Not exact matches
Admiral William McRaven,
author of «Make Your Bed: Little Things That Can
Change Your
Life... And Maybe The World,» explains what he learned after being fired early on in his career.
According to Tom Corley, financial planner and
author of «
Change Your Habits,
Change Your
Life,» adjusting your morning ritual can make you happier.
I had the pleasure of sitting down with Jeffrey Shinabarger,
author of Yes or No: How Your Everyday Decisions Will Forever
Change Your
Life and founder of Plywood People, a nonprofit in Atlanta that «leads a community of startups doing good.»
Longtime nap - skeptic and
author Daniel Pink says this kind of coffee nap, or nappuccino, as he dubbed it, recently
changed his
life for the better.
Whether you're unemployed, in transition or looking to completely
change the direction of your career, inspirational speaker and
author Adam Markel will help you do just that through his book, Pivot: The Art and Science of Reinventing Your Career and
Life.
Focus on
changing lives, said
author Deepak Chopra.
George Brescia, a style expert and
author of «
Change Your Clothes,
Change Your
Life Because You Can't Go Naked!
She is the
author of Make Waves: Be the One to Start
Change at Work and in
Life.
Admiral William McRaven,
author of «Make Your Bed: Little Things That Can
Change Your
Life... And Maybe The World,» explains what his daily workout consists of including push - ups, pull - ups and other exercises.
Don't miss: «Rich relationships» can be
life -
changing — here's how to make them, says
author who studies millionaires
Living the expat
life à la famed
author Ernest Hemingway may be the dream of many, but whether you're looking to move abroad for retirement or just searching for a
change of pace, choosing the right place to move to can be a daunting task.
John Mauldin: The
author of Thoughts from The Frontline who has dedicated more than 30 years of his
life to keeping people informed about risk, John has written at length about the fragmentation of society and the
changing nature of employment.
(Brian Tracy, bestselling
author of No Excuses, Maximum Achievement, and
Change Your
Life)
Because of a court case in Louisiana that expressly forbid Biblical Creationism being taught in school science classes, the wording
changed and the
authors removed references to catastrophism, a world - wide flood, a recent inception of the earth or
life, the concept of kinds, or any concepts from Genesis.
Dimitri Cavalli, source of many WWAI items over the past few years and
author of the Washington Examiner story from which these quotes are taken, explains the
change this way: Back then, Lynn was defending progressive causes, but now that «the so - called Religious Right has eclipsed the influence of the Religious Left in American public
life,» it's time to shut down religious influence.
In the theater of
life, the
author of religious discourses is still a prompter, but the stage, the actors, and the audience
change.
Describing its
author's
life up until his conversion to Christianity, the Confessions grounds Augustine's individual, mutable
life in the unchanging nature of God: «I entered into the depths of my soul,... and with the eye of my soul, such as it was, I saw the Light that never
changes casting its rays over the same eye of my soul, over my mind.»
We recently spoke with
author Eric Metaxas (Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy; Amazing Grace: William Wilberforce and the Heroic Campaign to End Slavery) about his new book Miracles: What They Are, Why They Happen, and How They Can
Change Your
Life and what inspired him to explore the idea of supernatural phenomenon in an increasingly cynical world.
«There have been
changes... in Christianity, particularly in evangelicalism over the years, and as sports has increased its popularity and increased its ways of invading our
lives,» said Shirl James Hoffman,
author of «Good Game: Christianity and the Culture of Sport.»
But, the lessons of Jesus (whether they came from God or from the mind of an ancient
author) are indeed
life changing if you allow them to be.
An interesting exercise to do with Nerm's post is to
change its
author (a middle - aged, white American) by a native American addressing the white Europeans who came to this country and destroyed their
lives, their way of
living, their nature.
Lewis Smedes was an academic,
author and pastor — his teaching
changed the
lives of people across the world.
I guess it's not so much the book itself that has inspired me, but the way the
author's continually refer to Jesus» teachings on the Sermon on the Mount, teachings which no one in their right mind can truly contemplate without trembling at the sort of
life changes it demands.
Steven Pratt, M.D.,
author of Superfoods Rx: Fourteen Foods Proven to
Change Your
Life, calls blueberries «brain berries.»
Brian is the
author of the best - selling book: Virgin Coconut Oil: How it has
changed people's
lives and how it can
change yours!
The Toronto - raised, Copenhagen - based
author tells me that the LCLOB (it even has its own acronym) has most definitely
changed her
life.
I will not go into any detail about it because the
author of the recipe I based my bread on did just that in her post, The
life -
changing loaf of bread.
About Nick's Visit to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital: In October 2009, children's book
author Nick Katsoris visited St. Jude Children's Research Hospital for the first time... and it
changed his
life forever.
«Kids are likely to see the divorce as a huge upheaval in their
lives if the divorce brings additional unwanted
changes, such as
changing schools, moving away from a parent to another state and leaving friends and familiar community,» says Dr. Richard A. Warshak, a psychologist and the
author of Divorce Poison.
Find how award - winning children's book
author, Yuyi Morales, discovers the power of writing a «gratitude letter» to the librarian who
changed her
life.
«When Success Leads to Failure,» The Atlantic «The Gift of Failure,» New York Times «If Your Kid Left His Term Paper At Home, Don't Bring It To Him» New York Magazine «Books That
Changed My Mind This Year,» Fortune «New Book Suggests Parents Learn to Let Kids Fail,» USA Today «7 Rules for Raising Self - Reliant Children,» Forbes «Before You Let Your Child Fail, Read This,» Huffington Post «How Schools Are Handling an Overparenting Crisis,» NPR «Why Failure Hits Girls So Hard,» Time «The Value of a Mess,» Slate «4 Reasons Why Every Educator Should Read «The Gift of Failure,»» Inside Higher Ed «Why We Should Let Our Children Fail,» The Guardian (UK) «Shelly's Bookworms: The Gift of Failure,» WFAA Dallas «Why I Don't Want My Kids to be Lazy Like Me,» Yahoo Parenting «Jessica Lahey,» Celia Walden for The Telegraph (UK) «How to To Give Your Child The Gift of Failure,» Huffington Post «The Gift of Failure,» Doug Fabrizio, Radio West «In the
Author's Voice: The Gift of Failure,» WISU / NPR «The Gift of Failure,» The Good
Life Project «Giving Our Children the Gift of Failure,» ScaryMommy «Lyme Resident's Book Challenges Parents and Kids on Failure,» Valley News «The Gift of Failure,» The Jewish Press
The
author, Damjana Dodič, MPsy, has written 11 books for children and adults coping with major
life changes and everyday conflicts.
Here's a milestone to consider: digital politics has now been around long enough now that
authors can start writing about how it HAS
changed people's
lives, rather than about how it WILL
change their
lives.
«As an
author and a community activist, I have made a
living promoting
change through various mediums, but this crisis has been very hard on those of us trying to positively impact our communities from outside of government.»
Partly because this is a time of
change and within
living memory, but also because it is clear that the
author knows and enjoys a wealth of information & sources which he wants to share with the reader.
Women, the unemployed, older people and those
living in rural communities are more resistant to
change, according to the
authors.
«These extraordinary works showcase the
life -
changing, and often controversial ideas that literally
changed the world, often at considerable cost to their
authors.
«Understanding
changes in prevalence according to population subgroups is important to inform clinicians about care that will be needed for the pediatric population
living with diabetes and may provide direction for other studies designed to determine the causes of the observed
changes,» the
authors write.
The
authors examined the effects of climate
change on more than a thousand species, including those that
live on reefs and those that
live in open - water habitats.
«The study results are extremely suggestive that
changes in diet might impact both how an individual responds to primary therapy and their chances of lethal disease spreading later in
life,» said the study's senior
author, Gregory J. Hannon, PhD, professor of Cancer Molecular Biology and director, Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, University of Cambridge in England.
Changes in the composition and activity of the gut microbiome in early life can influence the immune system and these changes might indirectly lead to changes in asthma later in life,» said Dr. Anke Maitland - van der Zee, senior author of the
Changes in the composition and activity of the gut microbiome in early
life can influence the immune system and these
changes might indirectly lead to changes in asthma later in life,» said Dr. Anke Maitland - van der Zee, senior author of the
changes might indirectly lead to
changes in asthma later in life,» said Dr. Anke Maitland - van der Zee, senior author of the
changes in asthma later in
life,» said Dr. Anke Maitland - van der Zee, senior
author of the study.
«If we can understand how the landscape has
changed over decades and what that does to water quality, human health, and ecosystem health, we can begin to make predictions for the future,» said senior
author Kathleen Alexander, professor of wildlife conservation in the College of Natural Resources and Environment and a Fralin
Life Science Institute affiliate.
Keith Bennett is professor of late - Quaternary environmental
change at Queen's University Belfast, guest professor in palaeobiology at Uppsala University in Sweden, and
author of Evolution and Ecology: The Pace of
Life (Cambridge University Press).
Lead
author Dr Orly Razgour, of the University of Southampton, explained: «Long -
lived, slow - reproducing species with smaller population sizes are not likely to be able to adapt to future climate
change fast enough through the spread of new mutations arising in the population.
«Early
life exposure to lead causes a long lasting impact on gut microbiome, and the
change of gut microbiome may partially contribute to the increased body weight in adult
life,» said lead
author Chuanwu Xi, associate professor of environmental health science.
«Our study suggests that short height in children is a possible marker of stroke risk and suggests these children should pay extra attention to
changing or treating modifiable risk factors for stroke throughout
life to reduce the chances of having this disease,» said senior study
author Jennifer L. Baker, Ph.D., associate professor in the Center for Clinical Research and Prevention at Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital and Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, at the University of Copenhagen, in Denmark.
Dr Tariq Aslam, Senior Lecturer in Ophthalmology at The University of Manchester, Consultant Ophthalmologist, at Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CMFT), and lead
author of the study, said: «There have been amazing scientific achievements in diagnosing and treating serious eye diseases, such as wAMD, which have revolutionised our ability to reverse
life -
changing vision loss.
«By understanding how this animal adapts to
changes in the environment, we can determine what we really need to be concerned about and what we really should be doing,» says Stephen DeStefano, a conservation biologist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and
author of the new book, Coyote at the Kitchen Door:
Living with Wildlife in Suburbia (Harvard University Press, 2010).
The function of these genes were involved in molecular maintenance strategies, such as DNA repair, chromosomal maintenance, immune response and programmed cell death The
authors argue that the «slower rate of
change in these functions is consistent with increased constraint on somatic cell maintenance as would be required in these relatively long -
lived and large - bodied mammals, illustrated by the additional large and long -
lived species with slower rates in these genes (e.g. double - strand break repair gene XRCC4 is also highly constrained in elephant.»
«By analysing this high harmonic spectrum, we can observe the
change in the structural order in these strongly correlated materials «
live» for the first time,» says first
author of the paper Rui Silva of the Max Born Institute.