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When it comes to making great decisions, the way you think about things is usually a lot more influential than what you actually think.
If you ever hired a person who ‘looks the part’, dated someone who ‘gives you a good feeling’, voted for the party that ‘speaks the most sense’ or got into an investment that ‘cannot be missed’, only to realise you made a horrible mistake, you might have wondered how you ever talked yourself into it. Yet, even with the bruises you’ve earned, you’re currently likely to make exactly the same decision, the next time around.
The beliefs that guide your ideas and the instincts that drive your actions, are all informed by your unconscious biases (and literally every single one of us has them), which irrationally tell us one thing is good, and another is bad; one thing is absolutely true and another is utterly false; and make you act less smartly than you actually are. But the good news is you can learn to see them, to manage them and ultimately to overcome them.
In Don’t Believe Everything You Think, Colin J Browne, the author of How to Build a Happy Sandpit, shows you how biases work, why they matter, and how to reframe your thinking to make well-founded decisions about life and work, relationships and investing, and much else in between, to vastly improve your chances of success.
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Conviction (English, French, DVD)
Hilary Swank, Sam Rockwell, Thomas D. Mahard, Owen Campbell, Conor Donovan, …
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R54
R34
Discovery Miles 340
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Hilary Swank and Sam Rockwell star in this crime drama based on a
real case that took place in 1980s Massachusetts. Hilary Swank
stars as Betty Ann Waters, a working-class single mother whose
small-time troublemaker brother Kenny (Rockwell) is falsely
convicted of a violent murder in their home town near Boston and is
sent to prison for the crime, where in his frustration and anger he
attempts suicide. With no one to turn to and no money, Betty Ann
decides to put herself through college and law school and qualify
as a lawyer in an attempt to set her brother free. Juliette Lewis
and Minnie Driver co-star.
In our modern day and age, when satellite imagery and GPS services
like Google Maps, offer strikingly accurate images of the world, we
can easily forget that for most of human history the world was an
unknown tabula rasa on which cartographers, scientists, men of god,
and kings imprinted their own dreams and ideals. This new extended
edition, with the addition of about 15 maps, explores changing
perceptions of the world map through the centuries and across
multiple vastly different cultures. We will juxtapose 18th century
Buddhist cartography in Japan with European mercantile maps of the
same period. We will travel with speculative cartographers and they
argue in the scientific academies of Paris, London, and St.
Petersburg over theories about what `must' fill the great unknown.
We will observe the emergence of the modern world view through the
cartographic lens. We will see how, much like reading a long lost
childhood diary, old maps are touching earnest reminders that our
former selves' knowledge and perception of the world are rich and
limited at the same time.
Tommy Dees is in the weeds - restaurant speak for beyond
overwhelmed. He's been working at Sunset Estates Retirement
Community to get the experience he needs to attend one of the best
culinary schools in the world. And he also needs a letter of
recommendation from his sadistic manager. In exchange for the
letter, Tommy has to meet three conditions - including train
new-hire Gabriel. Gabe, with the dimples and kind heart, who Tommy
crushed on during summer camp at age ten and then never saw again.
Unfortunately, Gabe doesn't remember Tommy at all. The training
proves distracting as old feelings resurface, and the universe
seems to be conspiring against them. With the application deadline
looming and Gabe on his mind, can Tommy keep it all together or is
it a recipe for disaster?
Find Hope, Joy, and Community as a Special Needs Mom For the
special needs mom who yearns for community and support on what can
be a lonely road, The Other Side of Special reminds you that you
are not alone, your best is good enough, and even on the hard days,
there are blessings to be had. As you pour your energy and
resources into raising a special child, it's easy to struggle with
feelings of isolation, competition, guilt, and overwhelm. Here's
the encouragement and practical help to navigate the emotional
reality of your situation. In The Other Side of Special, three
mothers raising children with physical, medical, mental, and
emotional special needs have joined forces and pooled their
experience and expertise to provide such a resource. They take a
deep dive into the most common emotions felt by special needs moms.
They acknowledge the hard things as those who have been there. They
celebrate the unique joys of being a special needs mom. And they
offer encouragement for the journey, remaining realistic about the
challenges special needs moms will continue to face.
This volume focuses on games to manage and facilitate
rehabilitation. It emphasizes user practice, attitudes, and
experience, and their changing place within developing
rehabilitation frameworks. It looks at how users have adopted,
integrated, and innovated with games to facilitate rehabilitation.
Topics include game technology, game design and accessibility,
web-based technologies vs pervasive and mobile technologies, social
and collaborative aspects, and rehabilitative outcome. Games for
rehabilitation are gaining interest from different communities such
as medicine, psychology, and rehabilitation. A distinction can be
made between games specifically made for rehabilitative purposes
and games made for the general public but that are used in
rehabilitation as well. Games have allowed the building of
new/complementary forms for rehabilitation and offered new options
to produce rehabilitative activities and experiences.
Jamie and Andrew are strangers, but they're two of the last people
left alive. They don't know what they'll find on their dangerous
journey ... but they may just find each other. A queer romance
about courage, hope and humanity for fans of They Both Die at the
End, The Hunger Games and Simon vs the Homo Sapiens Agenda. When
the Superflu wipes out most of the population, Jamie finds himself
completely alone in a cabin in the woods - until an injured
stranger crosses his path. Life is dangerous now and, armed with a
gun, Jamie goes to pull the trigger. But there's something about
Andrew ... something that stops Jamie in his tracks. Jamie takes
him in, and as Andrew heals and they eventually step out into the
strange new world, their relationship starts to feel like more than
just friendship ... But trouble isn't far behind. As the boys make
a perilous journey south, they'll come face to face with a world
torn apart and society in ruins. And who, or what, will they find
waiting for them at the end of it all? "Tense, exciting, sometimes
heartbreaking and always romantic, All That's Left in the World
explores what it means to hold onto hope and humanity when the
worst case scenario becomes reality. With characters you'll adore,
and a fast-paced, mysterious plot that keeps you turning the pages
as fast as you can devour them, this book is not to be missed." -
Sophie Gonzales, author of ONLY MOSTLY DEVASTATED "Brown has
somehow achieved a book that is romantic, hilarious, warm-hearted,
hopeful, and page-turningly thrilling all at once. I was hooked
from beginning to end." - Dahlia Adler, author of COOL FOR THE
SUMMER "A timeless love story that could not be more appropriate
for this moment, All That's Left in the World is a thrilling,
heartfelt, and beautifully written debut." - Tom Ryan, author of I
HOPE YOU'RE LISTENING "Survival is core to the queer experience,
and in All That's Left In the World, Brown takes that to
apocalyptic extremes with the story of Andrew and Jamie. This is
quintessentially brave, dangerous-in-the-best-way queer
storytelling!" - Adam Sass, author of SURRENDER YOUR SONS "All
That's Left in the World is unfailingly riveting and hopeful. A
timely exploration of survival, trauma, and love stitched together
with sharp wit and bone-deep emotion. Erik J. Brown is an
invigorating voice to watch out for." - Julian Winters,
award-winning author of RUNNING WITH LIONS
When high-magnitude meteorological hazards impact vulnerable human
populations, disasters are the inevitable consequence. Through
archaeological and historical evidence, this book investigates how
these sudden and unpredictable events affected British medieval
populations (AD 1000-1500). Medieval society understood disasters
in a practical sense and took steps to minimise risk by
constructing flood defences and reinforcing structures damaged by
storms. At the same time, natural hazards were widely interpreted
through a framework of religious and superstitious beliefs and a
wide variety of measures were followed to secure protection against
the dangers of the natural world. Disasters, therefore, were
interpreted through a duality of understanding in which their
occurrence could be the result of spiritual or superstitious
triggers but practical solutions were a key component in mitigating
their tangible impacts. In evaluating this duality, this book
focuses on specific case studies and considers both their diverse
historical contexts as well as their consequences for society
against the backdrop of significant demographic and climatic
change—as a result of the Black Death and the transition to the
Little Ice Age.
THEY FOUND EACH OTHER. NOW THEY MUST RESCUE WHAT THEY LEFT BEHIND. The
highly-anticipated sequel to the queer genre-bending dystopian romance
All That's Left in the World.
Against the backdrop of a ravaged world, Andrew and Jamie have settled
in a new community, more in love than ever. Finally they've reached
safety and have each taken on roles and responsibilities in this new
life. But it's soon clear they want different things:
Jamie is ready to move on and take to the road, just the two of them.
Andrew wants to remain in the safety of numbers.
With a storm brewing up the coast they have no choice to head back into
the wilderness where old enemies roam and they don't know who to trust.
Can they find their way back to safety and each other?
Pastimes is the first book in English on Chinese jinshi, or
antiquarianism, the pinnacle of traditional connoisseurship of
ancient artifacts and inscriptions. As a scholarly field, jinshi
was inaugurated in the Northern Song (960-1127) and remained
popular until the early twentieth century. Literally the study of
inscriptions on bronze vessels and stone steles, jinshi combined
calligraphy and painting, the collection of artifacts, and
philological and historical research. For aficionados of Chinese
art, the practices of jinshi offer a fascinating glimpse into the
lives of traditional Chinese scholars and artists, who spent their
days roaming the sometimes seamy world of the commercial art market
before attending elegant antiquarian parties, where they composed
poetic tributes to their ancient objects of obsession. And during
times of political upheaval, such as the nineteenth century, the
art and artifact studies of jinshi legitimatized reform and
contributed to a dynamic and progressive field of learning.
This book contains poetry by the Author written over some forty
years about aspects of life that touched his heart and mind. It is
generally descriptive, meaningful to the average man and yet at
times poignant. In this poetry, the author has captured people,
events and things which evoke vivid pictures, feelings and moods.
The common man can relate to the author's expression and his style
is easily read and understood. The poems reflect life in its many
forms and leave the reader able to interpret, experience and
appreciate life as described in these poetic reflections by Judge
Brown. We all pass through these experiences of life, but Judge
Brown has the great quality of being able to memorialize and
capture aspects of life in poetic words.
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