The Practical Self-Love Workbook is a refreshing, soulful, and relatable book that moves you towards practical solutions for gaining self-love. This workbook has stories and activities specifically for readers who identify as old souls, intuitives and empaths, recognizing the tendencies to over-love and over-give. It provides step-by-step actions towards self-love. The Practical of Self-Love Workbook includes: • A mix of Recommendations, the authours personal stories, How to’s, Resources, and Journal prompts to help you move towards practical self-love, healing, and personal power. • How-to Guides that help you work through stumbling blocks, such as “how to let go,” “how to forgive,” “how to heal.” • Journal Prompts to help you sort through emotions, change negative thinking, help with self-discovery, and sort through hidden desires. • A Step-By-Step Action guide to help you outline the direction you can take towards building self-love. • Encouragement through stories that uplift, motivate and make you feel seen. • Activity sheets that you can use for reference and keep on track with your journey Plus more! When not travel nursing or facilitating wellness workshops, Arlene writes about holistic healing and self-love for various online publications, including Collective World and SWAAY media. You can find her on various social media platforms. Arlene’s ultimate goal is to see more comfortable, confident, self-loving, healthy women.
In poetic prose, Forrester navigates leaving a life in one state and picking up in another and repeating the process through various and vast personal, social, and political landscapes. It's a personal story and it's an investigation of change and how we tend to hide away the most valuable parts of ourselves, especially, paradoxically, the parts that help us survive change, the parts that make us Soft Hearted, and we need more soft-heartedness in all times and in all places.
Heather Lindsay loves falling in love--even though her blueprint for romance has failed her time and time (and time) again. But now that she's signed on to design an outdoor-wedding venue for her friend's home renovation show, Heather's found a new focus: her career. Only it's not long before she's being distracted--by the hunkiest man who ever swaggered down the streets of Red Oak Falls. The show's new ranch manager, Waylon Peterson, a.k.a. Prince Harry in a cowboy hat, has every woman swooning. He's also got a bad-boy rep that's made him the hottest mess in town. In other words, he's catnip for Heather, the Texan queen of bad choices. That's why she's steering clear--even with Waylon's charm going full throttle. Waylon is determined to trade one night stands for true love, but convincing Heather may be an impossible task. He's ready to settle down, but can she get past her fear of settling and give love one more shot?
Stories to open your child's eyes wide! To grow and wheel their minds in wonder! Some titles to give you a taste: The Shy Silver Shimmer * The Stardust Kids * The Sandman * The Golden Girl and the Green Queen * Fluffy White * Whiz the Wingless Eagle * The Three Tree Friends * Baby Blue Dragon * Bobby Iceberg * The Magic Paint Brush * Vulcan the Volcano * Floxy Foxy * Ollie the Otter * Morkey the Monkey * The Snarpels and the Warpels * Fluffy Flies Free * The Water Diamond Warm these stories with your voice! Paint the images, rock the rhythms, resound the repetitions and the rhymes that children love! Read the fun, the fantasy, the lessons of love as you pass the gift of words to your children to discover a world that is far more mysterious and wonderful than any story can be. Dr. Gary Kirby, a Renaissance PhD out of Northwestern, describes his nine books on GaryKirby.com as Waking dreams with a pleasure and a point. As a boy he fell in love with stories on his Grandmother's lap. As a father and grandfather, he spins stories that open the eyes and the imagination of children, and that warm their hearts. He has started TheEarthAct.org, and invites you to check it out.
Human behavior and decision making is subject to social and motivational influences such as emotions, norms and self/other regarding preferences. The identification of the neural and psychological mechanisms underlying these factors is a central issue in psychology, behavioral economics and social neuroscience, with important clinical, social, and even political implications. However, despite a continuously growing interest from the scientific community, the processes underlying these factors, as well as their ontogenetic and phylogenetic development, have so far remained elusive. In this Research Topic we collect articles that provide challenging insights and stimulate a fruitful controversy on the question of “what determines social behavior”. Indeed, over the last decades, research has shown that introducing a social context to otherwise abstract tasks has diverse effects on social behavior. On the one hand, it may induce individuals to act irrationally, for instance to refuse money, but on the other hand it improves individuals’ reasoning, in that formerly difficult abstract problems can be easily solved. These lines of research led to distinct (although not necessarily mutually exclusive) models for socially-driven behavioral changes. For instance, a popular theoretical framework interprets human behavior as a result of a conflict between cognition and emotion, with the cognitive system promoting self-interested choices, and the emotional system (triggered by the social context) operating against them. Other theories favor social norms and deontic heuristics in biasing human reasoning and encouraging choices that are sometimes in conflict with one’s interest. Few studies attempted to disentangle between these (as well as other) models. As a consequence, although insightful results arise from specific domains/tasks, a comprehensive theoretical framework is still missing. Furthermore, studies employing neuroimaging techniques have begun to shed some light on the neural substrates involved in social behavior, implicating consistently (although not exclusively) portions of the limbic system, the insular and the prefrontal cortex. In this context, a challenge for present research lies not only in further mapping the brain structures implicated in social behavior, or in describing in detail the functional interaction between these structures, but in showing how the implicated networks relate to different theoretical models. This is Research Topic hosted by members of the Swiss National Center of Competence in Research “Affective Sciences – Emotions in Individual Behaviour and Social Processes”. We collected contributions from the international community which extended the current knowledge about the psychological and neural structures underlying social behavior and decision making. In particular, we encouraged submissions from investigators arising from different domains (psychology, behavioral economics, affective sciences, etc.) implementing different techniques (behavior, electrophysiology, neuroimaging, brain stimulations) on different populations (neurotypical adults, children, brain damaged or psychiatric patients, etc.). Animal studies are also included, as the data reported are of high comparative value. Finally, we also welcomed submissions of meta-analytical articles, mini-reviews and perspective papers which offer provocative and insightful interpretations of the recent literature in the field.
"The least detrimental alternative", the authors' seminal principle for safeguarding a child's growth and development by minimizing intrusions of the law, has been cited in more than 1,000 child custody cases since 1973.
In a break from Lawrence and Holo's ongoing adventures, author Isuna Hasekura presents "Side Colors," a series of short vignettes focusing on the fans' favorite characters.
The Golden Yoke is a remarkable achievement. It is the first elaboration of the legal, cultural, and ideological dimensions of precommunist Tibetan jurisprudence, a unique legal system that maintains its secularism within a thoroughly Buddhist setting. Layer by layer, Rebecca Redwood French reconstructs the daily operation of law in Tibet before the Chinese invasion in 1959. In the Tibetans' own words, French identifies their courts, symbols, and personnel and traces the procedures for petitioning and filing documents. There are stories here from judges, legal conciliators, and lay people about murder, property disputes, and divorce. French shows that Tibetan law is deeply embedded in its Buddhist culture and that the system evolved not from the rules and judgments but from what people actually do and say. In what amounts to a fully developed cosmology, she describes the cultural foundation that informs the system: myths, notions of time and conflux, inner morality, language patterns, rituals, use of space, symbols, and concepts. Based on extensive readings of Tibetan legal documents and codes, interviews with Tibetan scholars, and the reminiscences of Tibetans at home and in exile, this generously illustrated, elegantly written work is a model of outstanding research. French combines the talents of a legal anthropologist with those of a former law practitioner to develop a new field of study that has implications for other judicial systems, including our own.
During the later half of the nineteenth century, a majority of Brazilian women worked, most as domestic servants, either slave or free. House and Street re-creates the working and personal lives of these women, drawing on a wealth of documentation from archival, court, and church records. Lauderdale Graham traces the intricate and ambivalent relations that existed between masters and servants. She shows how for servants the house could be a place of protection—as well as oppression—while the street could be dangerous—but also more autonomous. She integrates her discoveries with larger events taking place in Rio de Janeiro during the period, including the epidemics of the 1850s, the abolition of slavery, the demolition of slums, and major improvements in sanitation during the first decade of the 1900s. House and Street was originally published by Cambridge University Press in 1988. For this paperback edition, Lauderdale Graham has provided a new introduction.