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Daddy drives a big red tanker truck, and he's away on the road a lot. But once in a while, he's near enough to pick up his little boy from preschool. And today is one of those very special days!
A teacher's perspective of growing up as a good and bad example. "A compilation of anecdotes and heartbreaks, of love, life, and laughter, from a kid who grew up a product of the barrio and despite growing up and growing out; never really left."
The job at Sunday Orchard was supposed to be temporary. A chance to gain some work experience. To have some fun. To get away from my overprotective brothers. To maybe, possibly encounter some lumberjacks in their natural habitat before moving on to the dream career that awaited me in the city. I had not expected to be welcomed into a family of gorgeous and weirdly efficient lumberjack-types myself. Or to find a purpose in the tiny Vermont town whose claim to fame seemed to be apple-based products and copious amounts of charm. And I most definitely hadn't expected to fall for Knox Sunday, my grumpy, burly, fifteen-years-older, reluctant roommate, with his infuriating lectures, his hot-as-fire body, his superior attitude, his snarky humor, and his stealth cuddles. Now I find myself making excuses to delay my big dreams... just for a little while. But Knox has unfulfilled dreams of his own. A career he walked away from. A big city life in Boston he left behind when he returned to his hometown to help his family. He claims he's not looking for anything permanent, and I've never been one to put down roots. My big life is waiting for me somewhere other than Little Pippin Hollow. So why does it feel like I've finally found the home of my heart? And how can I get Knox Sunday to... pick me?
Mark Mardirossian was an ideal student and pursued a normal but uncertain teenage life in Iraq. However, all that changed when a fleeting time after the Baath regime, under the control of Saddam Hussein, came into power and started to hunt minorities. Mark's father was wrongfully accused, tortured, and imprisoned in an Iraqi prison. With no hope or word from his father returning from prison, Mark had to take responsibility for his family in poverty conditions at the age of fifteen. A knock on their door eight days later changed things, which had prompted him and his family to escape Iraq and flee to Lebanon. Unfortunately, Mark was detained at the Lebanese border, which led to a separation from his family. While living in Lebanon, Mark escaped death three times. Inspired to share his true story some forty-three years later, Mark was compelled to write his memoir entitled, I Did It! From Iraq to Freedom. Mark had been self-employed in the construction business for 25 years. He holds Bachelor of Science and Masters Degrees, and prefers to divide his time between his profession and writing. This is his first book. "Freedom is not earned or given, but it is a struggle to achieve and a fight that is worth winning." - Mark Mardirossian If you would like to reach out to Mark, please feel free to email him at: ididit_fi [email protected]
The book that I have written, entitled The Husbands I Thought I Found, is an autobiography. It is about my relationship with my dad, which is the reason I pick all the wrong men to have a future with. How I longed for my dad to be in my life constantly. This book is also about my life being a young woman living under my mothers roof. I couldnt wait to get out into the world. I finally had an opportunity to leave her house. I had never been with anyone before, and I lacked the experiences and knowledge to make some of the decisions I made, which led me into situations of physical, emotional, and verbal abuse. My life had become a hellish nightmare and was full of heartbreak. Would I ever find the right man? Or would I stay in this deadly relationship?
Camisha Broussard's author debut, "Daddy Issues," offers a sometimes amusing, all-the-time hopeful, and eventual loving look at a dysfunctional parent-child relationship through the eyes of a fatherless daughter. Taking an atypical approach to the normal daughterless perspective, Camisha forces herself to reflect on the good things about her alcoholic father, humanizing him to the point of being more empathetic of the man he was, rather than remorseful of his shortcomings as the dad she wished him to be. From troubled teen to college professor, wife, and mother of four, Camisha's approach to the average fatherless daughter relationship is anything but stereotypical and is a profoundly holistic look at real life with real people who have real problems. From colorism to alcoholism, "Daddy Issues," promises readers a rollercoaster ride filled with every emotion imaginable reaching a final destination of forgiveness, hope, and finally love.
Drawing Your Line: Setting Boundaries Step-by-Step is a manual for developing the self-respect and empowerment that ultimately allows for the setting of healthy boundaries in various arenas of life. This process involves learning to find, respect, and use your voice to take control of your life. Inspired by their work as life coaches working with women, the authors share their personal successes and failures with setting boundaries to inspire you to make healthy changes in your own life. Chock-full of helpful reflection questions to elicit real growth and self-awareness, this book guides you through a "coaching" experience to help you understand where your boundary tendencies come from and how to make healthy shifts toward a life of freedom and peace. Setting boundaries is not an act of aggression, but rather, an act of self-empowerment through self-love.
Oral History is part of the Understanding Qualitative Research series, which is designed to provide researchers with authoritative guides to understanding, presenting, and critiquing analyses and associated inferences. There are three subareas in this series: Quantitative Research, Measurement, and Qualitative Research. This volume fits in the Qualitative Research group and addresses issues surrounding oral history - how to both fully and succinctly report and present this material, as well as the challenges of evaluating it.
From the struggles of childhood abuse to becoming a female police officer, this book tells the story of a woman's journey through the male dominated world of law enforcement. Through this personal account and unique perspective, a better understanding of policing strengths and weaknesses is gained.