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Lying-For Better or Worse
Everybody lies. Friends lie to friends. Children lie to their parents. Politicians lie to constituents. And, inevitably, husbands and wives lie to each other. Lies between lovers have tremendous potential to both nurture and destroy a relationship. It is easy to underestimate the power that lies-even seemingly harmless lies-can wield in your marriage. Tell Me No Lies explores the complexity of honesty versus deception in marriage and reveals the many reasons behind the lies we tell our partners (and ourselves).
Learn the four marital stages: * The Honeymoon * Emerging Differences * Freedom * Together as Two
Discover how to recognize how lying can lead to serious trouble at each stage. The signs include: * The Dark Side of the Honeymoon, when couples refuse to acknowledge any problems * The Stalemate, when couples fight and brutalize each other with exaggerated truths * Freedom Unhinged, when independence outweighs togetherness and marital anarchy ensues.
Offering a new way of thinking about truth and deception, this book will help you understand the dynamics of your marriage in the context of the marital stages. If you can identify your marital stage, you can overcome the barriers to honesty and move on to a happier and more fulfilling marriage!
This study offers a fresh reading of religious conversion by
analyzing a variety of "missionaries" that sought to influence the
Montagnard-Dega refugee. Thomas Pearson uses ethnographic and
archival research to tell the story of cross-cultural contact in
the highlands during the Vietnam War, Christian conversion, refugee
exile, and the formation of the Dega refugee community in the
United States. His insightful study considers not just evangelicals
and Catholics, but humanitarian workers in the highlands, refugee
resettlement volunteers in the United States, and the American
Special Forces soldiers. This book makes the case that the Dega
have appropriated the anthropological and religious discourses of
this disparate group of missionaries to recreate themselves through
a multivalent "conversion."
It is widely agreed that teacher education must consist of two
general components. There is a knowledge component which contains
specialized subject matter knowledge, and a practical component in
which intending teachers develop skills and abilities. In this
original and compelling work, first published in 1989, Pearson
attempts to examine the connection between the two. This title will
be of interest to students of education.
It is widely agreed that teacher education must consist of two
general components. There is a knowledge component which contains
specialized subject matter knowledge, and a practical component in
which intending teachers develop skills and abilities. In this
original and compelling work, first published in 1989, Pearson
attempts to examine the connection between the two. This title will
be of interest to students of education.
Birds have colonized almost every terrestrial habitat on the planet
- from the poles to the tropics, and from deserts to high mountain
tops. Ecological and Environmental Physiology of Birds focuses on
our current understanding of the unique physiological
characteristics of birds that are of particular interest to
ornithologists, but also have a wider biological relevance.
An introductory chapter covers the basic avian body plan and their
still-enigmatic evolutionary history. The focus then shifts to a
consideration of the essential components of that most fundamental
of avian attributes: the ability to fly. The emphasis here is on
feather evolution and development, flight energetics and
aerodynamics, migration, and as a counterpoint, the curious
secondary evolution of flightlessness that has occurred in several
lineages. This sets the stage for subsequent chapters, which
present specific physiological topics within a strongly ecological
and environmental framework. These include gas exchange, thermal
and osmotic balance, 'classical' life history parameters (male and
female reproductive costs, parental care and investment in
offspring, and fecundity versus longevity tradeoffs), feeding and
digestive physiology, adaptations to challenging environments (high
altitude, deserts, marine habitats, cold), and neural
specializations (notably those important in foraging, long-distance
navigation, and song production).
Throughout the book classical studies are integrated with the
latest research findings. Numerous important and intriguing
questions await further work, and the book concludes with a
discussion of methods (emphasizing cutting-edge technology),
approaches, and future research directions.
This publication provides practical guidance on appropriate methods
of conservation and repair of earth buildings using traditional
building materials. It is the first major work on the subject since
Clough Williams-Ellis and the Eastwick-Fields published "Building
in Cob, Pise and Stabilized Earth" in 1947. The book deals with the
nature of clay and chalk, their qualities and characteristics, and
the way in which they have been used to construct buildings. Advice
is given on soils analysis, the philosophy of repair techniques and
the factors to be considered before altering, converting or
extending an earth building. The author primarily advocates repair
techniques using traditional materials, but he also considers the
role played by certain modern materials, and assesses their
suitability.
This study offers a fresh reading of religious conversion by
analyzing a variety of "missionaries" that sought to influence the
Montagnard-Dega refugee. Thomas Pearson uses ethnographic and
archival research to tell the story of cross-cultural contact in
the highlands during the Vietnam War, Christian conversion, refugee
exile, and the formation of the Dega refugee community in the
United States. His insightful study considers not just evangelicals
and Catholics, but humanitarian workers in the highlands, refugee
resettlement volunteers in the United States, and the American
Special Forces soldiers. This book makes the case that the Dega
have appropriated the anthropological and religious discourses of
this disparate group of missionaries to recreate themselves through
a multivalent "conversion."
Birds have colonized almost every terrestrial habitat on the planet
- from the poles to the tropics, and from deserts to high mountain
tops. Ecological and Environmental Physiology of Birds focuses on
our current understanding of the unique physiological
characteristics of birds that are of particular interest to
ornithologists, but also have a wider biological relevance. An
introductory chapter covers the basic avian body plan and their
still-enigmatic evolutionary history. The focus then shifts to a
consideration of the essential components of that most fundamental
of avian attributes: the ability to fly. The emphasis here is on
feather evolution and development, flight energetics and
aerodynamics, migration, and as a counterpoint, the curious
secondary evolution of flightlessness that has occurred in several
lineages. This sets the stage for subsequent chapters, which
present specific physiological topics within a strongly ecological
and environmental framework. These include gas exchange, thermal
and osmotic balance, 'classical' life history parameters (male and
female reproductive costs, parental care and investment in
offspring, and fecundity versus longevity tradeoffs), feeding and
digestive physiology, adaptations to challenging environments (high
altitude, deserts, marine habitats, cold), and neural
specializations (notably those important in foraging, long-distance
navigation, and song production). Throughout the book classical
studies are integrated with the latest research findings. Numerous
important and intriguing questions await further work, and the book
concludes with a discussion of methods (emphasizing cutting-edge
technology), approaches, and future research directions.
Josh Pearson is a Tampa-based artist born in 1979. Raised in a
small town in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, he collected random
objects throughout his childhood and dismantled them constantly to
create what he called "inventions." At seventeen he began
exhibiting his paintings and working for tattoo artists sketching
custom pieces. Josh continued to arrange objects and construct
"inventions," going so far as to shift the plates and cups at the
dinner table into different compositions every time he sat down.
Soon, this obsession would find its' way into his artwork. He
started incorporating colorful collages of magazine clippings after
running out of supplies in the middle of a painting, and the tattoo
imagery began creeping into his paintings by combining his ink
drawings with the collages. What started out as a means to an end,
has become the practical approach to everything he does today.
Creating something new using only discarded scraps forces him to
face the limitations of the material and think around them. This
alphabet of creatures was derived with the same philosophy. By
examining ordinary objects we encounter every day, we may discover
the hidden characters inside of them. We can choose to ignore our
sometimes ugly urban environment or embrace it and see its
potential.
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