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Loving Someone with PTSD: How to Provide Support Without Losing Yourself

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  No one really prepares you for this. You love someone. You build a life. And then, somewhere along the way—sometimes suddenly, sometimes gradually—you realize that trauma has come into the room and taken a seat between you. It doesn’t introduce itself. It doesn’t explain its rules. But it changes everything. You Are Not Imagining It If you feel like the relationship has shifted in ways you can’t quite name, you’re not wrong. PTSD can alter: How a person responds to stress How they experience closeness How safe they feel—even in safe spaces You may find yourself thinking: Why are they reacting this way? Why can’t we just go back to how things were? That “before” may not be reachable in the same form. But something else—different, intentional, and still meaningful—can be built. Understanding Helps, But It Doesn’t Make It Easy Learning about PTSD can bring clarity. You begin to see patterns: Withdrawal is often protection, not rejection Anger may be overwhelm, not...

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 #145 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 greatest ...

Effervescent Grace: The Joy That Overflows

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  The late spiritual director, Carmella Dautoff, once described joy as “effervescent grace.” It’s a phrase that lingers, because it captures something essential about the way true joy behaves. Joy, in her understanding, is not a mood we manufacture or a smile we paste on. It is grace rising — unbidden, unforced, and unmistakably alive. Effervescence is what happens when something within begins to lift, bubble, and shimmer. Grace does that. When it touches the human heart, it doesn’t stay flat or quiet. It moves. It brightens. It spills over the edges of our lives in ways we don’t always notice but others often do. This kind of joy is not naïve. It doesn’t pretend that sorrow isn’t real or that life is easy. Effervescent grace is what happens when love proves deeper than pain, when hope refuses to die, when God’s presence becomes so steady that it begins to rise through us like light through water. People feel this kind of joy. They breathe easier around it. They soften. They remem...