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Precerpt from Raising God's Rainbow Makers: Shane's Self-Advocacy

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  Shane has always been a good self-advocate. Perhaps because he sees the world differently from others--as a matter of logic, which disconcerts those who would argue with him because they live in the larger illogical world. Fourth grade, fifth grade, seventh grade, eighth grade...nearly every year he had an opportunity not only to outthink his parents (that was a given) but also to outlogic his teachers.  Fourth grade was quite a year for him. He managed to frustrate his teacher on a regular basis. For example, he refused to do his homework, yet he would use math (algebra) to figure out how to lower our electric bill, and he would absorb himself in reading fiction typically assigned in high school and college classes. Though he was only 7 (remember, he began first grade at the age of 3), he considered his time valuable and did not to waste it on silliness or things he already knew. The teacher complained and complained and complained that her would not do his homework. I aske...

Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - Travels with Elly (MacDonald)

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  Today's publisher's pride is  Travels with Elly  by Larry MacDonald, which reached #43   in travel with pets books. Book description: Discover Canada like never before -- from a personal perspective, similar to John Steinbeck's view of America in his 1960 book  Travels with Charley . The author travels from coast to coast in a trailer with his wife and pets, including their Standard Poodle, Elly, in order to gain a better understanding of his adopted country. Interspersed between descriptions of history, cultures, places, and icons are the author's reflections on various things such as Elly's antics, signage, ferries, political injustice, environmental issues, and animal instincts. To provide a canine's perspective, Elly reflects on things of interest to her, including cats, cows, and other critters...but especially cats! Where was Canada's first settlement? What is its prettiest town? When and where was its most devastating shipwreck? And who was its greates...

The Longevity of Meaning

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  People talk a lot about diet, exercise, supplements, sleep trackers, and the latest “biohacks.” But one of the most powerful predictors of longevity isn’t a gadget or a green smoothie. It’s meaning. Not “grand purpose.” Not “change the world” pressure. Just meaning — the sense that your life has shape, direction, and a reason to get up in the morning. Researchers have followed thousands of older adults and found something striking: people who feel their life has meaning tend to live longer, stay more mobile, and maintain sharper cognition. Not because meaning magically cures illness — it doesn’t — but because it changes how the body and brain operate day to day. Meaning steadies the nervous system. Meaning reduces chronic stress hormones. Meaning encourages movement, connection, curiosity. Meaning gives the immune system a reason to stay in the fight. And meaning doesn’t have to be dramatic. It can be: tending a garden caring for a pet writing a diary that might help on...