Introduction to the distance learning programs available at the undergraduate and graduate levels at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).This book is designed for the adult learner or non-traditional student making their first leap into the exciting and challenging world of distance learning. It goes in-depth with clear and concise information so that the reader can make a reasonable decision in deciding which certificate, associate, bachelor?s, master?s, specialist or doctoral degree programs fit into their family and work lifestyle. This book is designed as a resource for counselors, teachers, and advisers who work with adult learners and non-traditional students to assist them with strategies to help students to identify, consider, select and enroll in distance learning programs at HBCUs.
This holiday themed release offers five religiously themed stories about Christmas, offering lessons about life and spirituality. Among the stories offered in the program are Oh Little Town of Bethlehem, Don't Forget the Baby Jesus, The Christmas Tree, Dear Santa, and The First Christmas. ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi
The mental disease of the century is narcissistic sociopathy manifested in having no empathy. I wanted solitude for no one's more hated than he who speaks the truth. Our self-image is trashed early, determining all that we attract later to confirm that bad identity. The smarter one is the more messed up they get when wires are crossed, hearts broken, rejected. Cross a narcissist and it's their entire goal to hurt you as much as they can so don't get involved man. Cover design by Karen Kellock, inside art by Fox Design and Blaze Goldburst
False kings collude together against God's men and women. Expect it: smear campaigns, gossipin'. The human python is social hypnotism and it's all we've known in human society from the beginning. People are cruel, they keep you down. Haters gotta hate something, it keeps their blood flowin'. The bottom line rule: just extract yourself from fools. We swim in muddy waters so we get stuff on us but it recedes with maturity then we just forget it. Cover by Karen Kellock, inside art by Blaze Goldburst
They didn't treat you as special, unique, talented or significant. You're treated with indifference/love was conditional. They compared you to others like you're fullabull. Early rejection explains the insane drive for greatness and the survival panic leading to suicide. The world imposes BS then weak friends create a mess blocking success. Significance is a child of God and that gives you purpose, no more seen as odd. Cover design by Karen Kellock, Inner art by Blaze Goldburst and Blaze Goldburst
When boomers were sickest look what they produced by that BS: prisons and brokenness. Narcissistic Hollywood culture is divorced from reality: violent, decadent and empty seeking to make us just as nasty. You learned lessons from trudging in the mud but they didn't--they even think democrats are good. Don't minimize betrayal trauma: someone you thought you knew is really a cad into girlie pictures too. Cover design by Karen Kellock, Inside page by Blaze Goldburst
The ruthless gossiping/petty competitions in a small liberal town: I'm a survivor, wow. They incited riots, they came to my house. Always with an army of monkeys of course. Once pegged it's impossible to change the image for years it seems. Sick family system extends out. The sisters lay evil seeds and the system repeats itself. Little lady seems harmless, right? She is NOT. She has the power of the sheriff who she calls a lot. Cover by Karen Kellock, inner art by Blaze Goldburst
The family as system splits between scapegoat and narcissist with flying monkey backup. We mal-adapt to our environment and that becomes the mental illness we have to heal from. No matter how insane you got adapting to rot it's water under the bridge: you were just a tot. The biggest mal-adaptation of the wife of the alcoholic is to get drunk herself, blamed to hell. Are you still masochistically attracted to men who are only into themselves, never reaching out? This comes from trauma, thinking you can change him if only you're nice enough. Cover design by Karen Kellock, inside art by Blaze Goldburst
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.