Being Home


Book Description

Winner of the 2016 International Book Award for Self Help Home is more than an address. It's a place you belong, one that reflects who you are. This feeling of belonging comes from your being, as well as where you are. Recognizing that relationship between you and your environment opens a door. When you understand the link between these two, you can step across a threshold and make your home a place that works well and feels right. Being Home teaches you how to establish this link between you and the outside world by: Creating awareness about your natural and energetic boundaries, Finding your own roots and how to connect to your spaces, and Utilizing the three fundamental qualities of an environment to create a feeling of home wherever you are. Each lesson is supported by a variety of exercises that can be performed at home, at the grocery store, even while stuck in traffic. When you engage with your surroundings, you'll move with fluidity and confidence anywhere--a crowded room, an empty street, and anywhere in between.




Being Home


Book Description

Through 40 eloquent prayers and small simple photographs that mirror and interpret the text, Being Home is a celebration of mindfulness. As M. Scott Peck put it, "This is simply the best book I know on the subject of the sacrament of the present moment, and a great work of devotional literature." 43 duotone photographs..




The Tao of Being Home


Book Description

The Tao of Being Home is a self-help guide to adjust your home to the “new normal” of sheltering, working, and learning at home using feng shui principles and eastern healing practices. The book introduces contemporary feng shui and eastern healing practices to the novice and provides comprehensive information to the experienced practitioner. The reader will be able to adjust the home to create harmony among all three activities as the family adjusts to the changes in lifestyles and realizes success going forward.




SheKnows.com Presents - The Mommy Files


Book Description

And Jen Klein knows motherhood. She's survived changing a soiled diaper in a truck-stop bathroom while suspending a baby in mid-air. She's witnessed the judgment of the so-called "Mommy Mafia." She's found dried applesauce on her shirt. And in her hair. And the baby's hair. And the dog's fur. Here she reveals secrets she's learned along the way about mastering the art of motherhood, from how to handle strangers who ask how much weight you've gained to (finally!) getting them on the big yellow bus--on time and with clean underwear. Inside SheKnows.com Presents: The Mommy Files you'll find: Your mom didn't know what she was doing either A pediatrician is your partner, not your adversary Playgroups are for moms more than they are for kids Just because they can talk doesn't mean they can reason Being a supermom is all about asking for help Disclosed here in a friendly, wry look at motherhood, Jen Klein takes you through each lovable (and less than enjoyable) step toward that coveted title that will be screamed at you so many times in the years to come: "Mommy!"




I'll Be Home for Christmas


Book Description

Christmas is a special time of year. When we celebrate Christ's birth together with family and friends, it brings back cherished memories and treasured reminiscences. Xulon Press is proud to present its first book of Christmas memories, a collection of short stories that will help spread the love of Jesus to readers everywhere. Some of the stories will bring you to tears, others will make you laugh out loud. Some recall Christmases from the "good old days" when the world was simpler and Christmas trees were cut from the woods. Some recall lost loved ones, who live on in the words and memories of another. In the end, all of the stories should give you something to remember in your own life.




I'll Be Home


Book Description

The winner of more awards than any editorial writer in the Albany Times Union's history, Jim McGrath was both an Albany institution and a keen observer of the world beyond his beloved adopted city. When he died in 2013 at the age of fifty-six, the newspaper lost a writer who combined a passionate advocacy for society's most vulnerable people with a scathing disregard for the elite whose actions created an underclass in the United States. His writing was often elegiac, but his take on his adopted home state of New York and his beloved Albany was variously bemused, witty, irreverent, and indignant. He could relate to the plight of the minimum-wage worker as easily as he could talk to a US senator, and he feared no one. His editorials and commentaries charted many of the most critical issues in New York and the country: the death penalty, civil liberties, gay rights, historic presidential campaigns, the economy, terrorism, and more—all with an incisiveness that remains relevant, if not more so, in the present political era. In addition to his editorials and op-eds, I'll Be Home contains essays, critiques, and other writings that have never before been published, as well as appraisals of his work and life by former colleagues Rex Smith, Fred LeBrun, Dan Lynch, and others. The book is both a tribute to a memorable newspaperman and an insider's perspective on politics and life through the lens of an editorial writer, a position that Jim described as "a great seat at a really weird show."




Teaching Your Child to Be Home Alone


Book Description

A drastic increase in the number of single-parent homes and homes where both parents work has produced generations of latchkey kids. It is often difficult for parents to know when their child is mature enough to be left unsupervised and for children to express their own fears of being home alone.




Good To Be Home


Book Description

Fixer Upper meets Sweet Home Alabama in this uplifting and heartwarming second chance romance. She’s coming home. He never left. When Isabel Marshall moved away from her hometown with hopes of making a name for herself in Los Angeles, she didn't mean to abandon her roots, but that’s what happened. Now, four years later and having amassed an interior design empire, Isabel must return to Mapleton to film a home renovation special for her TV show. While most of the village welcomes her with open arms, her family and the ex-boyfriend she left in her dust are another story. Daniel Smith couldn’t follow Isabel to California, no matter how badly he wanted to, because his grandfather needed him in Mapleton. Since she’s been gone, he’s moved on—or so he thought. But as they reconnect, Daniel can’t deny that though they’ve both changed, his feelings for Isabel haven’t. Unfortunately, a choice he made in her absence could ruin any chance of reconciliation. Together, Daniel and Isabel must determine whether the love they once shared has stood the test of time and distance. Can they navigate Isabel’s fame, their past decisions, and the growth they’ve undergone to build the future of their dreams? A delightfully sweet story about the importance of family, the beauty of forgiveness, and the magic of falling (or re-falling!) in love. Fans of... - Second chance romance - Charming, small towns - Sweet Home Alabama - HGTV home design shows ...will adore Good To Be Home. ♥ Each feel-good book in the Mapleton series is a clean and wholesome, standalone read, but the books are much more fun when enjoyed in order! Book club discussion guides are included at the end of each story. ♥




Nowhere to Be Home


Book Description

Decades of military oppression in Burma have led to the systematic destruction of thousands of ethnic minority villages, a standing army with one of the world’s highest number of child soldiers, and the displacement of millions of people. Nowhere to Be Home is an eye-opening collection of oral histories exposing the realities of life under military rule. In their own words, men and women from Burma describe their lives in the country that Human Rights Watch has called “the textbook example of a police state.”




The Linen Guildsman


Book Description