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Dreamy Cocoons (Leisure Arts #5582) features six adorable crochet sacks to wrap that precious baby in the very essence of love! A soft cocoon, paired with a matching cap, beret, or hat, will keep a newborn to three-month-old infant cozy and comfy. The six designs range from truly simple to slightly more intricate, with a perfect pattern for every skill level. Six sets by Kim Kotary to crochet using medium weight yarn : Purple Textures, Orange Flower, Tan Plaid, Yellow Puffs, Ripples and Ruffles, and Blue Tunisian.
Ever paid attention to a picture of a caterpillar in a cocoon? Ever wondered what's going on inside as she's changing from a crawling, not so attractive creature to one that's beautiful and soars? I'll tell you what's happening? The same thing that occurs when God draws us into a lonely place of intimate isolation to prepare us for radical and life-transforming changes. The caterpillar's internal and external features are undergoing drastic changes. She loses everything that's no longer needed when she becomes a butterfly. Among many changes is the loss of her mouth and feet, while she gains more eyes. Hanging upside down in total surrender to the process; the old things are dying off to make room for the new. And so it is with you and me when God's about to transform us into the women we desire and were created to be. We must lose our mouth (not speak against what God is doing); our feet (remain in the process), and gain eyes to see things from God's perspective. The caterpillar's old cells represent our sin and unhealthy baggage that God must remove such as, bitterness, lack of self-worth, shame, pride, and unforgiveness. These must go to make room for what the butterfly needs to soar. We initially hate and even fight the process of retreating to our spiritual cocoon, only to find an intimacy, love, and power we never knew existed. Yes, God draws us into isolation, but once we stop kicking and screaming and surrender; we realize that we yearn to be with God as much as He desires to be with us. When God has His perfect way in the process, we emerge more powerful than we could have imagined, ready to pursue our God-given purpose and destiny.
In a very special place, under a very funny looking tree, there lives a very tiny Dream Fairy. Her name is Little Whisper. She sleeps on a bed of soft moss under a big Leaf in the Land of Dreamy Dreams. When she woke up on this day, it seemed just like a regular day. She stretched out her little arms and buzzy-buzzed her little, tiny-finey wings and Yawned so big her little mouth got almost as big as a Strawberry Seed! After she yawned, and stretched, and buzzy-buzzed, she looked out from under her Roof, it was a big Leaf. There was a drop of water hanging from its pointy-endy-tip. She hurried over so she could see her reflection in it before it let go and splashed onto the Forest floor. Seeing your reflection in water is almost like looking into a mirror, and even a little Dream Fairy likes to make sure she looks nice in her own tiny-finey way before she starts her new day. Little Whisper wanted to fix her hair and wipe the sleepy-seepies from the corners of her dusty-pinky eyes before the drop of water let go. When it splashed onto the Forest floor, it could then do its own little part in watering the ground so more Thingie-Things could grow, you know. And you know what else? Every Thingie-Thing in Dreamy Dream Land is related to each other. Yep! In one way or another, they're like a Big Family. Even every single little Blade of Grass is an Individual with their very own Individual Personal Name. One Thingie-Thing is just as important as any other Thingie-Thing. No matter what they are, or what they do, they're all Thingie-Things together. Little Whisper was now ready to go. She had the Hardlywaits to see what she might find. So she buzzy-buzzed her little wings and took off into the Forest. What New Adventures, "WILL" She Find!
Now fully revised with an all-new interior design, this expanded edition of The Everything Dreams Book provides even more explanation of the subconscious, additional dream symbols, and even greater depth of explanation about dreams themselves. This second edition explains how to: Interpret nightmares and fantasies Find meaning in symbols and images-from eyes to birds to familiar people Remember dreams
In American Poetic Materialism from Whitman to Stevens, Mark Noble examines writers who rethink the human in material terms. Do our experiences correlate to our material elements? Do visions of a common physical ground imply a common purpose? Noble proposes new readings of Walt Whitman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, William James, George Santayana and Wallace Stevens that explore a literary history wrestling with the consequences of its own materialism. At a moment when several new models of the relationship between human experience and its physical ground circulate among critical theorists and philosophers of science, this book turns to poets who have long asked what our shared materiality can tell us about our prospects for new models of our material selves.
This fascinating and accessible book offers a comprehensive overview of dream interpretation theory and modern dream science, presenting an argument for dreamwork as a means to better understand emotional challenges and achieve personal growth. Bridging the gap between cognitive-behavioral therapies, psychoanalysis and depth psychology, the book explores topics like lucid dreams, end-of-life dreams, cross-cultural dream analysis and Freudian and Jungian models of dream interpretation. The authors offer a new model for better understanding dreams based on symbol formation, narrative structure and current neurophysiology, with the aim of reinvigorating the way we value dreams and their importance to individuals and society. The Wisdom of Dreams can be of great interest to analysts and therapists, including psychiatrists, psychologists, sleep researchers, social workers and counselors, as well as anyone interested in working with their dreams for greater personal clarity and self-understanding.
In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were tempted to take a bite out of an apple that promised them the "knowledge of good and evil." Today, a shiny apple with a bite out of it is the symbol of Apple Computers. The age of the Internet has speeded up human knowledge, and it also provides even more temptation to know more than may be good for us. Americans have been right at the forefront of the digital revolution, and we have felt its unsettling effects in both our religions and our politics. Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite argues that we long to return to the innocence of the Garden of Eden and not be faced with countless digital choices. But returning to the innocence of Eden is dangerous in this modern age and, instead, we can become wiser about the wired world.
Author's travel impression.
The four sections of Dabney Stuart’s new book represent a progression toward release from self-preoccupation, both personal and cultural, and a growing intimation of acceptance of the world outside the self. Using language with elasticity and elegance, Stuart is engaged in serious play, usually on more than one level. His familiar wit and subtlety arise in a context of good humor and sadness, warmth and reserve. His subject are a deft blend of pop culture (baseball, the movies), family situations, and legends, some old (Hansel and Gretel), some invented (“The Harpist’s Dream”). His is by turns straightforward and surreal. In fact, Stuart’s skillful rendering of dream sequenced is one of the appealing dimension of this work. Stuart is concerned as well with awakenings and with transitions, sometimes intensified into transformations. In “Love Story,” for example, a physical injury becomes the way to talk of psychic development; after a dizzying performance by an unusual broken leg, the poem concludes, Relax said middle age when I woke up, Dreams are for those who never heal. We healed. The title poem is a fresh appearance of Narcissus—not a mere reworking of the legend, but an opening out of the present world through the possibilities of the old myth. At the close of the poem, Narcissus, who has been fishing without luck, pulls his reflection from the water: He lower sit into the boat, takes it upon himself, drenched, obscene, a perfectly imperfect fit, leaving the water imageless, opaque, other. Narcissus Dreaming is the work of a mature, accomplished artist, sensitive to psychological nuance and complexity.
Inkspilled is a poetry chapbook, featuring positivity poems written by various writers.