Has a perfectly timed, seemingly impossible event happened to you? What do you think when this happens to you more than once? Do these glimpses into the extraordinary change you and in what ways? I had experienced too many of these occurrences to ignore. They defied logic. But they happened anyway. This book shares those experiences with you, as well as reflections on how they could occur. How does the impossible become possible? And will the impossible in this century become commonplace in the next?
What can we do to keep not only our teaching but also our lives more deeply meaningful, vibrant, restorative and exciting? This book gives to both new and experienced teachers and learners alike a gift of power and permission to be every ounce of what you want to be with vigor and determination, courage, respect and passion as well.
What can we do to keep not only our teaching but also our lives more deeply meaningful, vibrant, restorative and exciting? This book gives to both new and experienced teachers and learners alike a gift of power and permission to be every ounce of what you want to be with vigor and determination, courage, respect and passion as well.
Who among us has not experienced times of vague uneasiness, prolonged stress, depression, or even despair? What if you have just suffered a severe loss or many losses? Where do you turn when everything you've worked so hard to build up suddenly and completely falls apart? A Place Called Happiness, while understanding that circumstances and events of our lives can be anywhere from mildly difficult to brutalizing, nevertheless affirms a permanent pathway to a state of overriding contentment. In this concise, readable book, Dr. Dori Seider allows us to encounter, gently yet powerfully, the internal barriers that keep us from our own happiness. She helps us to define a new approach that will invite our contentment in, ask it to stay longer, and make it feel so at home that it will return to us more often. The book is divided into four parts: Losing Your Happiness, Changing Your Mind, Finding Your Truth, and Loving Your Life. Dr. Seider insists that even in a very troubled world it is possible for each of us to create an enduring sense of well-being, and she shows us how.
Two women, a flight instructor and her student, take off in a small plane and fly their thoughts into the future. They land for breakfast, but their thoughts stay suspended in the air until they become relevant to today’s situation. What were and are those thoughts? Please come and fly with us to breakfast and beyond. Feel free to fly your own vision of the future that we will build together.
Who among us has not experienced times of vague uneasiness, prolonged stress, depression, or even despair? What if you have just suffered a severe loss or many losses? Where do you turn when everything you've worked so hard to build up suddenly and completely falls apart? A Place Called Happiness, while understanding that circumstances and events of our lives can be anywhere from mildly difficult to brutalizing, nevertheless affirms a permanent pathway to a state of overriding contentment. In this concise, readable book, Dr. Dori Seider allows us to encounter, gently yet powerfully, the internal barriers that keep us from our own happiness. She helps us to define a new approach that will invite our contentment in, ask it to stay longer, and make it feel so at home that it will return to us more often. The book is divided into four parts: Losing Your Happiness, Changing Your Mind, Finding Your Truth, and Loving Your Life. Dr. Seider insists that even in a very troubled world it is possible for each of us to create an enduring sense of well-being, and she shows us how.
Has a perfectly timed, seemingly impossible event happened to you? What do you think when this happens to you more than once? Do these glimpses into the extraordinary change you and in what ways? I had experienced too many of these occurrences to ignore. They defied logic. But they happened anyway. This book shares those experiences with you, as well as reflections on how they could occur. How does the impossible become possible? And will the impossible in this century become commonplace in the next?
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