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Ever wondered whether change is possible? Respected businesswoman Stacey Currie is proof that it is. Raised in housing commission accommodation, Stacey was pregnant at 15. At 19, she had two kids and was homeless. At 21, authorities gave her a stark choice: go into counselling and change her life or lose her three kids to foster care. Stacey had to make big changes. When all she knew was battling, figuring out goals for her 'new life' seemed impossible. Starting with what she didn't want, she got rid of one unhelpful habit after another. Now a qualified leadership coach and mentor, the happily married mother of five shares how she turned her life around. Each chapter of Good Riddance focuses on a habit Stacey once had – things like blaming others, hanging on to limiting beliefs, being addicted to drama – and shows how she got herself unstuck. With her no-bullshit style and humour, Stacey is the life coach you've always needed. Her explanations, exercises and prompts will see you regain hope, lose your baggage and set up a new chapter in your life. Say good riddance to bad rubbish – and start living the life you really want.
Do you constantly tell yourself? I dont have enough money I dont have enough time I dont know what my passion is? Forget telling yourself I dont know - Discover how to find your passion and unlock the secrets to living your dream life. If you are powered by passion all things are possible... According to the usual script, Stacey should be living on the streets, in jail, on drugs or dead. She ticks all the boxes when it comes to risk factors, having experienced no mum throughout her life, bought up in housing commission, was sexually abused at the age of nine, living in a shed aged fourteen, fell pregnant at fifteen, was homeless with two babies at nineteenhad three children and was living in...
Written for Preschool through Early Elementary students in Friends schools, this book explains the sometimes mysterious Quaker practice of Meeting for Worship in simple language.
"Directory of members" published as pt. 2 of Apr. 1954- issue.
Includes data for the Ann Arbor, Dearborn, and Flint campuses.
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