Most people understand that they are in control of what and how they eat. Unfortunately, there can be a daily disconnect regarding one’s body, mind, and mouth, very often lasting for years. In this guide, author Margaret Marshall uses insights and lessons from her clients’ lives, along with her own experiences, to address the challenges we often face controlling our weight. She asks you to consider the unpleasant and sometimes life-threatening circumstances we accept in our lives instead of taking responsibility for our well-being. Among the real stories she shares in Body, Mind, and Mouth is the story of a New York City police officer who no longer fits into his bulletproof vest. He closes it tightly on his right side leaving a gap on his left side, knowing to face right if he is ever in a shoot-out. Also included is the story of a working mother and her son, who became increasingly heavier due to her busy life and the ease of obtaining fast food. These and other stories illustrate how our minds affect our mouths, how our mouths affect our bodies, and how a shift in thought can benefit our health and wellness. “Margaret Marshall uses humor and real stories to demonstrate her vast knowledge of nutrition and psychology in the weight-loss field. She brings to the book the same enthusiasm and knowledge she does in her speaking. Her message is clear, well written, and motivating. Imagine a book that is easy to read and packed with good information. Now that’s a real deal.” —Dr. Harris R. Cohen, author of Lessons Learned: How to Negotiate the Life You Want to Live
Taken together, these texts reveal the complicated public discussion of education in the 1890s - a period of transformation in culture, schooling, and the organization of knowledge. Moreover, they reveal the rhetorical structure of many of the questions Americans ask about education today: who should be educated, by whom, for what purposes, using what methods or materials? What of the past should we pass on to the future, and how? Contesting Cultural Rhetorics will be useful to readers interested in the history of education and nineteenth-century popular culture, as well as those involved in current debates on education and public policy.
Response to Reform: Composition and the Professionalization of Teaching critiques the politics of labor and gender biases inherent in the composition workplace that prevent literacy teachers from attaining professional status and respect. Scrutinizing the relationship between scholarship and teaching, Margaret J. Marshall calls for a reconceptualization of what it means to prepare for and enter the field of composition instruction. Interrogating the approach the education system takes to certify teachers without actually “professionalizing” their careers, Marshall contends that these programs rely on outdated rhetorics of labor that only widen the gap between teaching and other professional jobs. Such attempts to re-educate literacy teachers exploit and marginalize their work, and thus prevent them from claiming the status of academic professionals. In providing an overview of the history of and language used to literacy instruction, she also points out that while women are overrepresented in composition instruction, they are underrepresented in tenure track and administrative positions. To correct and combat these inequities, Marshall advocates an alternate alignment of power structures and rhetorical choices. In a wide-ranging survey that sheds new light on the composition workplace as well as higher education at large, Response to Reform: Composition and the Professionalization of Teaching boldly asks us to do away with the reductive language we inherit from the past that characterize teaching and professionalization, as well as our customary responses to public criticism of education. The result is a new articulation of composition as a meritorious profession.
The Five-Finger Food Guide is suggested for meat eaters, vegetarians, and vegans. If you are a college student, a busy parent, or someone who works more hours than you admit, the Five-Finger Food Guide will easily keep you on track with smart eating. Your guide goes everywhere you do, and is a handy reminder how you can eat smart in any situation. Margaret Marshall has a career that spans nearly three decades. It has been her daily routine to be welcomed into homes and offices, working with individuals or small groups of people connected by family, neighborhoods, friends, or work environment. She uses her expertise to help groups of familiar people recreate, restructure, and revive their eating. From the many life stories of these clients, she can tell you; The problem in Americas pantries lies in the cupboards of their minds. Margaret appears on TV hosting wellness segments. Her first book, Body, Mind, and MouthLifes Eating Connection, was released in 2012. It depicts how you manage the connection between your mind and your mouth, and enables you to reap the benefits in your body and health. Having a childhood nickname of Margaret, Margaret, the big fat target, it is her passion to help others change their self-image, health, and weight, and in turn, their happiness and level of success. Now she shares her Five-Finger Food Guide to help you eat smart, enjoy eating satisfaction, obtain your ideal body weight, and live a healthier life. Margaret is a nationally recognized speaker, and an expert in her field. She presents her wellness programs at corporate functions and conventions. Look for her blogs on www.HuffingtonPost.com Other books by Margaret Marshall: Body, Mind, & MouthLifes Eating Connection Contact Margaret Marshall at; www.MargaretMarshallAssoc.com http://us.linkedin.com/in/margaretmarshall Twitter: Margaret@MarshallM01 Face book: Margaret Thompson Marshall For further information visit: www.MargaretMarshallAssoc.com
La vera Bela 'Joe' ( Ĝo ) estis mezgranda, bruna kaj miksrasa hundo. Li estis origine posedata de viraĉo de la urbo Meaford, en Ontario, Kanado, kiu kruele misuzis lin kaj eĉ fortranĉis liajn orelojn kaj voston. Walter Moore savis la hundon en 1890 de probabla morto, perforta kaj dolora. En 1892, Margaret Marshall Saunders (1861–1947), unue eksciis pri 'Bela JOE' kiam ŝi vizitis sian fraton kaj lian edzinon, Louise Moore. Saunders estis tiel kortuŝata de la parola informo pri Joe, ke ŝi decidis verki longan rakonton en formo de aŭtobiografio. Ŝi volis ke 'Bela Joe' rakontu kortuŝe siajn vivospertojn per sia propra hunda voĉo. Kiam ŝi legis pri literatura konkurso de la 'Usona Humana Eduka Societo', Marshal Saunders alilokigis la lokon de la rakonto al la usona ŝtato Maine ( Mejn ) kaj ŝanĝis la nomon de la familio de Moore al Morris. La romano gajnis la unuan lokon kaj estis eldonita en 1893 kiam alia rakonto el vidpunkto de besto 'Nigra Belulino' ( Black Beauty ) de Anna Sewell jam fariĝis klasika verko kiu simile permesis al la leganto eniri la menson de la besto kaj senti pli da simpatio ol priskribo prezentita laŭ rekta dokumenta maniero. Ĝis 1900, pli ol 800,000 vendiĝis en Usono, 40,000 en Kanado kaj 100,000 en Britio.
Women were not invented until the 1950's. Or so it seems to the archival reader, searching for accounts of early farm women. Primary sources, however, reveal a different picture. At the heart of every successful farm was a woman. In this unique history, Margaret Coleman explores women farmers in Montgomery County, Maryland, from the early days to the present.
Margaret Rhyne loved and cared for her daughter Alexis for 29 years before Alexis unexpectedly passed away in 2005. Alexis began suffering seizures at eight weeks old, and never grew larger than a five-year-old. Even though Alexis was never able to walk, talk, or feed herself, Margaret worked to give Alexis a normal life, involving her in family functions, trips to the grocery store, and other opportunities for social interaction. This is the story of life after Alexis as well, including restoring a 1910 Sears catalogue home in Sedalia in honor of Alexis' memory.
Tilda Jane is a rambunctious orphan in search of a home, fleeing the orphanage that won't allow her to keep her rescued dog. Her independence and strong will bring her trouble and adventures that straddle the Canadian-American border. Ultimately, she arrives in Ciscasset, Maine, to work for the elderly, irritable Hank Dillson. Tilda Jane is a compelling story of self-discovery by Marshall Saunders, an author renowned for her commitment to a better life for children and animals. Published before L.M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables, these fictional orphans are both on a quest to find a home.
Many peple today deal with poor environmental conditions in their family residence.This book was written to encourage others to use their stumbling blocks as positive hurdles and show that they have the advantage to overcome the devastation in their lives.
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.