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The Transformative Power of Being Happy with What You Have

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  Transformation doesn’t always come from reaching for more. Sometimes it begins when we stop reaching at all. We live in a culture that teaches us to chase—success, possessions, validation, even peace. But the deeper kind of happiness doesn’t arrive through accumulation. It arrives through recognition. It’s the quiet moment when you look around and realize that what you already have is enough. That the ordinary day—the cup of tea, the familiar chair, the laughter in the next room—is not a placeholder for something better. It is the better. Being happy with what you have isn’t complacency; it’s clarity. It’s the shift from measuring life by what’s missing to seeing it through what’s present. It’s the understanding that gratitude isn’t a reaction—it’s a practice. When we stop chasing, we start noticing. And noticing changes everything. This kind of happiness transforms because it reorders the heart. It teaches us that joy isn’t earned—it’s allowed. It’s not waiting at the end of ac...

Get your free copy of An Afternoon's Dictation

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  The award-winning book,  An Afternoon's Dictation  (Greenebaum), is available free from Kindle countdown April 12-17. 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 into "The Call to Interfaith," "The Call to Love One Another," "The Call to Justice," and "The Call to Community."...

A Publisher's Conversation with Authors: 🌐 The Hidden Life of Books in the Book‑o‑Sphere

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  How Books Keep Moving Long After Their Moment Has Passed Books don’t disappear when their sales slow down. They migrate. They circulate. They get passed from hand to hand, recommended in conversations, discovered in libraries, resurfaced in online searches, and remembered by people who read them years ago. This hidden life — the book‑o‑sphere — is where most books spend most of their time. A book can be: out of print but alive in libraries rarely purchased but frequently mentioned old but newly relevant quiet in sales but loud in memory This is why authors sometimes hear about their books more often than they see royalties from them. The book‑o‑sphere runs on attention, not transactions. For authors, this is good news. It means your work has a life beyond the ledger. It means your ideas keep traveling. It means your book is part of conversations you’ll never hear and moments you’ll never witness. And sometimes, every few years, it sends you a tiny royalty just to say ...