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A Poetic and Transformative Journey to Inner Peace, Now Accessible to English Readers Worldwide This poetic yet pragmatic book guides you to rediscover yourself as a living Noah's Ark—a three-dimensional volume of conscious presence, stable and vast enough to actively embrace and support each facet of your being. Adelheid Oesch, a seasoned counselor, teacher, and founder of 'L'Atelier du Dialogue Intérieur' (Voice Dialogue Workshop) in Lausanne, Switzerland, masterfully weaves together the spiritual wisdom of the world with the ground-breaking insights of 'Voice Dialogue' psychology. With expertise shaped by extensive training with pioneers Dr. Hal Stone and Dr. Sidra Stone, she illuminat...
Bob is a painter and decorator in south east London in the late seventies. He loves Charlton Athletic, old war films and listening to Radio Caroline, a pirate radio station in the North Sea. By pure chance, he gets a job decorating the flat of the station's manager, the beautiful Olga. In the right bed at the right time, he is given the opportunity to leave the paint roller behind and pick up the headphones on the pirate ship. Avoiding arrest is just the beginning, avoiding death is somewhere in the middle and at the end, he faces the ultimate price. Based heavily on the author's real life experiences working on Radio Caroline, this is a tale of love, hate, fear, joy, betrayal, guns, sex, drugs and rock n roll; they all play a part in The Last Great Adventure for Boys.
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Recital's easy-to-understand, bite-sized poems lend a fresh voice to life's daily joys and struggles. Whether it's rainy a Paris boulevard, Ireland's Connemara, or the windswept dunes of Long Island's Hamptons, from one page to the next Recital carries you away with depth and spirit. The richly varied program features poems that span the full range of emotions and ask the questions often closest to our hearts... Where do all the years go? How can we feel alive right now? Why are happiness and despair so closely linked? How can we balance the material with the spiritual? What happens after we die? They say if the same musician played the same program a thousand times, no two performances would be alike. The same holds true for Recital, the Poems of Richard M. McErlean, Jr. Read it once, read it once a day- it will always surprise you with something new. All you have to do is take your seat... and enjoy.
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It will never be known just how many men, women and children have died and lie buried in the bush. Many of the deaths were not registered, and they are known only because the local paper reported on them. It was not the selector who lost his life, but usually men who had no idea how harsh the country could be, and consequently took risks by walking between stations looking for work, most times with very little water, and not much idea of where they were going. Many of the men were suffering from alcohol related problems. Most deaths were caused by fever, accidents, suicide, and murder. The women followed their men, enduring the harsh conditions and sometimes not seeing another white woman for years. They died during child birth, usually the baby died as well. Young children succumbed to the harsh conditions, dying of convulsions, poisoning, and accidents.
In 16th and 17th century Ireland religion and nationality fused together in a people’s struggle to survive. In that struggle the country’s links with Europe provided a life line. Members of religious orders, with their international roots, played an important role. Among them were the Irish Jesuits, who adapted to a variety of situations – from quiet work in Irish towns to serving as an emissary for Hugh O’Neill in the south of Ireland and in the courts of Rome and Spain, and then founding seminary colleges in Spain and Portugal from which young Irishmen returned to keep faith and hope alive. In the seventeenth century persecution was more haphazard. There were opportunities for prea...