There are more than one thousand speech-marks in this book and they can be of much help in changing your perception of life all together in no time. The quotes are easy to understand and they are my ideal speech marks because of its brilliance and impressive expressions. We all have a fighter in us, this book will help the readers to motivate and encourage themselves in all the aspects of life, every day. The more you read this the more you will feel like reading it. Make your life less stressful and more peaceful by changing the way you see things around you.
Nasrin is Abdullah's first wife. She's extremely empathetic and everyone's favourite in the haveli. Badi Begum, Abdullah's mother, adores her a lot but when she knows Nasrin can never be a mother, her immaculate bonding becomes inimical with Nasrin. On his mother's demand, Abdullah is obliged for a second marriage to Bano. After one and a half years, they're blessed with a daughter, Azima. Nasrin forgets her piercing sufferings of 1947's partition, when her family left India forever, after Azima's birth. Out of her miserable world grows mother-daughter bonding that can endure all obstacles and hardships of life. She teaches her one of the important lessons of life that there is a vast difference between 'being patient' and 'being oppressed'. She loves Azima beyond everything one could ever imagine. But once again, she has to bear the pain of separation when Azima will marry to Hasan. Hasan is happy with his Nawabi tag and unaware of his responsibilities towards his wife and daughter. His sister Ruqayya is the one who holds his business. She loves Azima and her niece Ezzah a lot, also she shares a strong friendship with Azima, but as usual, she's perplexed and entangled between blood relation and friendship. Maheen, Hasan's courtesan, has changed Azima's life forever. In a patriarchal and conservative society where women are not allowed to speak before their fathers and husbands, will Nasrin and Azima be able to get what they deserve for their, "unacknowledged struggles"?
2020 was pretty good with pity fragrance of challenges. Taking immense pleasure to thank everyone for rendering your supports amidst the heart wrecking incidents that took place in 2020!2020 should always be a guideline for the upcoming people; thus we bring you this book which rewinds 2020 - The year of battle! This anthology consists of beautiful and emotional words of 15 best co-authors! Relive memories reading this! Let's forget the past and survive peacefully in the upcoming years! Great Future Ahead!
“No one knows how the world ever began, Do not fear the future, Nothing lasts forever. If you dwell on the past or the future, You will miss the present precious moments’’ This book compiled by Hoshika Agarwal is an anthology comprising of 25 other brilliant individuals who’ve come a long way and witnessed that what’s coming is better than what’s gone and they’d want you also to believe in the magic of universe and thyself as forever is a lie and what lasts and matters is between the hello and the goodbye because empty hand you came on Earth and barefoot you leave. This novel truly makes sure that everyone has a joyful trip as nothing will last forever so cherish it and stay cheerful and let nothing dim the courage you posses as light is always bright after the daunting nights.
These are the hard truths no one will tell you, but what you most need to hear. Wherever you are in your life, if you do not feel like the happiest, most honest version of yourself, this book is for you. Stop making excuses for your partner’s behaviour, stop ignoring the ways your friend lets you down, stop selling yourself short at work. Start living a life that makes you happy. Simon Gilham has built a dedicated community of over 9 million people worldwide through his videos that tell you what you need to hear, even if it’s not what you want to hear. In Stop Lying to Yourself, for the first time, he brings all his most sought-after advice together with completely new quotes, prompts and practical self-help steps to create a straight-talking, inspirational handbook for us all. Read in one sitting or dip in and out, this book might sometimes feel challenging, but it will always feel empowering, so that you can finally make the positive change you deserve, today.
Do you often find yourself lost in a whirlpool of tasks, responsibilities and commitments? As if no matter how hard you try, staying afloat seems impossible. Do stress and anxiety keep you from experiencing the joy and clarity you crave? But what if you could break free from this cycle of overwhelm and embrace a life of purpose and fulfillment? In "Taming Overwhelm: Your Practical Guide to Shift Mindset and Replace Stress with Clarity & Joy," the author presents a roadmap to reclaim your life and find inner peace amidst the chaos. Through thought-provoking insights and practical exercises, it empowers you to identify triggers, shift your mindset and live a life of harmony and joy. Throughout the book, you'll encounter engaging activities and journaling prompts designed to spark reflection and inspire positive change. These actionable steps will help you integrate the lessons into your life and make these positive changes even more sustainable. Whether you're a busy professional, a student facing academic pressures, or anyone seeking to regain control of your life, this book is your guide to more clarity, harmony, and true joy.
A Walk Through Life’s Doors is my second book of poems. It is my description of what poetry is to me. It is what I use to process my life’s ups and downs and the good and bad—memories that I want to remember. These are poems of the places my heart has been to; it’s a journey through my world. I believe that this book of poetry will relate to many of you who have gone through so many of life’s experiences dealing with love, hope, anger, and death. These poems live somewhere between a poem and a short story of my life, and I cherish them because I have lived in each one of them.
"All it takes is a single flame to light the path toward self-love, toward hope, toward the soul you always were before the darkness took hold." "Wildfire" is the sixth collection in Samira Vivette's catalogue, exploring themes of reclamation, motivation, and introspection. The poetry and prose within this book facilitate shadow work and inner child healing, with both comforting and fiery themes in each of the four chapters: The Wick of Introspection; Free Burn; Twirling Embers; Greenery/Dear Younger Me. A journey toward self-discovery, the words within these pages will bring you peace as you fall back in love with who you are. It's finally time to embrace your uniqueness that was suppressed and overlooked for far too long. Welcome to the wildfire.
Mostly when we read stories about advertising in the media or in books, they concentrate on the big names of the business - whether advertisers and their brands, agencies, or people. Yet while they sit at the undoubted glamorous end of the spectrum, picking up creative awards and with tales of off-screen outré antics to spill, they represent only the tip of the iceberg in terms of numbers. Under the waterline most of the smaller ad agencies were independent; a few were the regional subsidiaries of the biggest agencies (Saatchis, Dorlands, JWT, McCanns, Royds and Streets all had offices in Manchester for example); a few were also second string agencies in London set up by the main agency for a variety of reasons: specialist agencies that worked in recruitment, finance, corporate, and business-to-business advertising for example; or to handle conflicting accounts, or clients that were too small for the main agency to handle profitably. But as Campaign once wrote, there is a ‘stigma attached to these agencies.’ They were (still are?) seen as second class and on the fringes of the business. Rarely did they act as feeder agencies for talent (unlike journalism where many leading journalists started their careers on local newspapers before ending up on Fleet Street). Even the Chairman of JWT Manchester admitted in the early ‘80s that ‘Northern advertising people have a bit of a complex about their London counterparts. All regional agencies are in danger of being a bit provincial in their outlook.’ This volume looks at those agencies mainly through a diary written in the late 1970s. This gives a vivid, truthful, warts-and-or portrayal of what life was like in the tail-end of the advertising business.