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Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - Nothing So Broken (Richards)

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  Chris Richards' book,   Nothing So Broken , reached  #7 in Vietnam War biographies and #160 in disability biographies. Book description:  In the shadow of loss, a path to healing begins. Chris Richards grew up in a small New England mill town, where life was tough and loyalty ran deep. At just 19, his world was shaken when a close friend was left permanently disabled by a devastating accident. At the same time, Chris’s father began to show troubling symptoms linked to his service in the Vietnam War—unseen wounds that would slowly unravel the man he once knew. The weight of watching two people he loved unravel under the strain of trauma and physical decline left deep scars—ones Chris carried silently into adulthood. For years, he buried his grief and fear, never imagining that one day, facing his own crisis, he would turn to their stories for strength. This powerful and moving memoir explores the enduring impact of trauma, the quiet power of resilience, and how...

Top 10 Blog Posts in February 2026: #6. Why learning new grammar makes you "forget" the old grammar

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                                                                                  Many years ago, German linguist Dr. Nina Garrett made a fascinating observation: when students learn a new grammatical category—say, the past tense—they often start making mistakes in something they had already mastered, like the present tense. It feels counterintuitive. Shouldn’t learning  more  make you better, not worse? Here’s what’s actually happening. 1. Your brain is reorganizing the system, not adding a file Grammar isn’t stored as isolated rules. When you learn a new category, your brain reshapes the entire network of forms, meanings, and patterns. That reorganization temporarily destabilizes what was previously solid. It’s not regression; it’s re...

The Midlife Dating Chronicles, Episode One: Handling Embarrassing Situations as a First‑Time Midlife Dater

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  There are two kinds of people in this world: Those who glide through first dates with the grace of a swan. And the rest of us—who are more like a swan that suddenly remembers it has knees. Midlife dating is a special category of adventure. You’re wiser, more self-aware, and far less willing to tolerate nonsense. But you’re also equipped with a lifetime of stories, reflexes, and quirks that tend to surface at the worst possible moment. Embarrassing moments aren’t just possible—they’re practically guaranteed. The trick is learning to handle them with humor, dignity, and the kind of confidence that only comes from having survived far worse. Here are the classics. 1. The “I Didn’t Hear You” Problem Midlife hearing is a choose‑your‑own‑adventure story. Your date says something. You hear… something else. They say: “I love hiking.” You hear: “I love high kings.” You respond: “I didn’t know monarchy was still a thing.” The solution: Smile, lean in, and say, “Let’s try that...