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Dear Mummy,I love you very much! Let me tell you when... Join two young children in this heartwarming story as they write a letter to Mummy sharing all the things they love about her. Written by Catherine Allison (Brown Paper Bear and Ssh! Don't Wake the Baby) and beautifully illustrated by Shelagh McNicholas, this enchanting story is perfect to share with Mummy. Features and envelope with card to create your own special message for Mummy.
If you could tell your mum anything, what would it be? Samuel Johnson, Amanda Keller, Vika and Linda Bull, Guy Pearce, Elizabeth Tan, Rebecca Gibney, Peter Helliar, Clare Wright, Hilde Hinton, Gillian O'Shaughnessy, Adam Spencer, Brooke Davis, Lawrence Mooney, Patti Newton, Shane Jacobson, Julie Koh, Susie Youssef, Lehmo, Favel Parrett, Matilda Brown and many more ... A heartfelt, honest and very human book of letters that will make you smile and make you cry. It is the perfect gift for the mum in your life. And a reminder to tell her how you feel before it is too late.
140 pages to write and conserve the memories and thoughts of your Mom. Laying down your memories about your mother will help you to overcome her loss Beautifully designed pages with the message "I will love you forever Mom..." at the bottom of each page. Dedicated front page to be personalized with a message or owner's name. An emotional letter created specially for you and your mom. Special place to glue your favorite photo with your mother. Perfect 5" by 8" size for easy keeping so you can write whenever you want. Adequate for kids (age 7+), teens or adults. Get your copy today by clicking the "Buy Now" button right now!
The first collection of poetry from Bunmi Laditan, bestselling author of Confessions of a Domestic Failure and creator of The Honest Toddler, capturing the honesty, rawness, sheer joy and total madness of motherhood. With the compassion and wit that have made her a social media sensation among mothers around the world, Bunmi Laditan puts into evocative and relatable words what so many of us feel but can’t quite express. For mothers who love their children with a fiery fierceness but know what it is to feel crushed at the end of those long days, Dear Mother is like a warm hug that says, “I get it.”
Shortlisted for the ABIA Award (Biography of the Year) 2015 A searingly honest memoir of family, cancer, love ... and unicycles by the founders of the Love your Sister charity, Connie and Samuel Johnson, that will inspire and they hope get people talking about boobs! Born a year apart, Connie and Samuel Johnson have always been close. Faced with the devastating news that they would soon be separated forever, they made a decision. After already surviving cancer twice in her young life, at 33 Connie was diagnosed with breast cancer. But this time it was a whole different ball game. This time she was told she will die, leaving behind her two sons. As a young mum faced with her own death, Connie wanted to make it all less meaningless, and she knew just the way to do it - send her brother, Sam, on a one-wheeled odyssey around Australia. The aims: to break the world record for the longest distance travelled on a unicycle. To raise $1 million for the Garvan Research Foundation. And, most importantly, to remind women to be breast aware and stop others having to say goodbye to those they love. Their message is simple: 'Don't fall into the booby trap.' Samuel has travelled through every state and ridden more than 150,000 kilometres to raise awareness and raise research dollars. But Connie had a secret fourth aim: to fix Samuel. And it worked. Sam cleared his diary, cleaned himself up and tenaciously kept his promise to his dying sister. For them the job isn't over. They are determined to raise more money for research. Connie vows to fight until her dying day and Sam says the fight will go on long after that. These two remarkable Australians share their tale, from childhood through to the finish line and beyond in this truly unique story. Part memoir, part travel diary, part conversation, Love your Sister is an inspiring and unforgettable story that shows just how far one man will go for his sister. The Johnsons' memoir is bracing and affecting. - Sunday Age, Sun Herald Part memoir, part diary, part conversation, this is an unforgettable story of how far a brother will go for his sister. - Brisbane News There are many joyous moments as brother and sister reflect, often wryly and honestly, on the power of their bond and the full catastrophe that is family life. - Sydney Morning Herald This book, like Connie and Samuel's lives, is much bigger than their experience of misfortune. - Canberra Times
She lived through The Great Depression, her one and only sibling died, had four kids of her own - losing one of them in a mysterious accident, and had her arm amputated due to cancer. Yet, she's the most upbeat positive person I know. She's my hero, she's my mom. This book isn't just about Carm Drayer. It's an incredible collection of stories and tributes that will undoubtably touch your heart.*In 2017 Ohio State student Reagan Tokes was kidnapped, raped and murdered. To this day, her mom Lisa often finds signs from her beloved daughter. In Dear Mom, Lisa is looking for a particular sign on what would've been Reagan's 26th birthday.*Cancer can change so much. For TV News Anchor Maria Durant, it changed everything. Or did it?*What was it like raising twin girls as Ohio's First Lady? Karen Kasich shares fascinating secrets that have rarely been told. *Suzi Hanna not only raised three daughters, she also took care of wild animals inside her home! What else would you expect when you're married to Jungle Jack Hanna!*Katie Smith is a 3 time Olympic Gold Medalist. But how did her mom handle watching all those basketball games?*Imagine watching your kids make history on national TV. *The heartbreak of losing a fur baby. TV News Anchor Yolanda Harris knows that pain all too well. From dog moms to single moms and everything in-between. No one faces life's turmoil and triumphs quite like a mom. Dear Mom is a one of a kind book that you can't put down.
Full-time FindingJoy.net blogger, speaker, marketer, podcaster, and single mom of seven, Rachel Marie Martin presents a rallying cry to anyone who believes the lie that she is "just a mom." Over the years, you willingly pour everything you have into your family, but in the process, you lose the essence of who you are. In her characteristic raw and visceral style, Rachel teaches you how to rewrite the pages of your story, follow your passion, and discover the beauty of who you are. Drawing on lessons from her own incredible journey--together with insight from conversations with thousands of other women--Rachel encourages moms to break cycles, take off masks, and prevent fear from taking control. She balances her "no excuses" approach with breathing room and grace for those messy moments in life and mothering. Rachel reminds you there is always a reason to hope, to move forward, and to dare the impossible. You can make changes. You can pursue dreams, find yourself, and live a life of deep happiness and boundless joy. Stop waiting for "someday." Take hold of the moment, and say yes to your dreams.
In the most humorous way possible, "Dear Mom, You Don't Get to Have Nice Things" helps moms everywhere cope with the daily destruction of their most prized possessions. Moms, prepare to laugh at the very situations that typically leave you frustrated, hopeless, and ready to give up on owning anything valuable before your sweet baby leaves the nest. Your mommy friends are guaranteed to praise you for wiping their tears away with the pages of this book. And, because this story helps readers to understand the everyday struggles of parenting a tiny tornado, some of your friends and family will thank you for the free birth control.
Dear Reader: Every woman has stories to tell about her mother. The mother she has, the mother she wants, the mother she misses, the mother she didn't know. We carry our mothers with us. Sometimes we carry her in our hearts, in our heads-or on our backs. Sometimes we are connected to our mothers with the thick, strong cords of intertwined love and true acceptance; other times the bonds are stretched thin and taut, scratching against our consciousness, rubbing raw the sore spots in our souls. But we are always linked to our mothers: both to the dreams of the mothers we wish for and the realities of the mothers we have. Even if our mother has been gone for years-for decades-the relationship is still very much alive. Mom is still with us: offering advice, encouragement, criticism, appreciation, rejection, solace. What we daughters do with this ongoing commentary-whether we unknowingly incorporate it into our reality, or consciously and carefully review it, deciding what to keep and what to put away-is fundamental to how fully we lead our own lives. In Dear Mom: Women's Letters of Love, Loss, and Longing, you meet women who have stripped away pretenses, societal constraints, and basic fears to uncover and express their most private truths about their relationship with their mothers. You get to peer over the shoulders of the women, share in their laughter, and experience their struggles. You see how other women cast light on this most complicated, rewarding, and sometimes frustrating relationship. You witness women at different stages of their lives reflecting on the legacies their mothers (knowingly or unconsciously, but always powerfully) left them. You hear how other women experience the glories and the scars, the hurt and the healing that make up this most primal of connections. You also get to meet the women behind the letters, since each Dear Mom letter is followed by a profile of the contributor. You learn about the surprises, satisfactions, and challenges they faced in writing down their most private truths. The 25 Dear Mom contributors include women from a variety of backgrounds, careers, religions, and lifestyles. They include (present and former) teachers, business owners, homemakers, real estate agents, artists, secretaries, social workers, journalists, and government officials. Some are accomplished professionals, well-known in their fields and public figures in their communities. They are married, single, divorced, widowed. Many, though not all, are mothers themselves. Many contributors are baby boomers, in their 40s and 50s. Others are in their 60s, 70s, and 80s. (The oldest contributor is over 90; her conversation with her mother continues!)
this journal is the perfect way Mothers can share the joys and triumphs of their lives while also creating a cherished legacy.