformational love of companionship. With self-knowledge and an understanding of our own loneliness and emotional defenses leading the way, we can make the choice to love more vulnerably.