This is the story of Sylvias journey from being born during wartime to living through health and other challenges and eventually achieve living out her lifes purpose. It is a journey of twists and turns, synchronicity, with both humour and sadness interspersed. Her story illustrates how we can overcome in life with a determined spirit and reach our true purpose. The challenges in life can be our greatest teacher. It is in these times, as Sylvia shows through her journey, that we find our inner eternal spirit that will lead us ever onwards to living who we truly are, free of fear!
Sylvia and her husband, Brian, were enjoying an unconditionally loving relationship when suddenly, it all changed, and Sylvia found herself investigating young onset Alzheimers disease. A nursing and care home management background did not prepare Sylvia for the journey ahead. The Rocky Road of Naughty Neurons explains the journey she and her husband took when he was diagnosed with the condition. The blessings on their journey have been many, as they have been determined to do their very best to make each day a positive one with lots of laughter. Sylvia has drawn on her inner spiritual strength plus coaching mechanisms to work at being able to choose peace during the most challenging moments. Sylvias story takes you from prediagnosis to Brian being in the start of full-time care and includes many tips for carers.
Sylvia and her husband, Brian, were enjoying an unconditionally loving relationship when suddenly it all changed and Sylvia found herself investigating young-onset Alzheimers disease. A nursing and care home management background did not prepare Sylvia for the journey ahead. The Rocky Road of 24/7 Care explains the journey she and her husband embarked on when the plan they had to do the journey totally at home changed and nursing home care became the best option. Sylvia has drawn on her inner spiritual strength plus coaching mechanisms to work at being able to choose peace during the most challenging moments of this new journey as a carer. Sylvias story takes you from admission day to Brians care in the latter stages of his condition.
The long-predicted Coronal Mass Ejection has arrived, destroying civilization. Nathan Owens has been prepping for a disaster like this for years. But when it occurs, he is far from his family and his refuge. He has to pull together a team of young survivalists and, as he reluctantly leads them across the hellscape of what was once the United States, Nathan has to ask himself--what else is he willing to do for them?
Flying Officer Wayne Luthie of the RAF recounts his training and action in World War II. Shot down over Dunkirk, he is captured, tortured, but manages to escape. A first novel.
Fueled with in-depth research and personal recollections, Hooligans Alley presents a historic novel embracing generations of early European immigrants and their amazing struggles. In the style of a novel, author Joanna Kelly tells the true story of Wilhelmina Huebner Metting, an orphaned farm girl who uprooted her life in Germany to search for an aunt living far away in America. Her quest took her to New Yorks infamous Hells Kitchen, an area of overcrowded slums, lumberyards, slaughterhouses, factories, and immigrants troubled by poverty and violence. There, seventeen-year-old Wilhelmina started a seamstress business and kept cows on a vacant city lot. Wilhelmina was, above all things, a passionate social reformer. She encountered American society first during the Civil War, a time of great social unrest. Her involvement with the Colored Orphan Asylum put her in the center of the New York City Draft Riots, the largest uprising in the history of the United States. Wilhelminas story inspired Kelly, who fleshed out the few hard facts she could find with a lovingly researched fictional visit to a long-lost time and place in Americas history. Joanna Kellydraws special strength from her Quaker faith as well as her insatiable thirst for history in writing her first novel, Hooligans Alley. She is a gifted writer who explores her love of music, wildflowers, and passion for family in weaving this remarkable series of adventures that will set your heart to racing, while stretching your own recollections and imagination. Hooligans Alley is a must-read for New Yorkers and history lovers, and everyone who cares about origins and family. E. Barrie Kavasch best-selling author of The Medicine Wheel Garden
In this sword and sorcery, sci-fi satire, Art Wiederhold, author of The Avenger of Thule, combines his talents with those of Charles W. Sutphen to produce another fantasy masterpiece. Two young men, Rolf and Zorn, begin simultaneous quests to find the lost city of Makhrek and their missing father. Along the way they team up with an unusual band of adventurers that include a mysterious cleric, a dark assassin and a beautiful warrior maiden, and embark on a fast-paced fantasy adventure that has a blockbuster of an ending!
In Rachels Journey, Rachel leaves her home to travel alone into the world. This journey is her only chance for a future, as she uses her skills against the wild and those who fight against her. She will meet new friends but also must battle her familys old foes. Evil is triumphing, and Rachel must join the Opposition and help fight for freedom. Can one young girl make a difference in the world? Her God says that nothing is impossible with Him, so Rachel only has one choice. Can she find her future and help her people?
Mary Rockwood Powers reluctantly left her comfortable life as a doctor's wife in Wisconsin in 1856, one of the many women whose destiny as a settler of the West was determined by her husband's wishes. Trading in her home for canvas roof and wheels, Mary, her husband, and their three children set out on the arduous trek westward to California. Shortly into their travels west, it became painfully obvious that Doctor Powers was simply not up to the task of making sure his family "outlasted the trail." Mary had to step in and become the head of the household with its canvas roof and wheels--leaving behind her ideals of femininity along with her beloved possessions. In Outlasting the Trail author Mary Barymeyer O'Brien uses the letters Mary Rockwood Powers wrote to her mother and sister back home as a stepping off point to further illuminate this remarkable woman's story. Based on the dramatic struggle a real family, this novel brings to life a fascinating slice of American history.
A deeply researched and poignant reflection on the practice of forgiveness in an unforgiving world "Broad in its philosophical sweep and fine in its literary analysis, this work redefines forgiveness as the modest yet heroic ability to hold pain and anger together with hope and nonviolence."--Joie Szu-Chiao Chen, Lion's Roar Matthew Ichihashi Potts explores the complex moral terrain of forgiveness, which he claims has too often served as a salve to the conscience of power rather than as an instrument of healing or justice. Though forgiveness is often linked with reconciliation or the abatement of anger, Potts resists these associations, asserting instead that forgiveness is simply the refusal of retaliatory violence through practices of penitence and grief. It is an act of mourning irrevocable wrong, of refusing the false promises of violent redemption, and of living in and with the losses we cannot recover. Drawing on novels by Kazuo Ishiguro, Marilynne Robinson, Louise Erdrich, and Toni Morrison, and on texts from the early Christian to the postmodern, Potts diagnoses the real dangers of forgiveness yet insists upon its enduring promise. Sensitive to the twenty-first-century realities of economic inequality, colonial devastation, and racial strife, and considering the role of forgiveness in the New Testament, the Christian tradition, philosophy, and contemporary literature, this book heralds the arrival of a new and creative theological voice.