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Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - An Afternoon's Dictation (Greenebaum)

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    Recently,  An Afternoon's Dictation  (Greenebaum), reached #1 on the Amazon bestseller list of books in ecumenism Christian theology, #10 in faith and spirituality. and #66 in Christian Faith. The book has been on bestseller lists many times.  Book Description:  In 1999 Steven Greenebaum felt he'd hit the wall. Fifty years old, he could not make sense of his life or the world around him. For several months he angrily demanded answers from God, if God were there. One afternoon, an inner voice told him to get a pen and paper and write. Steven then took dictation - three pages, not of commandments but guidance for leading a meaningful life.   An Afternoon's Dictation  grapples with, organizes, and deeply explores the revelations Steven received and then studied for over ten years. His sharing is NOT offered as the only possible way to understand it the dictation. It is offered, rather, as a start. The book's sections include deep explorations int...

ADHD in College: When Structure Falls Away

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  College is often described as freedom — the first time young adults make their own choices, set their own schedules, and live by their own rhythms. For students with ADHD, that freedom can feel less like liberation and more like disorientation. In childhood, structure is external. Parents, teachers, and routines hold the scaffolding in place. Homework is assigned, meals are served, bedtime is enforced. The student may struggle, but the system compensates. Then college arrives — and the scaffolding disappears. The invisible shift ADHD doesn’t suddenly appear in college; it’s often been there all along, masked by support. What changes is the environment. College demands self‑management — planning, prioritizing, organizing, sustaining attention, regulating sleep, and managing time. These are the very executive functions ADHD disrupts. The result is a paradox: a student who may be intellectually gifted but chronically late, overwhelmed, or unable to start. Professors see poten...

Everything Is Connected

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  We live in a world that loves compartments. Work here, family there, creativity somewhere else — as if life were a set of tidy boxes stacked on a shelf. But the truth is, nothing stays in its box for long. Everything leaks, overlaps, influences, and transforms everything else. The conversation you had with a friend shapes the tone of your next meeting. The way you care for your animals teaches you patience with people. The frustration you feel in one area of life often reveals what’s missing in another. Every thread touches every other thread. When we start to see life as a web instead of a grid, the patterns become clearer. The failures we thought were isolated turn out to be connected to our growth. The random encounters that seemed meaningless become turning points. The small kindness we offered ripples outward in ways we’ll never fully see. Connection is not just a spiritual idea — it’s a practical truth. The health of one part of our life affects the others. The energy we br...