Posts

Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller LIsts - One Family: Indivisible (Greenabuam)

Image
  Today's Publisher's Pride is  One Family Indivisible  by Steven Greenebaum, which reached #323 among Amazon top sellers in Christian ecumenism. Book Description: Throughout history we have divided ourselves into groupings of "us" and "them".  One Family: Indivisible  engagingly  invites the reader into the deeply spiritual and lifelong journey of the author to find a way to acknowledge our differences without dividing and subdividing ourselves into competing tribes. It is a journey of mountain tops and deep valleys, but it leads to the inclusivity and mutual respect possible with Interfaith. This is a book for seekers of all races, ethnicities, and spiritual paths who search for that elusive goal of a community of love and inclusion that also respects our diversity. AWARDS Eric Hoffer Award Category Finalist, American Book Fest Best Books Award Finalist (religion) Keywords: interfaith, spiritual journey, common humanity, religious diversity, unity in dive...

Cancer Diary: When Heartburn Isn’t “Just Heartburn”

Image
  Most people think of GERD as a nuisance — a burning throat after pizza, a few antacids, a shrug. What almost no one realizes is that long‑standing, uncontrolled GERD is one of the few cancer pathways we can actually see coming . Not in a panic‑inducing way, but in a “pay attention and you can change the outcome” way. This is not about scaring anyone. It’s about naming a risk that hides in plain sight. The Hidden Link: GERD → Barrett’s → Cancer GERD itself does not “turn into cancer.” The danger comes from years of acid washing over the esophagus , irritating it, injuring it, and eventually convincing it to remodel itself into something it was never meant to be. That remodeling is called Barrett’s esophagus — a quiet, structural change that you cannot feel. Barrett’s is the step that matters. It’s the fork in the road where the esophagus says, “Fine, if you’re going to keep bathing me in acid, I’ll become something more acid‑resistant.” And once that change happens, the risk of e...

Deep Processing, Shallow Processing, and Why It’s Not About Intelligence at All

Image
  Every so often, a concept comes along that quietly explains a lifetime of human behavior. Not in a grand, cosmic way — more in the “Oh… so that’s why we keep talking past each other” way. Deep processing vs. shallow processing is one of those concepts. Before anyone clutches pearls: these terms have nothing to do with intelligence, morality, or virtue. They describe how the nervous system handles information, not how “smart” someone is. Think of it as cognitive architecture — the wiring diagram behind the scenes. And once you see it, you can’t unsee it. Deep Processing: The Internal Circuit Deep processors route information inward first. They don’t react; they integrate . Their minds automatically search for patterns, implications, and meaning before they speak or act. A few hallmarks: Internal referencing — new information is compared to internal models, memories, and frameworks. Slow-to-speak, fast-to-integrate — the outside world sees a pause; the inside world sees a superc...