How To Forget Someone You Love


Book Description

The ache of a lost love can feel overwhelming. Memories linger, emotions swirl, and moving on seems like a distant dream. But you don’t have to stay trapped in the past. “How to Forget Someone You Love” is your compassionate guide to navigating the healing journey. This book offers practical strategies and heartfelt advice to help you: Accept the reality of the situation. Manage the emotional rollercoaster. Break free from unhealthy attachments. Rediscover your strength and independence. Open yourself up to new possibilities. This is not about erasing cherished memories, but about learning to live with them without letting them define your future. With gentle encouragement and practical steps, this book will empower you to move on with grace and pave the way for love and happiness in the chapters to come.




Teach Me to Forget


Book Description

Ellery’s grief over the loss of her younger sister is pushing her down a dark path in this heartwrenching story of loss and the journey to hope that’s perfect for fans of Girl in Pieces and All the Bright Places. Ellery doesn’t want to live anymore. She’s unable to bear the pain of losing her younger sister to a car accident she blames herself for, or face the rest of her broken family. So, she’s made a plan—bought the gun, arranged for her funeral, and picked the day. Everything has fallen into place. Then, on the day she intends to take her own life, she meets Colter, a boy who recognizes her desperation and becomes determined to stop her. Ellery won’t be swayed so easily, but as she struggles with her hopelessness it becomes clear Colter has good reasons for his vigilance—deep, personal reasons. And whether Ellery likes it or not, he can’t let go.




Remembering to Forget


Book Description

AcknowledgmentsI: Collective Memories, Images, and the Atrocity of War II: Before the Liberation: Journalism, Photography, and the Early Coverage of Atrocity III: Covering Atrocity in Word IV: Covering Atrocity in Image V: Forgetting to Remember: Photography as Ground of Early Atrocity MemoriesVI: Remembering to Remember: Photography as Figure of Contemporary Atrocity Memories VII: Remembering to Forget: Contemporary Scrapbooks of Atrocity Notes Selected Bibliography Index Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.




Afraid to Forget


Book Description

Zoë lives an uneventful life in the bustling city of New York until the day she meets Aion, who with a crucial secret brings excitement and adventure Zoë never could have imagined. Upon meeting a seemingly perfect man, this young PhD candidate begins to have a succession of dreams each in a different time and place in history. Meanwhile, her best friend and her doctoral advisor develop an uncanny relationship. Zoë soon finds that she is unaware of some information about her own life but will stop at nothing to search for the truth no one will give her.




I Forgot To Remember To Forget


Book Description

In "I Forgot To Remember To Forget" Norman Johnson calls upon his sixty eight years of experience in the fields of entertainment and broadcasting to bring the reader series of vignettes of the lives and careers of some of America's top entertainers, many from East Texas and Nacogdoches, his adopted home town. Throughout the book Johnson relives his own personal encounters and friendships with most of the people he writes about including artists from various genres of music as well as Broadway and movie acts, politicians and just everyday folks. This is simple history from one who got to know each individual up close and personal. Johnson expands upon his previous book, "The Kid and The King," to include dozens of singers and actors who thrilled and entertained you through the years.




How To Forget To Breathe


Book Description

Heartbreak poetry and nature observations, set in lush tropical settings from the island of Saint Lucia.




Why We Forget and How to Remember Better


Book Description

"One of us (Elizabeth) had the opportunity to conduct research with a gentleman named Henry Molaison (better known by his initials, H.M.1), who had the interior portion of his left and right temporal lobes (the part of your brain next to your temples) removed in 1953 because of epileptic seizures that were difficult to control. From a technical standpoint, the surgical procedures went fine. But, as he recovered, the doctors and researchers soon noticed something very troubling: he was unable to form any new memories. He could read, and talk, and if you were having a brief conversation with him, you would probably not notice anything amiss. But family members would visit and, although he knew who they were, he would have no memory of them coming. New doctors would introduce themselves and the next day (or even the next hour) he did not recall that he had met them. It was then that the doctors understood that, somehow, the removal of those parts of the temporal lobe caused him to become completely amnestic"--




Dying to Forget


Book Description

For some, the day you die is only the beginning. After Piper dies, she gets two choices: enter her own personal hell, or go back to Earth and become the voice of conscience inside a boy's head. Can she save Sloan from meeting the same fate? A tale of hope that will warm your heart.




So Hard To Forget


Book Description

Amnesia? A con game? Or is he just seeing double? Maximilian Warner. Tough. Cynical. Successful. A partner in one of the country's top security and private investigation companies. Recently, Max has done something totally uncharacteristic. He's fallen in love with a client's daughter. Sandra is beautiful, intelligent…and probably dead. After eighteen months of trying to prove that Sandra's husband murdered her, Max reluctantly puts the case aside to move on to a new one. Only to discover that the man he's now investigating has a daughter. Nicole is beautiful, intelligent…and the image of Sandra.




Love, Infidelity and Drinking To Forget


Book Description

Sara and Daniel, two New Yorkers used to the buzz of the Big Apple and the Metropolitan Museum, pack their books and cats in a pickup and set off for the backwoods of Atlantic Canada, their lovely young heads filled with lovely rustic dreams. From the start, things go haywire and the homesteading couple discover Law #1 of the wilderness: Nature goes its way and folks go crazy. The process is alternately hilarious and devastating. The main catalysts are the splendid locals, who first appear as uproarious rednecks, but gradually emerge as very affecting characters in their own right. Another is a much longed-for baby, who crystallizes Sara and Daniel's feeling for each other and the land. At the center of the book is the story of what happens to the child–a stunning section of quiet, simple intense writing that goes straight to the heart of what love is all about. Gundy draws deeply on her readers feelings; she is a writer who can make you weep on one page and laugh hilariously on the next. LOVE, INFIDELITY AND DRINKING TO FORGET chronicles a spiritual change that resonates long after the last page. "…a great pleasure. Elizabeth Gundy is such an intelligent and affecting writer. As she did in BLISS, she has created characters whose sorrows you suffer and whose joys you celebrate." –Hilma Wolitzer