It's a Regular Life


Book Description

Skips skipped across the Park and stopped beneath the towering metal gate. He would leave. He would never come back. He decided right then, with a stern yeti look. He would never return to the Park again... "I wish I'd never worked at the Park," Skip said, and he took a slow, heave skip forward. Little did he know that crazy Christmas magic was in the air, doing crazy Christmas things...




It's a Regular Life


Book Description

It’s Christmastime at the Park! Based on the classic Christmas movie spectacular It’s a Wonderful Life, we find everyone’s favorite yeti, Skips, having a tough time this holiday season. Frustrated, he wishes his old life away. When his wish is granted, he is shown how bad off the Park is without him and wishes for everything to return to normal. He awakens to find everything as he left it with a very special holiday surprise from all his Regular Show friends who love him dearly.




We Now Return to Regular Life


Book Description

When fourteen-year-old Sam Walsh returns home after three years in the custody of his kidnapper, his older sister Beth and childhood friend Josh must deal with their survivors' guilt, their memories of what really happened the day Sam disappeared, and with the fact that Sam is not the boy they remember, but a troubled teen struggling to re-adapt to normal life.




The Narrative Complexity of Ordinary Life


Book Description

William L. Randall shows how narrative psychology is integral to how we navigate everyday life. He makes the case that all people function as narrative psychologists by continually storying their lives - as well as those of others - in memory and imagination. The book weaves anecdotes of encounters its author experiences with speculations on his own life story, probing the narrative complexity of our memories, emotions, and identities, and our experience of everything from romance to rumour and history to religion.




Everyday, Ordinary, Insane Life


Book Description

If you feel stressed out or depressed, then you have a lot in common with the author, Jimmy Jabroni. But how do ordinary people deal with the stress, the sadness and the disappointments of everyday life? That's right. They go to Las Vegas and fornicate. However, for those of us who hate to fly, we cope by venting about our problems which distress us to our friends. Unfortunately, Mr. Jabroni has no friends. Fortunately, Mr. Jabroni is a brilliant humorist and a master of satire & sarcasm, so he can release his pent up frustrations through his sobering humor. And you will be thoroughly entertained as you read this jabroni's hilarious personal experiences with dating, relationships, working, sex, being single, depression and other problems. Every paragraph of this book is bound to provoke fits of laughter. And you will continue laughing as the author examines with even more comical genius the big philosophical quandaries which torment him, such as the meaning of life, death, happiness, truth and more.




Extraordinary Encounters In An Ordinary Life


Book Description

In Extraordinary Encounters in an Ordinary Life, Mark Miller writes of everyday experiences (growing up in a Jewish household, raising children) and unique experiences (interviewing the Dalai Lama, running for public office. Miller tells of colorful characters he has met as newspaper reporter, copywriter, and marketing manager, and describes the difficulty of raising children after divorce. Reflecting on a career in hospitals, nursing homes and hospices, he recounts personal experiences with the dying, including members of his own family, providing insight into how health care systems often fails the poor and elderly. He asks questions about health care issues that become increasingly critical as Baby Boomers head into their final years. Finally, he gives personal accounts of celebrities he has met and interviewed, including Jimmy Carter and George Bush, which paint fresh portraits of the people behind the photos. Mark Miller's experiences and life lessons can serve as reminders for us to pay closer attention to the people and the blessings in our lives and to live every day with open minds and open hearts.




Cultural Change And Ordinary Life


Book Description

How important are the media? How is culture changing? How is ordinary life being transformed? How do we belong? This ground-breaking book offers a new approach to the understanding of everyday life, the media and cultural change. It explores the social pattern of ordinary life in the context of recent theories and accounts of social and cultural change. Brian Longhurst argues that our social and cultural lives are becoming increasingly audienced and performed and that activities in everyday life are changing due to the ever-growing importance and salience of the media. These changes involve people forging new ways of belonging, where among other things they seek to distinguish themselves from others. InCultural Change and Ordinary Life, Longhurst evaluates changes in the media and ordinary life in the context of large-scale cultural change, especially with respect to globalization and hybridisation, fragmentation, spectacle and performance, and enthusing or fan-like activities. He makes the case that analysis of the media has to be brought into a more thorough dialogue with other forms of research that have looked at social processes. Cultural Change and Ordinary Lifeis key reading for students and researchers of sociology, media studies, cultural studies and mass communication.




As you Life it - Work as usual. Life as unusual


Book Description

Time is a queer commodity that is reconstructed in memories and deconstructed in regrets as it goes by. Most of us sleepwalk through our youth in trying to win some kind of an identity . Then we stumble upon middle age & scramble to preserve that identity . And suddenly, standing at mid-point , we realize that somewhere in this medley of all the artificial races we were enlisting in, we have quietly let go of our greatness. Partly by default , partly by design. The first pangs of urgency hit us. We know this is no dress rehearsal. It is our own life that is gliding past. We straighten up and reach for it. And try to snare it on print. This book is Ayon’s attempt to capture his journey at intermission, narrated through a heterogeneous ensemble of his articles that take you through events, relationships, successes and failures which add up into the randomness of his life that he joins backwards into coherent stories.







A Life Less Lonely


Book Description

'The practical advice in this book is gold dust not only for lonely people, but for those who long to help them.' - Joanna Lumley Loneliness is an epidemic on the rise. It has long been documented that older people suffer from social isolation, but teenagers do too, likewise new parents, those with disability or illness, and anybody going through a significant life change. As more people work full-time, and we interact via social media rather than face-to-face, we need to stop and ask ourselves: what can we do to ensure all our futures are more connected and socially satisfying? This book will help to share stories of loneliness to increase our empathy and understanding of it, and to look for possible solutions. Using the research the Jo Cox Commission undertook following the MP's senseless death in 2016, it offers a wealth of practical advice: how to spot the symptoms in yourself and in others; how to ease them; how to seek help and, ultimately, how to understand this most fundamental of human emotions. Its aim is simple: to provide us all with the tools we need to lead kinder, more connected lives.