This new take on relationships changes everything! By examining the seven desires we all share, Mark and Debra Laaser illustrate how men and women are actually more alike than different. Do you long for ways to: Tune in more closely to your children? Connect on a deeper level with your spouse? Strengthen friendships? Reach a fuller relationship with God? The Laasers look past what separates us to examine what connects us. Instead of focusing on how to sidestep or compensate for perceived differences, they dig deeper, to the core of our souls, to examine how the basic needs of all people make us more alike than different. Seven Desires explores the common desires God has given us--to be heard, affirmed, blessed, safe, touched, chosen, and included. Using stories, biblical references, and sound psychological principles, the Laasers explain each desire and show us how we seek it and what it feels like to have it truly fulfilled. You will learn healthy ways to embody these desires in your relationships and receive the tools you need to start repairing and rebuilding relationships and developing new skills for creating emotional and spiritual intimacy.
This issue begins with an overview that distinguishes evidence-based practice (EBP) and translation science, followed by a description of Hawaii’s statewide EBP program that uses active and multifaceted translation science strategies to facilitate the rate and extent of adoption of EBP changes. With one exception, the remaining articles describe individual EBP projects from five different health care facilities that used the Iowa Model to guide their work. Each article includes an evidence summary, a description of implementation strategies, an evaluation of the innovation, and lessons learned. These completed projects were initiated between 2009 and 2012, address a variety of topical nursing issues, and, for the most part, focus on preventing complications (ie, blood sugar elevations, increased lengths of stay, extubation failures, noise-related injury, pain, surgical site infections, pneumonia, restraint use, delirium, and fever). An additional article describes the use of evidence to inform simulation-based learning, a possible strategy for ensuring competencies in and compliance with EBP interventions. Nursing leaders will come away with solid information about utilizing EBP to improve patient outcomes. The Hawaii program demonstrates that health care quality can be realized by employing the best available evidence and empowering the nursing workforce. It also offers a glimpse of the care that the future nursing workforce could provide to create a health system that provides accessible, affordable and quality care to everyone in the United States.
Popular culture provides a daily catalog of cultural attitudes, values, and practices. From television sitcoms to the daily news, from the theater to the sports stadium, we observe embodiments and enactments of character, virtue, honesty, and integrity (or lack thereof) in situations we find understandable, if not familiar. The essays in this volume address popular mediated constructions of ethical and unethical communication in news, sports, advertising, film, television, and the internet. Emphasis is on the consumption of popular culture messages, as well as how auditors make moral sense out of what they read, hear, and observe.
Let's Go To The Mountain" is a daily devotional for those who are looking up to the Lord for help in his or her every day life. Have you ever felt God call you to do something that you felt was impossible? Have you faced disappointments, death of loved ones, or disabling illness? Do you like anecdotes about animals and nature? If the answer is "yes" then this book is for you. Author Debra Whittington claims that if God can use her despite her lack of formal education in Journalism, then He can use anyone! This book chronicles fifteen years of the author's life and those around her as God uses the usual and the unusual to teach life's lessons. Debra Whittington and her husband Mark are native New Mexicans living near historic Route 66 with their dog "Gracie." They operated a motel on the famous road for 28 1/2 years before retiring in 2004. Debra's writing experience started with a historical column with the local newspaper, "The Quay County Sun" in 1991. She has written her religious column, "Notes From The Church Lady" for the past 15 years. This is Debra's third book. The first, "History of First Baptist Church" was written for the church's 90th anniversary in 1994. It was followed by a local history of the area "In The Shadow Of The Mountain: Living in Tucumcari in 1997. Her work has also appeared in New Mexico Magazine. Debra and Mark are active in their church working on various committees and coordinating "Trailblazers" the senior adult ministry of the church.
Whether it's space academy, finding God, fighting wars, or bringing your cat to a psychiatrist, life takes us many interesting places. Some roads we choose. Some are chosen for us. But all have to be traveled. Join Bayou Writers Group as they explore life's journeys in their new anthology.
Essay from the year 2010 in the subject American Studies - Literature, grade: 1,3, Middlebury College (Bread Loaf School of English), course: Identities in 19th century American Literature, language: English, abstract: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is often referred to as a bildungsroman because Huck, its hero, takes three major steps towards becoming a morally free man: to help Jim escape, not to turn him in, and to go to hell to save Jim (Shockley 2). To a large extent, Huck’s growth is the result of spending time with Jim as he begins to view him as an equal human being and thus treats him with respect. In a sense, Jim serves as a substitute for Huck’s father. Contrary to his natural father, Jim takes the role of the father that gives him moral courage, and seeks to love and protect him. Huck’s character develops the more experience he gains which leads him to becoming aware of society’s falseness until he finally rebels against it by doing the right thing: freeing Jim even though that means going to hell and eternal punishment. The quest for freedom from social constraints is the propelling force that makes Huck flee the racist society in which he is living. In the end, Huck is morally freed from Southern society’s hypocrisy and injustice by listening to his heart instead of his conscience. [...]
Like a literary box of chocolates, this is the first edition of Small Town Anthology: Entries from the First Annual Tournament of Writers. Writers from Schoolcraft, Michigan and surrounding areas bravely allowed their works to be judged. Here presented are a wide variety of experiences, fantasties, and causes in a keepsake book.
Women loved the Taylor men. Dr. Keith Taylor and his two sons, Ryan and Brian, were three of Chicagos most wanted. Not in a criminal sense, but wanted and desired by women and girls of all ages. Dr. Taylor was immaculate in every sense. He instilled in his two sons, all the values that he possessed. Taylor men were handsome, educated, and most of all, powerful. Dr. Taylor intended for his sons to portray these values to the fullest. And he certainly wont allow anyone or anything to hinder what he has made. Thats Taylormade. But will his sons be able to uphold their fathers unsullied reputation, following an unexpected pandemoniumor will they soon discover the reputation that they forcefully inherited was suddenly distorted?
Goodnight, Mary Ann, a heart-tugging adventure, is an oral history of the early Sage family who settled in Shawnee and Wabaunsee County, Kansas. In the 1850's, much of Kansas was still Indian territory. Settlers lived "up" and "down" Mission Creek southwest of Topeka, which later became Dover in 1870. Alfred Sage, who was the owner of the Historic Sage Inn was married twice, both times to a woman named Mary Ann. Through the eyes of these two women, the reader learns about not only the trials of the Sage family, but about the early history of Kansas during the territorial years and the Civil War.
Philip Roth scholars continue to reflect on what Philip Roth’s retirement in 2012 means for the landscape of American literature and what his professed disappearance from the public eye in 2014 would mean for the future consideration of his legacy. This collection seeks to answer those questions in a scholarly way. Composed of eleven original essays written by accomplished scholars in the field of Philip Roth Studies, the collection is both relevant and engaging on three levels: it is the first of its kind to offer a scholarly retrospective of Roth’s works and career; it considers Roth within the American literary imagination; and it speculates on Roth’s legacy—particularly the enduring quality of his novels that will continue to resonate long after his retirement.
Transform your high school accounting course with CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING MULTICOLUMN JOURNAL 10E, the leader in high school accounting education for more than 100 years. CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING 10E maintains its renowned instructional design and step-by-step approach to teaching accounting. Greater emphasis on conceptual understanding and financial statement analysis encourages students to apply accounting concepts to real-world situations and make informed business decisions. New features like Forensic Accounting, Think Like an Accountant, Financial Literacy, and Why Accounting? are a few examples of the expanded opportunities for students to master critical-thinking skills. In addition, problems integrated throughout the text equip students to work with Microsoft Excel, Peachtree, QuickBooks, and Automated Accounting Online, with step-by-step instructions. Important Notice: Media content referenced within the product description or the product text may not be available in the ebook version.
Transform your high school accounting course with CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING MULTICOLUMN JOURNAL 10E, the leader in high school accounting education for more than 100 years. CENTURY 21 ACCOUNTING 10E maintains its renowned instructional design and step-by-step approach to teaching accounting. Greater emphasis on conceptual understanding and financial statement analysis encourages students to apply accounting concepts to real-world situations and make informed business decisions. New features like Forensic Accounting, Think Like an Accountant, Financial Literacy, and Why Accounting? are a few examples of the expanded opportunities for students to master critical-thinking skills. In addition, problems integrated throughout the text equip students to work with Microsoft Excel, Peachtree, QuickBooks, and Automated Accounting Online, with step-by-step instructions. Online Working Papers, powered by Aplia, provide engaging digital homework solutions.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.