HEAL YOUR DEPRESSION AND REGAIN YOUR LIFE—WITH THREE NEW TOOLS ON THE CUTTING EDGE OF TREATMENT Everyone feels depressed sometimes. But a sustained lack of energy, a pro-found inability to enjoy life, or an overwhelming sadness that can render unbearable pain may be symptoms of something more. If you suffer from any of these symptoms, you may be one of 300 million people worldwide who have depression. While we often think of pharmaceutical treatments as the best way to treat depression, the truth is that for many people they either don’t work or lose their efficacy after a time. But there is hope in the form of three groundbreaking therapies: ketamine, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). In Brain Reboot, you’ll learn: How to get an accurate diagnosis How to determine what treatment(s) are best for you The efficacy of ketamine, TMS, and ECT A clear summary of benefits and potential side effects Step-by-step information for each treatment and FAQs Tips for supplementing your recovery with exercise, nutrition, and sleep Treatments on the horizon Dr. Michael Henry’s life mission is to help anyone suffering with treatment-resistant depression; in Brain Reboot he provides everything you need to know about using ketamine, TMS, and ECT to regain your self and your life.
St. Charles is the second-oldest city in Missouri and one of the oldest cities in the United States. For most of its history, it could have been featured in any bad western movie, with a legacy of street shootings and lynch mobs. When you sit on the banks of the Missouri River, it does not take much of an imagination to see, feel and perhaps even smell the ghosts lingering there. The scoundrels, the criminals and the victims of traumatic events are the spirits that cannot rest. Join Michael Henry for some of their stories as he keeps vigil with representatives of the city's restless past, from the lost dogs of the Lewis and Clark Expedition to the mysterious Lady in White.
An argument and fight between panhandler Lester "Mule" Gardner and Abdul Azeem nee Joseph Randall at the Gas & Go Fast convenience store in the heart of the Mississippi Delta results in the shooting death of Azeem and the serious wounding of innocent bystander Trevor Brewer, who returned fire after being shot by Mule.District Attorney Willie Mitchell Banks initiates the prosecution of Mule, but forensic evidence reveals that it was a bullet from bystander Trevor Brewer's gun that killed Azeem. A routine database check of Trevor's gun reveals that it was the murder weapon in a racially motivated double homicide in Oklahoma City two years earlier. Azeem's associates at the Muslim commune in rural Yaloquena County insist that the D.A. send Trevor Brewer to prison for life. When Willie Mitchell tells them the evidence shows that Trevor fired in self-defense, the commune leader Mohammed X threatens to take matters into his own hands. Trevor's uncle, outlaw biker Freddy Brewer and his white supremacist biker gang, The Dregs, undertake to join forces with the Brewer Hill clan of sharpshooters to protect Trevor from the law and the Muslim militia.A twelve-person jury returns a verdict in Willie Mitchell Banks' murder trial against Mule Gardner, but neither the Muslims, the outlaw bikers, or the Brewer clan is satisfied. More violence ensues, with D.A. Willie Mitchell Banks, his Assistant U.S. Attorney son Jake Banks, and Yaloquena County Sheriff Lee Jones caught in the middle.
A veritable cookbook of natural plaster recipes and techniques for beautiful, durable finishes Natural plasters made of clay, lime, and other materials mixed with sand are beautiful building finishes. Fun to work with, low-impact, and allowing infinite creativity, they are high performance and provide proven, centuries-long durability. Yet until now there's been no resource that has pulled together the best North American plaster recipes and how-to into one place. Essential Natural Plasters covers it all: Sourcing and selecting materials, including site-soils Clay, lime, and gypsum plasters as well as fibers and amendments Interior and exterior use and specialty plasters such as tadelakt for bathrooms Preparing substrates, from straw bales and cob to lath and Sheetrock How to set up a safe, efficient worksite Mixing, testing, tinting, repairing, and applying plasters Coveted recipes from leading plasterers in Ontario, Vermont, New Mexico, France, and New Zealand. Richly illustrated and deeply researched, Essential Natural Plasters is the must-have resource for owner-builders and professionals alike.
(Applause Books). This engrossing drama by Michael Henry Brown had its world premiere in 1992. This book features the complete script of the story of two childhood friends, one black, the other white, and their struggle to live in a racist world.
A back-to-basics approach to employee engagement, Time to Lead provides common sense leadership practices for busy leaders like you. It is a practical resource on how to address your administrative responsibilities while increasing your presence with employees and customers. Each goal focused exercise and self-assessment tool comes directly from the collective experiences of leaders like you. By practicing Time to Lead principles, you will enhance your ability to: Align your activities with your professional values and work unit priorities; Spend quality time with your employees and customers; Develop a cohesive team where employees effectively communicate within and between work units; Ensure employee understanding and acceptance of team goals, roles, policies and resources; Teach employees the difference between problems (that can be solved) and realities (outside of your control); Conduct results oriented meetings where employees constructively participate in decision making; and Hire and retain those employees who demonstrate high Emotional Intelligence (E.Q.).
While everyone is accountable for their own behavior, leaders are ultimately responsible for employee performance. By setting their own standards of exceptional performance, managers teach their employees to accept accountability for their own actions and attitudes. What You Accept is What You Teach is the perfect "how to" guide for navigating the maze of challenging employee communication and performance problems. It is an excellent resource for developing a healthy culture of accountability and improved employee performance. In use by more than 25,000 managers nation-wide.
How has American literature after postmodernism responded to the digital age? Drawing on insights from contemporary media theory, this is the first book to explore the explosion of new media technologies as an animating context for contemporary American literature. Casey Michael Henry examines the intertwining histories of new media forms since the 1970s and literary postmodernism and its aftermath, from William Gaddis's J R and Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho through to David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. Through these histories, the book charts the ways in which print-based postmodern writing at first resisted new mass media forms and ultimately came to respond to them.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jake Banks gets re-assigned to New Orleans to follow his ex-girl friend, FBI Special Agent Kitty Douglas, working on a federal task force to stop the flood of assault weapons from the Port of New Orleans to drug cartels in Mexico. Riding in an NOPD patrol car, Jake encounters Cuban-born Ignacio Torres, a Santeria priest and sorcerer, mystical leader of Los Cuervos, a cult-like gang smuggling thousands of weapons out of the port. Torres kills the two cops hosting Jake's ride along, but mysteriously allows Jake to walk away. Jake works with NOPD detectives and Kitty's FBI task force to locate Torres and his drug-smuggling cult, but Los Cuervos and the sorcerer become the hunters, pursuing Jake and Kitty on the gritty streets of N.O. Kitty survives a horrendous assault by Los Cuervos, and Jake disappears. His father, Mississippi District Attorney Willie Mitchell Banks, and David Dunne, Jake's mentor and leader of the covert Domestic Operations Group (DOGs), arrive in N.O. They search the dark corners of the French Quarter to find Los Cuervos and the sorcerer Torres, but whether they can save Jake is not resolved until the thrilling final pages of THE RIDE ALONG.
Law Without Force is a landmark in political and social philosophy. It proposes nothing less than a completely new basis for international law. As relevant today as when it was first published nearly sixty years ago, it commands the attention of all concerned with what the future may bring to the law of nations. The great scope of Niemeyer's undertaking draws respect even from those who disagree with his challenging analysis of the historical past and his suggestions for the future of international law. In his new introduction, Michael Henry observes that Law Without Force provides us with a foundation of Niemeyer's thinking. Published in 1941, when Hitler was swallowing up Europe, this volume shows how a first-rate mind grappled with a legal, historical, social, and ultimately metaphysical problem. It provides in detail the reasoning behind Niemeyer's rejection of a foreign policy based on morality and his distinction between authoritarian and totalitarian governments; and it provides us with the first stage of his lengthy and prodigious effort to understand "this terrible century." It is a book that no serious student of Niemeyer can afford to ignore. At the very heart of the author's vigorous discussion may be found his rejection of a moral basis for international law and his suggestion that a functional basis should be substituted for it. The book incisively reviews the relation between traditional international law and the changing structure of international politics concluding that the traditional system of law has operated as an agency of disharmony and conflict. After an investigation of the traditional legal system, the author then asks, "What type of law fits the social structure of this modern world?" The answers are presented in the last part of the book, as Neimeyer offers his case for a functional system of law, divorced from moral exhortations or appeals to shattered authority. Philosophy, sociology, and legal theory are brilliantly interwoven in this volume, which will engage serious readers interested in political and social theory.
Long identified with African-American style and culture, Harlem is also a pillar of New York's social and architectural history. In this beautifully illustrated study, historian Michael Henry Adams presents an evocative portrait of the various and divergent Harlems of yesteryear, from the Native American settlements discovered by the Dutch in the seventeenth century to the vibrant community of present-day preservationists. In addition to the legacy of residential architecture—Dutch farmhouses, Native American longhouses, mansions and country villas, thoughtfully planned row houses, and handsome apartment buildings, the author examines schools, industrial facilities, stores, churches, and more. Harlem's spectrum of designers ranges from the well known—McKim, Mead & White, responsible for part of Strivers' Row; George B. Post & Sons, architects of the monumental Shepard Hall at the City College of the City University of New York—to practitioners who, though today mostly forgotten, designed much of the urban fabric of Harlem and New York City. All have contributed to an extraordinarily rich streetscape that today preserves the best of Harlem's past.
This timely workbook helps employees prepare themselves for our constantly changing health care environment. Learn how to be an outstanding Organizational Citizen by developing effective problem solving and change-agent skills. Develop conflict resolution competence and assertive Fair-Fighting skills to deal with difficult co-workers, managers and physicians. Empower yourself to take complete responsibility for your own job success, satisfaction, intrinsic motivation, work and service ethic - regardless of the environment you work in.
This book is for the serious-minded Christian. It is for those who are running the Race set before them. It is for those who desire to hear those words, "Well done, my good and faithful servant." The book is for those who are no longer happy with calling themselves a Christian and then not acting like one. It is not a book for the faint of heart who want to get into heaven and yet not obey the Father. If you want to be Christ like, and are ready to count the cost, this book is for you. If you want to do things your way, by all means, buy a feel good devotional book and some Kleenex. But if you are serious and/or determined and want to challenge yourself, let's run this race. This will please our Father in Heaven.
The Power of Shared Vision addresses how to develop goals that unite people around a common cause and secure employee ownership of changes that improve the quality of their work. Learn to create a retribution-free communication environment where people can communicate their needs without fear of retribution. Leaders will help team members distinguish problems that can be solved from those work realities that are outside of their control. Understand the reasons why some employees cannot or will not meet job-related expectations and what leaders can do to close the performance gap.
The multifaceted career of John Thelwall (1764-1834)&—poet, novelist, playwright, journalist, politician, scientist&—is the lens through which we are offered here a new look at the phenomenon of British Jacobinism, long distorted by the critical view of it as intellectually weak bequeathed to us by Coleridge and Wordsworth, once Jacobins themselves. This book, the first on Thelwall in almost one hundred years, combines literary analysis and historical description to show how this innovative political activist remained true to his radicalism while adapting his methods in the face of the anti-Jacobin reaction that Paine's The Rights of Man helped set off. The three parts of the book set Thelwall's achievements and challenges in the political and literary context of his times. Part One, &"Jacobin(s) Writing,&" focuses on the most essential aspects, ideologically and formally, of the insurgent writing of the 1790s to which Thelwall contributed. Part Two, &"The Voice of the People,&" treats both Thelwall's radical oratory and journalism, as well as his writings and activities as a natural scientist and rhetorician, a professor and technician of &"elocution.&" Part Three, &"Jacobin Allegory,&" expounds on Thelwall's characteristic strategy of indirect expression through synecdoche and allegory, which he used in his later career after repression forced him out of politics. Through Thelwall's life Michael Scrivener succeeds in revealing how British Jacobinism reshaped the public sphere, initiating numerous literary experiments with oratory, pamphlets, periodicals, popularizations, and songs in the spaces opened up by political associations, lectures, meetings, and trials. Jacobinism thus altered the very institutions of reading and writing by expanding literacy, restructuring the popular arena for reading, and generating a body of diverse texts that were &"seditious allegories.&
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.