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When the kids are gone, you can discover a richer, deeper, and more
fulfilling life than you ever imagined! Whether you've been looking
forward to it or dreading it, the experience of coming home to an
empty nest brings with it a well of emotions, realizations, and one
gigantic, all-consuming thought: Now what? As an empty nester, the
options before you are practically limitless--a fact that can be as
exciting as it is terrifying. In this book, Jim Burns combines his
personal experiences with extensive research, interviews with other
empty nesters, and his professional work as a family educator to
help you navigate your new life as an empty nester and find joy in
the opportunities for life-change before you. Rather than offering
shallow suggestions of hobbies you should take up, Burns encourages
you to actively pursue a fresh start, reinvent yourself, and thrive
beyond this new stage. To help you do this, he equips you with
practical advice and timeless principles, including how to: Change
the relationship you once had with your children--for the better
Face big issues (like aging parents, finances, and kids returning
home) with confidence And rekindle your fire and purpose to live
with passion day by day Amid his wealth of know-how, you'll uncover
what may be the most important takeaway of all: hope that the best
is yet to come.
After hearing the words no one wants to hear--"you have
cancer"--Jim Burns set out to articulate the most important
principles for a life well lived and now shares them with you as a
collection of essential truths for a healthy, balanced, and
successful life. What's truly important for leading a life well
lived? After being diagnosed with cancer and facing his mortality,
prolific author and family-life expert Jim Burns learned what it
really means to live a meaningful life from the perspective and
practical wisdom only gained from facing death. Now cancer free,
those same life-changing lessons continue to guide and enrich Jim's
faith, work, and relationships in immeasurable ways. With his
conversational style and heartwarming and entertaining stories, Jim
brilliantly distills that hard-earned wisdom into 13 simple yet
powerful life principles you can put into practice today. Jim will
help you learn how to: Break the cycle of being overcommitted and
underconnected once and for all Make family the priority you want
it to be with an action plan that will nurture your closest
relationships Embrace the discomfort of discipline and avoid the
pain of regret Incorporate the vital element of fun in your life
for connection and relief in even the toughest times Train your
mind in reflexive gratitude to rise above negative circumstances.
Don't wait any longer. Let these principles guide you into deeper
joy, more purpose, and better connection--and start truly living
today.
Developments in the education field are affected by numerous, and
often conflicting, social, cultural, and economic factors. With the
increasing corporatization of education, teaching and learning
paradigms are continuously altered. Deconstructing the
Education-Industrial Complex in the Digital Age is an authoritative
reference source for the latest scholarly research on the shifting
structure of school models in response to technological advances
and corporate presence in educational contexts. Highlighting a
comprehensive range of pertinent topics, such as teacher education,
digital literacy, and neoliberalism, this book is ideally designed
for educators, professionals, graduate students, researchers, and
academics interested in the implications of the
education-industrial complex.
Most Christian parents know that the best way to leave a
God-honoring legacy to their family is to nurture their children's
faith . . . but many don't know where to start! This new resource
from Jim Burns, founder of HomeWord, will equip parents to start
important conversations with their kids--family time with an
eternal impact. Faith Conversations for Families makes it easy to
invite God into quality family time. Each section outlines an
easy-to-follow dialogue, which is flexible for children of
different age groups. In addition, suggested activities and
exercises make spiritual formation adaptable for kids with varying
learning styles. The six family-friendly topics included in this
book are: Who Is Jesus and Why It Matters: Help parents talk with
their kids about why His life, death, and resurrection are so
important. What Prayer Is All About: Parents can introduce vibrant
conversation with God into their family's time together. What It
Means to Be Christian: Parents can lead their kids toward a faith
commitment and spiritual growth, through open communication and
exciting biblical expression. A Strong Family: Parents can teach,
guide, and strengthen healthy bonds within the family. Loving and
Serving Others: Parents can talk with their children about servant
leadership and self-sacrifice and be challenged to serve in and
outside of their home. Building Morals and Values: Parents can help
their kids discern and navigate cultural influences that run
contrary to a biblical worldview. In the heart of every Christian
parent is a desire to help their children grow spiritually. Faith
Conversations for Families helps parents make that desire a
beautiful reality.
If you have an adult child, you know that parenting doesn't stop
when a child reaches the age of eighteen. In many ways, it gets
more complicated. Both your heart and your head are as involved as
ever, whether your child lives under your roof or rarely stays in
contact. In Doing Life with Your Adult Children, parenting expert
Jim Burns helps you navigate the toughest and the most rewarding
parts of parenting your grown kids. Speaking from his own personal
and professional experience, Burns offers practical answers to
questions such as these: Is it OK to give advice to my grown child?
What's the difference between enabling and helping? What boundaries
should I have if my child moves back home? What do I do when my
child doesn't seem to be maturing into adulthood? How do I relate
to my grown child's significant other? What does it mean to have
healthy financial boundaries? How can I support my grown children
when I don't support their values? Including positive principles on
bringing kids back to faith, ideas on how to leave a legacy as a
grandparent, and encouragement for every changing season, Doing
Life with Your Adult Children is a unique book on your changing
role in a calling that never ends.
Parenting teenagers is one of the biggest challenges parents face.
New realities make becoming independent more difficult. Teens are
traveling a different road and are moving at a different pace than
those of previous generations. Today's cultural environment is more
complicated and confusing than ever. But fear not! Family expert
Jim Burns provides a handy guide for parenting teens. For teens to
become responsible adults, parents need to help them grow through
developmental changes to attain a healthy self-identity, establish
good relationships, make wise decisions, and grow in their
relationship with God. Burns shows how parents can shape behavior
and character, navigate social media challenges, and communicate
and resolve conflict healthily. He also tackles the realities of
our day, including cyberbullying, dating violence, self-injury,
depression, and much more. Whether you're facing serious troubles
or need simple tips for a better family life, this book offers help
and hope.
Much more than just the when and how of having "the talk," this
invaluable resource encourages building a "theology of healthy
sexuality" through the introduction of age-appropriate dialog
throughout a young person's life.
The Love Dare challenged individuals to love their spouse more.
"Closer" shows wives and husbands how to grow that love together.
Introduced with Scripture verses and engaging stories, these 52
devotionals will inspire couples to draw closer through faith
conversations--those quiet talks so vital for emotional and
spiritual intimacy in a marriage. Guided, practical action steps
round out each reading. "Closer," with its flexible weekly format,
is an appealing alternative to a daily devotional.
A Powerful Approach to Bringing God's Grace to Kids Did you know
that the way we deal (or don't deal) with our kids' misbehavior
shapes their beliefs about themselves, the world, and God?
Therefore it's vital to connect with their hearts--not just their
minds--amid the daily behavior battles. With warmth and grace, Jim
and Lynne Jackson, founders of Connected Families, offer four
tried-and-true keys to handling any behavioral issues with love,
truth, and authority. You will learn practical ways to communicate
messages of grace and truth, how to discipline in a way that
motivates your child, and how to keep your relationship strong, not
antagonistic. Discipline is more than just a short-term attempt to
modify your child's actions--it's a long-term investment to help
them build faith, wisdom, and character for life. When you discover
a better path to discipline, you'll find a more well-behaved--and
well-believed--kid.
Spanning several decades but interlocking at all times, these
essays focus on novelists like Robert McAlmon and Isaac Rosenfeld,
offering fresh views of poets such as Kenneth Patchen and Kenneth
Fearing, critics Irving Howe and Alfred Kazin, and beat poets Allen
Ginsberg and Gary Snyder.
Children's ministry has the power to change the lives of kids and
families. Unfortunately, it's not always clear that the work a
person does with kids is really making a lasting difference. Ask
children's ministry leaders and kid-influencers if they are making
the impact on children's lives as they had hoped and most likely
the responses will be mixed. And for good reason. Research over the
past decade has revealed an alarming lack of long-term growth in
the faith community as children progress through student ministries
into adulthood. Clearly, something needs to change. Relational
Children's Ministry seeks to reverse this trend by equipping
children's ministry leaders with practical tools to disrupt the
status quo approach to discipleship with children and realign their
ministries for greater long-term impact. Ministry leaders will:
Learn how to relate intentionally to kids and families by putting
five discipleship invitations modeled by Jesus into practice
Explore practical approaches to realign their children's ministry
for a new trajectory by hitting three "reset buttons" to ensure
long-term discipleship is embedded Encounter examples of disruptive
disciple-makers in action and learn key principles that can be
translated into their own ministry context Children's ministry
leaders will receive practical training to refocus their children's
ministry along with time-tested tools to personally recommit to
lifelong discipleship. Kid-influencers can become a disciple-making
community that redirects the current trajectory for this and future
generations.
A new collection of art from one of the UK's most acclaimed sci-fi
artists featuring everything, from his initial sketches to his
final works and published book covers. Includes covers from the SF
greats - Greg Bear, Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, Anne
McCaffrey, Robert Silverberg, Joe Haldeman, Oson Scott Card, John
Meaney, Ricardo Pinto, Peter F Hamilton, and Timothy Zahn and many
more.
Author Jim Burns believes the key to instiling in children a
healthy, values-centered view of sexuality is to start the
discussion early--being open and honest at every stage. The Pure
Foundations series is already guiding parents of preteens and teens
through potentially awkward conversations. Now two fully
illustrated books--one for pre-readers and one for early
readers--complete the series.
How God Makes Babies is an age-appropriate introduction to basic
sexuality, helping children ages 6 to 9 understand that God created
males and females differently and with a purpose, emphasizing that
God is a part of each family from conception to death.
This tenth collection of essays and reviews again throws the
spotlight on Paris and some of the painters and places associated
with the city. Montmartre in its heyday, the 1890s and thereabouts
when Edgar Degas and Alphonse Mucha produced images of the
spectacles to be seen in Paris and the leisure activities of its
citizens. Some of them, at least. Neither artist was noted for
painting scenes of working-class life, nor of poverty. To say that
is not to condemn them for it. The same can be said of Matisse and
Bonnard who largely created colourful canvases in the sun-drenched
South of France. We need to appreciate artists for what they did,
not accuse them for not doing what we think they should have done
Jim Burns and Doug Fields wish you the very best for your wedding,
but sadly, they won't be able to make it. What they are here for is
your marriage. Jim and Doug have seen it all. They have worked with
many couples and have studied extensively to uncover the essential
elements for making marriages thrive. This book is their early
wedding gift to you: a comprehensive, easy-to-navigate road map for
beginning your union.
Filled with premium fuel for the journey--including meaningful
excercises, hard truths, and conversations starters--this book will
nourish and guide your relationship for the long haul.
This eighth collection of reviews, essays, and other pieces takes
Paris as its starting point, with essays about artists like Picasso
and Soutine, a look at the existentialists, a consideration of the
role of the barricade in the various insurrections in the city, and
the roles played by the photographer Nadar and the composer
Offenbach in shaping images of the city both for its inhabitants
and visitors. There are reviews of exhibitions by British painters,
Sven Berlin, John Bratby, and Stanley Spencer, and of the work of
American poets, Thomas McGrath, Lola Ridge, and William Wantling.
The Beats get a look in with articles about little magazines that
printed their work, and the effects of the blacklists in Hollywood
are explored in several pieces. Jazz is represented with surveys of
the music of Tony Fruscella and Willie Dennis, and the birth of
rock and roll is explored. Other essays focus on the early days of
communism in both Russia and America.
This seventh collection of essays and reviews kicks off with a
survey of some overlooked British poets from the 1940s who, through
a network of little magazines with anarchist inclinations,
attempted to offer an alternative to the MacSpaunDay generation's
sensibilities. Another piece considers how British writers were
monitored by MI5 and local police forces, while a third switches
attention to the USA and looks at the still-controversial case of
Alger Hiss and his alleged role as a spy who passed information to
Russia. There are essays about lesser-known Beat-related writers
like Bob Kaufman and Brion Gysin, inspections of some little
magazines of the 1950s and 1960s, and two long reviews which
consider the effect that Dadaism had and the role played in the
movement by Tristan Tzara. Walt Whitman, Woody Guthrie, and Malcolm
Cowley also make an appearance.
This sixth selection of essays and reviews looks at a whole list of
writers, poets, political activists and others who can be claimed
to be rebels in their various ways. The strange communist Joseph
Pogany or John Pepper, as he was known in America, is here, as is
B. Traven, author of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, in his
earlier role as Ret Marut, a German revolutionary. There are essays
about communism in Hollywood and about Henry Miller and the writing
of The Tropic of Cancer. Beat novelists, bohemians in Paris and
elsewhere, jazz musicians like Lester Young and Charlie Parker,
surrealism in Prague, and the underground in Amsterdam, all take
their place in this wide-ranging survey.
Jim Burns continues his critical history of off-beat writers,
artists and jazz musicians of the last century. This is volume 4 of
his acclaimed series of essays.
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