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Unlike most guidebooks for improving personal finances, this
breakthrough work helps readers defeat the often debilitating
anxieties over money that can affect financial decision-making. For
more than a decade, psychologist and business professor Marty
Martin has helped hundreds of people around the globe overcome the
psychological barriers to developing a healthier relationship with
their money. With The Inner World of Money: Taking Control of Your
Financial Decisions and Behaviors, Martin puts his practical,
proven tools for effective earning, saving, spending, and investing
in your hands. Bookstores are full of titles on improving personal
finances, but none focus on the often debilitating worries that can
lead to poor money habits. The Inner World of Money addresses those
worries head-on with time-tested strategies for dealing with
bill-paying, personal debt, splurge spending, investment, and
household budgets. Going beyond simply explaining bonds, stocks,
CDs, and mutual funds, Martin provides genuine, life-changing
support based on the latest advances in neuroeconomics,
evolutionary psychology, positive psychology/happiness studies,
sustainability, socially responsible investing, and behavioral
finance, an emerging science combining the best of finance and
psychology. Self-assessments that help readers understand the
current state of their personal finances Checklists that break down
strategies into easy-to-follow steps Exercises to help drive home
important ideas Tip sheets for avoiding common financial
misunderstandings and pitfalls Real-life examples that show the
effectiveness of the author's approach with actual people
Standing at the crossroads of psychology and religion, this catalyzing work applied the scientific method to a field abounding in abstract theory. William James believed that individual religious experiences, rather than the precepts of organized religions, were the backbone of the world's religious life. His discussions of conversion, repentance, mysticism and saintliness, and his observations on actual, personal religious experiences - all support this thesis. In his introduction, Martin E. Marty discusses how James's pluralistic view of religion led to his remarkable tolerance of extreme forms of religious behaviour, his challenging, highly original theories, and his welcome lack of pretension in all of his observations on the individual and the divine.
In Marty Martins's novel, The Blizzard, readers are taken on a
journey that touches on questions of morals and ethics, and the
importance of communication between parents and their children.
Melanie Hondel is the all-American high school student. She is
popular, pretty, and attracts the attention of more than a few
boys. One of them is Chet, who Melanie thinks is handsome enough,
but whose determined self-reliance she has always found a bit
strange and hardly romantic. When Melanie refuses the advances of a
classmate, Tommy, and is beaten by him, she flees into a blizzard,
where she falls through the ice. Her cries for help are heard by
Chet, who is able to save her. They find refuge in an isolated
cabin, where they shed their icy clothing and huddle together for
warmth...in a bed. Rescuers arrive the next day, followed closely
by Melanie's father, and there is confusion and anger. Mr. Hondel
insists that Chet be arrested and refuses to accept his daughter's
explanation, thereby leaving everyone convinced that Chet is
dangerous. What ensues is an emotional and very important story
about parental expectations, the decisions teenagers and young
adults must make that impact their self-respect, their confidence,
and their relationships with parents and community. This is a novel
about coming of age, romantic love, and the importance of trust.
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