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Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - Since Sinai (Gonyou)

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  Today's Publisher's Pride is  Since Sinai  by Shannon Gonyou, which reached #30 in biographies of Judaism.  Since Sinai  has appeared in Amazon best-selling categories nearly every week since its release. Book Description: Raised in a heavily Catholic suburb of Detroit, Michigan, Shannon grew up focusing on two things: how to do enough good deeds to get into heaven and how to stay pure enough to escape hell. In college, she followed many of her peers into an Evangelical church known for guitars, drum, religious-based shame, and the idea that without Jesus she was nothing. But when she encountered Judaism on that same campus, a spark ignited within her and refused to be put out. Judaism felt obvious, familiar. After a falling out with her biological mother and two miscarriages, she found the courage to send the most important email of her life: she asked the local Jews by Choice program to accept her as a student. Honest and unflinching, Shannon's story of comi...

Emotional Intelligence and Spirituality: The Quiet Partnership

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  The Overlap Between Feeling and Meaning Emotional intelligence (EQ) and spirituality may seem like separate domains—one psychological, the other transcendent—but they share a common goal: understanding the self and connecting meaningfully with others. Both cultivate awareness, empathy, and peace. Where EQ teaches us to manage emotions wisely, spirituality teaches us to see those emotions as part of a larger human experience. Shared Foundations Self-awareness: Emotional intelligence begins with recognizing what we feel and why. Spirituality deepens that awareness by asking what those feelings reveal about our values and purpose. Empathy and compassion: EQ helps us sense others’ emotions; spirituality invites us to respond with compassion rather than judgment. Mindfulness and presence: Both encourage living in the moment—EQ through emotional regulation, spirituality through practices like meditation or prayer. Transcending ego: Emotional maturity and spiritual growth both requi...

Why So Many People Think Life Is “Over” at Midlife — And Why They’re Wrong

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Somewhere around forty or fifty, a strange cultural script kicks in. People start whispering about “slowing down,” “settling,” “being realistic.” Dreams get quietly folded into drawers. Whole futures get downsized. And many otherwise vibrant, capable adults begin to believe a lie so common it almost sounds reasonable: that midlife is the beginning of the end. But when you look closely, the shutdown isn’t about age. It’s about stories — the ones we’re told, and the ones we tell ourselves. The Myth of the Narrowing Path From childhood on, we’re trained to think life follows a single, linear arc: Grow up. Choose a path. Stick to it. Don’t deviate. Don’t disrupt. Don’t disappoint. By midlife, that script feels cemented. Careers are established. Families depend on us. Responsibilities multiply. And the idea of changing direction — or daring to want something new — feels reckless. People don’t shut down their dreams because they’re old. They shut them down because they think they’re out of t...