I would first of all like to say my book is all about love its basically about friendship and also about meeting someone special and getting to know one another and yes falling deeply in love. There is really nothing like it. Falling in love to me is the ultimate. To me it helps to bring joy and peace and love and happiness into your life. It helps to make life a whole lot sweeter. It puts a smile on your face and it gives you that warm and caring feeling you get when you know within your heart that someone cares deeply about you. I would love to see this book touch so many hearts and so many lives and to bring people closer together with one- another. For couples to meet and fall in love this is my wish for all of you that read my book that ultimately along the way you will all find a happy ending. There is nothing like a happy endings thats a big part of what life is all about is finding that special someone and having that happy ending. I also want to thank all the people at the publishing company that helped to make my dream of writing this book come true. I want to thank first of all my best friend Mini for helping to make it possible for me to get this book published. I also want to thank Mary Flores, Faith Go, Rey Santos also everyone in the Production Department that helped and worked so hard at putting my book together and getting it published. Thanks to all of you for your hard work and patience with me. I have one last thing to say. Remember everyone when you meet someone and you fall in love and you touch one anothers hearts always respect one another and always strive to have those happy endings. Love to all of you Y.H.
* Filled with historical photographs * Includes excerpts from diaries, newspaper files, community histories, and personal interviews The highway through Washington's Cascades at Snoqualmie Pass is one of the most heavily used mountain transportation routes in the country. Yet, within sight of its concrete ribbons, one can find sections of the primitive wagon road that brought prairie-state settlers through the pass to open up the Puget Sound country. Traces can still be found of an even earlier route, the trail used by the Indians for hunting and trading. Others traveled the pass as civilization moved West: fur traders, miners, military horse columns, cattle drovers, farmers, precursors of today's land developers. A little ferryboat once crossed Lake Keechelus to link up the wagon road; then logging and dam building altered the lake forever. The coming of the automobile; the establishment of two railways and then subsequent waves of highway construction brought the pass into the modern era, which also saw the birth of the ski resort in the Northwest. This is the story of the evolution of the Snoqualmie Pass, from narrow Indian trail to multi-laned Interstate 90, and of the people who took part along the way. For the hundreds who drive through the pass daily, for the countless thousands more who have skied, hiked, snowshoed and climbed in this alpine playground, it's a fascinating tale.
Drs. Van Zaalen and Reichel, internationally renowned experts about cluttering, have drawn on their extensive experience in working with people who clutter to prepare a comprehensive guide that covers everything a clinician needs to know about cluttering, from theory to diagnosis to treatment and beyond. The book includes personalized explanations that help readers truly understand the complicated disorder known as cluttering, along with numerous therapy activities and exercises that can be directly incorporated into treatment for people who clutter. Potentially confusing topics are presented with clarity, controversies are explained in accessible terms, and the varied presentations of the condition are sorted so clinicians can approach their clients in an orderly and organized fashion. Examples of the types of information presented include: defining cluttering (including historical perspectives), differential diagnosis between cluttering and stuttering (as well as numerous other conditions), public awareness and perceptions of cluttering, a wide range of key symptoms for clinicians to evaluate, detailed diagnostic procedures that examine more than just overt speech behaviors, and a careful consideration of therapy development and planning. It should be comforting for clinicians to recognize that they can receive such comprehensive guidance from these expert clinician/researchers, and I am confident that all who work with people who clutter will appreciate having access to this important new resource." -J. Scott Yaruss, PhD, CCC-SLP, ASHA Fellow Board-Recognized Specialist in Fluency Disorders, Associate Professor, University of Pittsburgh, Co-Author, School-Age Stuttering: A Practical Guide and Minimizing Bullying for Children Who Stutter
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