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Have you always wondered how to apply confidence and to employ the process of positivity to overcome challenges? Now you can conquer all the major setbacks in your life and rise above the circumstances threatening to crush you! "When Life Happens" is the special guide to turning your life around - it offers invaluable lessons in self-direction in a balanced way by teaching how to find "that something" in you. This book provides practical strategies for overcoming negative thoughts and behaviors, and building critical thinking skills. It also describes techniques for accepting, embracing, and learning from the experiences of life, improving communication skills and developing greater personal happiness. Within the pages of this refreshing book, Marion dishes out techniques that are guaranteed to ignite your business, relationships, and life starting now. It focuses on the five strategies and the 21 tips that help people to tap into their "that something". The book ends by asking the reader to Dare...Stretch...Prosper. Because, climbing the ladder of life as well as success is certain to have rungs that are missing, rungs filled with fear and doubt, rungs of "I give up." But, if you stay the course, and move onward and upward the ladder, you can be assured that opportunity is there, success is there, and prosperity is there. The discoveries in this book will completely change any reader's life!
Paying special attention to the Romantic poets from Wordsworth and Coleridge down to Pound and Eliot, Marion Montgomgery explores the disorientation of image and methaphor for reality. Two species of "romanticism" emerge: that of the poet and that of the scientist.
Eudora Welty and Walker Percy were friends but very different writers, even though they were interested in the relation of place to their fiction. This work explores in each the concept of home and the importance of home to the homo viator (""man on his way"") and anti-idealism and anti-romanticism.
In this work, a self-proclaimed Fugitive-Agrarian concentrates on the history and mystery of nature. He explores Fugitive-Agrarian concepts of nature, history, science, industry, family and community, paying particular attention to the contrasting philosophies of John Crowe Ransom and Allen Tate.
This text is an exploration of Romantic poetry, including that of Eliot, Pound, Keats, Donne, Wordsworth, and Williams, from a Thomistic perspective. The author is particularly interested in the intellect and its relation to reality, intuition and rational thought.
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