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Nach der Geburt in Frankfurt am Main 1970 wurde die kleine Fati – wie die iranische Familie die Autorin als Kind rief – sogleich nach Teheran überführt, wo sie mit ihrer älteren Schwester Sandra erst bei den Eltern, dann beim Stiefvater aufwuchs. Niemand kümmerte sich ernsthaft um die Kinder, und doch waren es vielleicht ihre glücklichsten Jahre – mit magischen Sonnaufgängen am Rande der Wüste, aber auch Abenteuern mir Wölfen. Bald wurden erst Sandra, dann auch Deborah beim Herannahen der Islamischen Revolution Knall auf Fall zur deutschen Familie nach München in Sicherheit gebracht und dort zwangsassimiliert. Deborahs Stiefvater war ein gebrochener Mann, verfiel der Depressio...
Seelenbotschaften, die von Herzen kommen Die Seele ist der Ort, an dem die Liebe, das Glück und der Frieden wohnen. Deshalb lohnt es sich, der Seele große Aufmerksamkeit zu schenken und sie zu hegen und zu pflegen, um Liebe, Glück und Frieden nachhaltig einen Platz im eigenen Leben zu geben. Menschen, die auf der Suche nach Zufriedenheit, Erfüllung und ihrem Lebensglück sind, erhalten in diesem Buch wichtige Denk- und Handlungsimpulse. Alle Expert*innen, die hier mit ihren Seelenbotschaften zu Wort kommen, zeichnen sich einerseits durch ein hohes Maß an Lebenserfahrung und andererseits durch Kompetenz in Sachen Persönlichkeitsentwicklung aus. Empathie und die Freude an der Zusammenarbeit mit Menschen sind allen Autor*innen sehr wichtig. Ein Leitfaden und Wegweiser für Menschen, die sich aufgemacht haben, ihr Glück zu finden.
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Blessed with a natural beauty, Scotland-born actress Deborah Kerr (1921–2007) provided the cinema with memorable studies of English gentility. A star in British pictures before she was 21 and a Hollywood fixture from 1946 on, she projected a cool reserve and stoic nobility, often hinting at passion and insecurity beneath the surface. Frequently portraying selfless, sympathetic women, she was brilliant in such roles as Anna Leonowens in The King and I (1956). And in a fascinating departure from her normal range, her portrayal of the sexually frustrated Army wife in From Here to Eternity (1953) resulted in the screen’s most famous “clinch”—the beach scene with Burt Lancaster. Though she never won an Academy Award despite six nominations, Deborah Kerr received an honorary Oscar in 1994.
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The Deborah Project is a collection of nineteen stories about different Deborahs and what they are involved with. Each of the stories has a surprising word pun ending.
Clive Wearing has one of the most extreme cases of amnesia ever known. In 1985, a virus completely destroyed a part of his brain essential for memory, leaving him trapped in a limbo of the constant present. Every conscious moment is for him as if he has just come round from a long coma, an endlessly repeating loop of awakening. A brilliant conductor and BBC music producer, Clive was at the height of his success when the illness struck. As damaged as Clive was, the musical part of his brain seemed unaffected, as was his passionate love for Deborah, his wife. For seven years he was kept in the London hospital where the ambulance first dropped him off, because there was nowhere else for him to ...
THE WOMEN OF LOCKERBIE and THE COMFORT TEAM: Two Plays by Deborah Brevoort with introductions by Roberta Levitow and Chris Hanna. Two powerful, compelling plays that focus on how communities cope with tragedies and find a way toward healing.
A woman recounts coming of age in the shadow of her father’s mental illness in this “candid, unsettling portrait of madness and enduring love” (Kirkus). Deborah A. Lott grew upina Los Angeles suburb in the 1950s, under the sway of her outrageously eccentric father. A lay rabbi who enjoyed dressing up like Little Lord Fauntleroy, he taught her how to have fun. But he also taught her to fear germs, other children, and contamination from the world at large. Deborah was so deeply bonded to her father and his peculiar worldview that when he plunged from neurotic to full-blown psychotic, she nearly followed him. Sanity is not always a choice, but for sixteen-year-old Deborah, lines had to be...
To the Brink and Back By: Deborah Morgan-Hughes Deborah’s life has been fraught with many challenges but the move interstate with her family proved to be disastrous. Battling and just surviving she naively believed in the good nature of her fellow human beings unfortunately she was proven wrong. Only now after many years of hard work is she beginning to regain some form of trust in people but restoring shattered trust is a gradual process involving a great deal of courage. As C.S Lewis wrote…”Experience is a brutal teacher but you learn by god how you learn!”