Sentences with phrase «about her address book»

Not exact matches

Guy Kawasaki addresses emotional contagion in his book Enchantment: «Smiling sends a very clear message about your state of mind, not smiling creates an opening for many interpretations, including grumpiness, aloofness, and anger.»
I address this topic thoroughly in my new book, TakingPoint, which is about leading organizational transformation and the role culture plays in successfully leading change.
In her new book, Thrive, Arianna Huffington enthuses at length about the degree to which meditation has addressed her problems of overwork and exhaustion.
In their forthcoming book, An Everyone Culture: Becoming a Deliberately Developmental Organization, authors Robert Kegan and Lisa Lahey take a deep dive into several companies where employees are expected to learn about their pain points — and promptly address them.
I've admitted my own stumbles, addressed our own challenges, and have created an open book of data and analysis to support very deep concerns about the risks that investors face over the completion of the current market cycle.
And if you keep digging a bit more, chances are you'll also find your entire address book and even metadata about your SMS messages and phone calls.
If a booking had an email address associated with it, the solution enabled bmi to email customers about additional taxes due.
Addressing the matter, Georg von Schnurbein, who co-authored a book about the governance of Swiss foundations, expressed his belief that «there is no reason for [the foundation to fund the Breitmans» defense] because their activities were connected to their Delaware company, not to the foundation.»
We could probably swap negative stories for hours about being endlessly put on hold by the front desk, waiting too long for an appointment that you need, sitting in the waiting room for your appointment that was 30 minutes ago, or being told that you need to book another appointment to address an issue because you're out of time.
It occurs to me that, despite the unprecedented flood of writings of all sorts — books, blog - posts, newspaper op - eds, and academic journal articles — addressing just about every monetary policy development during and since the 2008 financial crisis, relatively few attempts have been made to step back...
Taken together, the two books offered about 1800 words addressed directly to the majority of «former homosexuals» who would not marry.
I suspected I'd get a little pushback from fellow Christians who hold a complementarian perspective on gender, (a position that requires women to submit to male leadership in the home and church, and often appeals to «biblical womanhood» for support), but I had hoped — perhaps naively — that the book would generate a vigorous, healthy debate about things like the Greco Roman household codes found in the epistles of Peter and Paul, about the meaning of the Hebrew word ezer or the Greek word for deacon, about the Paul's line of argumentation in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 11, about our hermeneutical presuppositions and how they are influenced by our own culture, and about what we really mean when we talk about «biblical womanhood» — all issues I address quite seriously in the book, but which have yet to be engaged by complementarian critics.
I am currently writing a book about faith, and in it, I briefly address the idea of blind faith, or taking a leap of faith.
When I got a book deal, I took advantage of having your email address to ask a few questions about publishing, and you always responded quickly and graciously.
These two books address these quite different understandings of liberalism, and reach quite different conclusions about its prospects.
The listings in the World Government Address Book give some idea of the hundreds and hundreds of NGOs that make no bones about their dedication to, well, world government.
As far as creating opportunities for dialog within your faith communities, I'd recommend starting with a book club, perhaps around a book like Trouble I've Seen by Drew Hart, or The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander, or Assimilate or Go Home by Danielle Mayfield, or Forgive Us by the authors mentioned above — something that's not directly about this election or this presidency, but that addresses issues related to justice.
He recognizes that he is addressing mainly the Catholic situation in the United States, and even that from his Irish - American perspective, but he believes that his core argument about the Catholic imagination and its cultural potency has wider application, and I expect he is right about that, although in this book it is asserted rather than demonstrated.
Tripp is also committed to Christian nonviolence, and in June releases a book, co-edited with Justin Bronson Barringer, calledA Faith Not Worth Fighting For: Addressing Commonly Asked Questions about Christian Nonviolence from Cascade Books.
It's for this very reason that Justin Barringer and myself put together the book, A Faith Not Worth Fighting For: Addressing Commonly Asked Questions About Nonviolence.
It includes questions for discussion and ideas for action corresponding with each chapter as well as a list resources for those wishing to learn more about the topics addressed in the book, (perhaps from people who don't conduct their research from the rooftops of their homes).
Here is a page that addresses some of the many lies by DB: http://tfninsider.org/2012/03/02/more-zombie-lies-from-david-barton/ (This was the author whose book about Jefferson was yanked by his publisher when it came to light that is was chock full of misinformation.)
A reader recently contacted me with a good question about a topic I address on this blog and in my book:
In describing and accounting for the lives of the Religious Right, which we define simply as religious conservatives with a considerable involvement in political activity, the book and the series tell the story primarily by focusing on leading episodes in the movement's history, including, but not limited to, the groundwork laid by Billy Graham in his relationships with presidents and other prominent political leaders; the resistance of evangelical and other Protestants to the candidacy of the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy; the rise of what has been called the New Right out of the ashes of Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964; a battle over sex education in Anaheim, California, in the mid-1960's; a prolonged cultural war over textbooks in West Virginia in the early 1970's — and that is a battle that has been fought less violently in community after community all over the country; the thrill conservative Christians felt over the election of a «born - again» Christian to the Presidency in 1976 and the subsequent disappointment they experienced when they found out that Jimmy Carter was, of all things, a Democrat; the rise of the Moral Majority and its infatuation with Ronald Reagan; the difficulty the Religious Right has had in dealing with abortion, homosexuality and AIDS; Pat Robertson's bid for the presidency and his subsequent launching of the Christian Coalition; efforts by Dr. James Dobson and Gary Bauer to win a «civil war of values» by changing the culture at a deeper level than is represented by winning elections; and, finally, by addressing crucial questions about the appropriate relationship between religion and politics or, as we usually put it, between church and state.
Given Driscoll's alarming preoccupation with sex and «masculinity,» and the immaturity with which he has addressed these subjects in the past, one would think Christians would approach this book the way they would approach a book about nutrition written by a pastor who struggles with obesity... (or a book about overcoming procrastination written by me!)
Commandeering an address book, we called every Manhattan listing only to be told over and over again by former friends that the man we were calling about was a drunk, a bully, spoiled and abusive — in short, everything we had discovered about him on our own.
The really heartening thing about this book is that such questions can now be addressed with courtesy and respect by a theologian of international repute without his immediate deletion from everyone's Christmas card list.
Many think that they are addressing books and articles to one particular community (normally their own), but these are in fact read by others, and especially by that other community that they are about.
Tripp is also committed to Christian nonviolence, and in June releases a book, co-edited with Justin Bronson Barringer, called A Faith Not Worth Fighting For: Addressing Commonly Asked Questions about Christian Nonviolence from Cascade Books.
With 100 - plus proposals on what the United Methodist Church (UMC) should do about human sexuality — from deleting its Book of Discipline's stance that homosexuality is «incompatible with Christian teaching» to allowing local churches to choose whether or not to approve same - sex unions and non-celibate gay clergy — organizers of the denomination's quadrennial conference tried to develop a special process to address the issue.
She addresses this head - on at the start of the book and talks about the compromises she's had to make to retain the texture and loft of the baked goods, but I hadn't seen it mentioned in any reviews so I wasn't aware of it when I purchased it online.
While in New York with Mary Jane, I gave an address about the new book to the Horticultural Society of New York and autographed some copies while everyone was eating spicy burritos.
However, he also moved to address quotes once attributed to him about Wenger's coaching skills in an extensive extract in The Sun which covers various points from the book.
In his 2015 book Transforming Schools, Lenz addressed the class concerns that many people have about the deeper - learning approach.
That's what marriage has become, as my co-author and I detail in The New I Do: Reshaping Marriage for Skeptics, Realists and Rebels, and what Eli J. Finkel addresses in his about - to - be released book, The All - Or - Nothing Marriage: How the Best Marriages Work.
It's never an easy decision, even for a woman who so publicly wrote about the demise of her first marriage in a book and then addressed her reluctance to tie the knot again in her 2010 follow - up book, Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace with Marriage, but ultimately did in order to keep him in the States.
More than just another book about discipline, though, Unconditional Parenting addresses the ways parents think about, feel about, and act with their children.
Through these appearances, we've had the opportunity to know what resonated for people, what they were most curious about, and those are the vignettes and issues we addressed in the book.
What I liked most about the book is that it doesn't shy away from addressing the real - life challenges that can trip up the best - intentioned parent, whether it's the growing influence of peers as a child moves into elementary school, the «I don't need your advice» attitude of the high schooler, or the scheduling conflicts that can make healthy, communal eating seem impossible.
While not about a death in the family, this book addresses the death of a schoolmate.
Don't worry about digging through your address book at the last minute, because we have a handy way to organize and print off all of those essential phone numbers — for your caregiver, the labor and delivery unit, a neighbor and others!
The book is written in a question - and - answer format and features a central character, Angus the Answer Dog, who addresses basic queries about starting school, including what a teacher does and what you can find in a preschool classroom.
The things she does for a client are cook big meals (including some to freeze), cleaning bathrooms and kitchens and floors, doing laundry, addressing birth announcements, helping with simple breastfeeding problems (like positioning problems) and helping you decide if it's serious enough to call the lactation consultant about or if you can wait for the breastfeeding support group in a few days, holding the baby while you nap or take a shower, playing with older children, fielding phone calls from family and friends, helping look up odd things in the baby book, dialing the pediatrician, and telling you you're doing a great job.
(Check out the book if you'd like more information about your options to address the underlying causes of colic).
I wrote the book that I wished I'd had - with everything a parent needs to know about colic: clearing up the misconceptions, written specifically for a sleep - deprived parent and giving a balanced perspective on the options to address the underlying causes of colic.
This is a very clever and fun educational book, about a subject that you sooner or later will have to address.
However, rather than simply accepting the opinion of states and critical Western scholars as the point of reference, the edited book Responsibility to Protect: Cultural Perspectives in the Global South by Rama Mani and Tom Weiss addresses the important and so far under - researched question of what scholars and activists from the global south really think about the R2P principle and how the R2P implementation process can account for those southern concerns and insights.
And these books address several important questions: on the origins of the destructive rivalry between the two, about how far they really differed on policy and the puzzle of Brown's premiership.
Indeed, the governor — in both his annual State of the State speech and a policy book released later in the day — sounded warnings about the importance of lifting the neediest New Yorkers out of poverty through comprehensive education programs that address academics while also battling hunger, improving mental health and providing after - school care.
Mahoney tweeted Tuesday morning that he received an email about the book at an address he set up in 2007 to register for an Eliot Spitzer open house at the governor's mansion.
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