18+Camelia's life was destroyed when someone forcefully took her and married her. She was tired of living at the tender age of 18. Her days were more agonizing than death. She was saved by the mafia king Lucifer Martinez. Naive, innocent Camelia began thinking of him as her hero. But was he really her hero? Or he was worse than the worst villains? Was Camelia walking into a one-way road with Lucifer? Will her story end happily or she will be just a playtoy of Lucifer?Read this story and be a part of Camelia and Lucifer's journey.
there were ghosts in the cave dead people in the dorm strange events in the library and so on from that day on my life underwent a tremendous change i was just an ordinary university student but i was disturbed by the sudden occurrence of a supernatural event the love from his previous life would continue in this life would he be able to fulfill the wishes from his previous life in this life there was also a prideful ghost servant who was tangled up in a entanglement leading to a soul-stirring secret
Unbridled Passion: Show Jumping's Greatest Horses and Riders, written by Jeff Papows, is a thrilling look at the Olympic sport of show jumping and its superstar horse and rider pairings, including McLain Ward and Sapphire, Ian Millar and Big Ben, Beezie Madden and Authentic, and many more. Utilizing his own experience as an amateur show jumper, Papows brings together personal interviews with the biggest stars, owners, support staff, and caregivers, to give readers an inside look at the personalities behind show jumping. With a foreword by Olympic team coach George Morris, each chapter features a different internationally celebrated horse and rider and their intimate stories of success, struggle, and sacrifice. Utilizing over 60 vibrant color photographs throughout the book, Papows brilliantly captures the essence of the finest moments in the sport's recent history.
William Shepherd ("Billy Shears") took over The Beatles and the McCartney estate on 16 September 1966, going from "Billy Pepper" of Billy Pepper and the Pepper Pots, to The Beatles' new "Sgt. Pepper" of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Taking creative control of the band from John made William "the new boss," saving the band, but tormenting all involved. The Memoirs is the source of the "Paul is Dead" material reprinted in Billy's Back! and of the insights in Beatles Enlightenment, but also includes the darker aspects: Paulism, Satanism, and Biblical humor--calling The Beatles the four-headed 666 Beast. The Memoirs is the first fully encoded full-length book. As part of that encoding, it contains the world's largest acrostic, and is the world's premier of word-stacking. By reading The Memoirs, you will learn the secret meanings of their songs, and will recognize Paul and William's distinct physical differences, personality differences, and vast differences in musical skills.
In The Eye of the Storm: Genesis 10: 24 - 29 Genesis tells us how the idea of slavery within the Americas first came about and how religion was used as a justification to bind and hold a group of people to a dieing system. The impact of slavery on this nation was so horrendous it tore the fabric of America apart and set a nation on a course that all but doomed it. The anger and resentment still hold two groups of people apart, steeped in jealousy and distrust of one another. Learn when slavery began and where it began and the nations involved that to this day have not relented nor apologized for the deaths and incarceration of more than 100 million people. Learn how the history books carefully walked around the truth about slavery and taught you what they wanted you to know. Slavery was not what you were taught, the hypocrisy of those that were involved showed the mental struggle within that society for what was deemed immoral, yet they fought on to continue on the course they had set. We see in life, we have but one goal to make it as bearable as possible. We tend to gravitate to one existence and then settle on a mundane life style or existence. As we continue into the void we maintain contact within a society whos attitude, however primitive, however chaotic, however limited never ceases to exert itself upon a Nation with in a Nation. Mans attempt to replace what he knows of himself and what he refuses to believe, obscures the true meaning behind the idea of Slavery. To him life has many meanings, one of which is to control what you do not understand, man should know that time is not on his side in this case; it is a moment in the time clock of the very creator. What is time to us is but a fleeting moment, but to him who knows no bounds it is a time of reconciliation for the wrongs dealt. To the very core of this universe, time is a meaningless phenomenon He who is consumed with guilt is driven by guilt to the detriment of our very existence. A world when taken and dissected is found absent of any warmth or any relevance to the creator in any way other than existence to the very people he created. It is interesting to assume that life can be a rich and fulfilling endeavor when given a chance. If we are to exist we first have to present ourselves as worthy to exist in a universe not conditioned for us.
In 1758, Rousseau announced that he had adopted "vitam impendere vero" (dedicate life to truth) as a personal pledge. Despite the dramatic nature of this declaration, no scholar has yet approached Rousseau’s work through the lens of truth or truthseeking. What did it mean for Rousseau to lead a life dedicated to truth? This book presents Rousseau’s normative account of truthseeking, his account of what human beings must do if they hope to discover the truths essential to human happiness. Rousseau’s writings constitute a practical guide to these truths; they describe how he arrived at them and how others might as well. In reading Rousseau through the lens of truth, Neidleman traverses the entirety of Rousseau's corpus, and, in the process, reveals a series of symmetries among the disparate themes treated in those texts. The first section of the book lays out Rousseau’s general philosophy of truth and truthseeking. The second section follows Rousseau down four distinct pathways to truth: reverie, republicanism, religion, and reason. With a strong grounding in both the Anglophone and Francophone scholarship on Rousseau, this book will appeal to scholars across a broad range of disciplines.
Chapter 1. The kama sutra -- chapter 2. The psychology of love -- chapter 3. The art of love -- chapter 4. The art of love for the unmarried -- chapter 5.1. The Oneida community and the doctrine of male continence -- chapter 5.2. The Oneida community continued -- chapter 6. An unsolicited life story, with comments -- chapter 7. More sex and case histories -- chapter 8. Brief mention of case illustrating the necessity of universal knowledge of the psychology and art of love -- chapter 9. Article on sex education and venereal disease in "Mental hygiene," October, 1920 -- chapter 10. How sex perversions arise and why they increase -- chapter 11. Free love doctrines discussed, deplored, and devitalized -- chapter 12. Prolegomenon, and an apotheosis of love.