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Are you having trouble finding your purpose in life? Do you feel that life just has it in for you sometimes? Do you want to gain a new, more positive perspective on life? Life Lessons From an 18-Year-Old is a brief compilation of 10 lessons I've learned during my time on this planet. My name is Sonia Randhawa and I've spent much of my teenage life pondering life's big questions, as have we all from time to time. This is what I came up with. By the end of this book, my hope is that you will have more clarity in finding your purpose and learn how to focus more on you. Contained within are 10 lessons that are valuable for people of any age. This will help you to: Zone in on your purpose Learn to love yourself and Live more in the moment Life Lessons From an 18-Year-Old is based on workable theories that can be easily applied to your everyday life, with tips included in each chapter (and some doodles!). Each chapter explains a different concept relevant to helping you to improve your mindset and help you view life in a more positive and focused way. Give this book a read and see how I learned to focus more on myself and what it took for me to get there. And how you can too. Take a Look Inside
This book examines how women journalists in Malaysia negotiated male power structures, in particular structures determined by the keystone party of the ruling coalition, the United Malays National Organisation. Through both oral histories and content analysis, it looks at how women journalists in the women's pages of the newspapers found spaces to advocate for their readers. It is thus the first work to look at the importance of the women's pages in the Malay-language newspapers, and how apparently monolithic institutions of the authoritarian state hid diverse contests for resources and prestige. In this contest, the concept of news values, the perception of the reader and the ways in which women constructed themselves as journalists all come into play, and are examined here. The book contributes to the field of feminist media studies by examining how gendered newsroom practices paradoxically allowed women journalists in the women's pages more editorial freedom than those in the malestream press.
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