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Have you been living in an unhealthy relationship?Have you lost confidence and self-esteem as a result?Do you want to rid yourself of a toxic relationship and live a happy life once more?If you are someone who has been living in a relationship, where a partner is enabling your worst attributes and leaving you reliant on them for approval, then you are probably in a co-dependent one. You may not have heard that phrase before or recognize the symptoms as being called by another name, but the one sure thing is that you need to break out of it as soon as possible.Inside this book, Co-dependent - How to Cure Co-dependency and Regain your Self-Esteem, Avoiding Emotional Abuse and Toxic Relationships, you will find ways to cope with a co-dependent relationship that will help you to: Ø Understand the condition betterØ Recognize the different forms of abuse that can arise from itØ Spot when a relationship is toxic and badØ Become a more confident and outgoing personØ Avoid relationships that will harm your health and find ones that are loving and nurturingØ Find self-fulfillmentØ Become freeØ And more...Armed with the tips and advice in this book, you will begin to see why co-dependency is such a dangerously harmful mindset. By allowing yourself to remain in such a relationship you risk serious mental and potentially physical harm, but by freeing yourself from its confines you can live the happier and more contented life you deserve.Get a copy and see the advantages of breaking free!
An engaging "counter-memory" of a diverse, cross-class opposition to the Vietnam War that included the labor movement, working-class students, soldiers and veterans, and Black Power, civil rights, and Chicano activists.
During the period of Mussolini¿s Fascist regime (1923¿43) ¿colonie¿ ¿ holiday centres for children ¿ were established on the northern Italian coasts. Run by paramilitary youth organisations, they brought together modernist architecture, fresh air and discipline with the intention of converting the body and soul of Italian youth to fascist principles.The colonie were far removed from both the towns of Italy¿s past and from the traditional structures of family and community. They offered a dramatic daily programme of activity with marching, synchronised exercise and gymnastics, flag raising, saluting and swearing of allegiance to the regime. It was a programme that in turn inspired architectural features in the buildings ¿ including towers, ramps and elevated platforms ¿ all designed to dramatise the parades and presentations by the young people. Even in the context of massive public works programmes, the building of the colonie offered unprecedented opportunities for progressive architects. They became a distinctive type of fascist building that evolved under the directives of the youth organisations.Despite the spectacle of the buildings, official policy declared luxuries as anti-educational and anti-social. Accordingly only the most basic of accommodation was provided. Dormitories were intimidating, open plan and stark; each might accommodate several hundred children. Italian parents would routinely admonish recalcitrant children with the threat ¿ti mando in colonia!¿ (Behave, or I'll send you to the colonia!). For a generation of Italians the experience of fascism was a formative one, from which some never recovered.An architect by training, artist and photographer Dan Dubowitz is also a cultural master-planner who has worked on major public arts projects both in the UK and abroad. Patrick Duerden is a well-respected architect and writer. Penny Lewis was editor of Prospect, the Scottish architecture magazine, from 2003-2008 and now lectures at the Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen.
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