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Showing 1 - 18 of
18 matches in All Departments
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Lonely Bird
Ruth Whiting; Illustrated by Ruth Whiting
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R568
R487
Discovery Miles 4 870
Save R81 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Do we all have guides? Who are they, and what do they do? In
WORKING WITH SPIRIT GUIDES, bestselling author Ruth White explains
all you need to know about these special beings: What their purpose
in our lives is; how to identify and communicate with them; and
what to expect from them. Ruth tells her own amazing story and
those of others, and includes easy-to-follow exercises for
activating your sensitivity and intuition and helping you on the
path to inner wisdom. You will discover how to: * recognise and
communicate with your guid * increase your awareness through
meditation * ask the right questions and receive the right answers
* work with your dreams and intuition * guard against false
guidance * find your sense of purpose and follow your destiny.
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The Flying Rock (Hardcover)
Robert Rush; Illustrated by Ruth Whiting
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R546
R456
Discovery Miles 4 560
Save R90 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Ted Wyatt and Kelly Trent make choices that determine the direction
their lives will take. Ted wants to marry and start a family; Kelly
wants to leave ranch life behind. They seem to have complementary
needs--but do they? Or are they headed for frustration and
non-fulfillment?
In "A Man Was a Real Man in Them Days," Ruth Burns celebrates the
life and character of the pioneers who dared to challenge the vast
prairie of the Llano Estacado of Eastern New Mexico. In the 1880s
along the Rio Grande and Pecos Rivers, the cities of Santa Fe,
Albuquerque and Ft. Sumner were bustling centers of commerce, but
on the High Plains, due to the lack of dependable water, the
prairie was inhabited only by occasional outlaws, Indian hunting
parties, Hispanic mustangers and buffalo hunters. After the Civil
War, cowmen began to bring their herds to the plains; and in 1898
when the railroad came, homesteaders poured in, lured by promises
of free land. Barbed-wire fences were put up, and the day of the
open range was at an end. Using interviews and letters collected by
her mother in the 1930s and 1940s, Burns reveals the courage,
determination, and good humor of these first settlers by using
their own words, recorded while they were still living.
IT AIN'T THE UPS AND DOWNS IN LIFETHAT GETS YOU, IT'S ALL THE JERKS
_________________________________WHAT HAPPENED TO YOUYESTERDAY DOES
NOT MAKEYOU A VICTIM TODAY; NORDOES IT LIMIT WHEREGOD CAN TAKE
YOUTOMORROW __________________________________IF YOUR SHIP HAS NOT
YETCOME TO SHORE, JUMP IN THE WATER AND SWIMTOWARD IT
___________________________________Ruthe White is an author/
speaker/teacher.She resides in Victorville.California with
herMinister husband. They have two daughterstwo grandchildren and
four great-Grandchildren.Ruthe has appeared onnumerous
telecastsIncluding segmentson both Bakersfield andFresno Good
Morning America, ABC.
The author holds a Master's degrees in Christian Education from
Eden Seminary and in Nursing Education from Washington University,
St. Louis. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Sociology from
MacMurray College and a nursing certificate from Blessing
Hospital.Awards include: Curator's Award from University of
Missouri, Ford Foundation teaching internship, United States Public
Health Service Grant, and academic scholarships. She has been
recognized by Blessing nurses' alumni association as Nurse of the
Year and inducted into her Palmyra, Missouri school district's
Academic Hall of Fame.She was a missionary teacher for twenty years
under the Presbyterian Church USA and vocational and program
agencies. From 1974 to 1978 she was a Nursing Instructor at the
University of Azarabadegan in Iran and from 1978 to 1988 she was a
Christian Education Teacher at Maridi Teacher Training Institute
and the first American woman to become Chair at their Department of
Religion.Marjorie White, a missionary teacher for over twenty
years, has written this book at the request of missionary schools
who want to train educators to serve in Muslim countries. The book
covers the personal perspectives and experiences in Iran during her
time of service and her own perspectives on relating to those of
the Muslim religion that she learned from interaction with her
Muslim students, friends and co-workers.The books of Moses were the
only text that she was allowed to use in her religious education
classes in both Sudan and Iran and this presentation is fairly
representative of what she taught. Parts of this book are devoted
to her use of the new teaching technique of using literary methods
to teach science and other non-literary subjects. This book is
timely, as it addresses today's new interest in teaching Bible
truths throughout school curriculum.
The author holds a Master's degrees in Christian Education from
Eden Seminary and in Nursing Education from Washington University,
St. Louis. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Sociology from
MacMurray College and a nursing certificate from Blessing Hospital.
Awards include: Curator's Award from University of Missouri, Ford
Foundation teaching internship, United States Public Health Service
Grant, and academic scholarships. She has been recognized by
Blessing nurses' alumni association as Nurse of the Year and
inducted into her Palmyra, Missouri school district's Academic Hall
of Fame. She was a missionary teacher for twenty years under the
Presbyterian Church USA and vocational and program agencies. From
1974 to 1978 she was a Nursing Instructor at the University of
Azarabadegan in Iran and from 1978 to 1988 she was a Christian
Education Teacher at Maridi Teacher Training Institute and the
first American woman to become Chair at their Department of
Religion. Marjorie White, a missionary teacher for over twenty
years, has written this book at the request of missionary schools
who want to train educators to serve in Muslim countries. The book
covers the personal perspectives and experiences in Iran during her
time of service and her own perspectives on relating to those of
the Muslim religion that she learned from interaction with her
Muslim students, friends and co-workers. The books of Moses were
the only text that she was allowed to use in her religious
education classes in both Sudan and Iran and this presentation is
fairly representative of what she taught. Parts of this book are
devoted to her use of the new teaching technique of using literary
methods to teach science and other non-literary subjects. This book
is timely, as it addresses today's new interest in teaching Bible
truths throughout school curriculum.
"Around 5:00 a.m. on a warm Sunday morning on October 1953, my Aunt
Belle left her bed and vanished from the face of the earth."
Everyone in Coal Station, Virginia, has a theory about what
happened to Belle Prater, but twelve-year-old Gypsy wants the
facts, and when her cousin Woodrow, Aunt Belle's son moves next
door, she has her chance. Woodrow isn't as forthcoming as Gypsy
hopes, yet he becomes more than just a curiosity to her-- during
their sixth-grade year she finds that they have enough in common to
be best friends. Even so, Gypsy is puzzled by Woodrow's calm
acceptance of his mother's disappearance, especially since she
herself has never gotten over her father's death. When Woodrow
finally reveals that he's been keeping a secret about his mother,
Gypsy begins to understand that there are different ways of finding
the strength to face the truth, no matter how painful it is. "Belle
Prater's Boy" is a 1996 Boston Globe - Horn Book Awards Honor Book
for Fiction and a 1997 Newbery Honor Book.
WORKING WITH YOUR CHAKRAS is a clearly written and easy-to-use book
which brings esoteric chakra knowledge into a Western perspective.
You will discover how connecting with your chakras enables growth,
healing and balance to take place in all areas of your being -
physical, mental, emotional and spiritual. Ruth White explains that
much chakra work is of self-help nature. Through exercises and
colourful visualisations and meditations you will unlock a wealth
of information about yourself. Unsuspected strengths or gifts will
emerge and information essential to full physical and emotional
healing will be revealed. Above all, the self-understanding you
will gain through contact with your chakras will help you to live
more fully and make more dynamic and exciting life choices.
Based on their research into clinical teaching in nursing, the
authors of this work adopt an approach that considers the context
in which clinical teaching takes place. The cycle of events in the
preparation for and follow-up of practice is seen in the context of
the socialization from student to nurse. The book applies the
concepts of the clinical learning cycle to clinical teaching and
suggests a style of professional practice that students can learn
to adopt. Clinical teaching is regarded as a specialized field of
practice, with skills that are different from classroom teaching.
Examples of commonly encountered problems invite readers to think
through their responses to a situation before proceeding to a
suggested source of action. The principles of clinical teaching are
universal although they will have variations in application in
different settings. The book should be of use to nurse educators,
curriculum developers, staff development personnel, workshop
facilitators, basic biological and social and behavioural science
teachers.
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