Friday, June 21, 2019

A Place Without you Free Pdf

ISBN: B07MRJG5C9
Title: A Place Without you Pdf
She is his student.

Sometimes ... fate is forbidden.

Everything feels temporary when you’ve experienced tragedy—until Henna Lane meets Bodhi at a music festival.

Young and spontaneous, they have a lust for seizing the moment, falling hard and fast.

When Bodhi is forced to leave without a goodbye, Henna thinks she’ll never get over him.

But then she meets Mr. Malone, her sexy, new guidance counselor.

They are reckless.
They are forbidden.


When their secret is discovered, Henna has to choose between finishing school—banned from seeing Mr. Malone—or dropping out to follow her nomad dreams.

Henna chooses her dreams.

Life is not a destination or a journey.

Some things are more than temporary.

Forbidden can never be ignored.

But if she returns for him, will he still be hers?

A top 100 Amazon bestseller

Read it today!

Enjoyable read Jewel E Ann gave me three five star books last year and I was really looking foward to reading this one. I must admit I did find the first half hard going and I had that "meh " feeling throughout, however the last fifty percent really kept my attention and prevented that DNF. I am glad I persevered and finished but I have to be honest and say if it wasn't Jewel E Ann I probably would have given up.I would have loved to have learned more about what happened to Henna to make her the way she was, her highs and lows after her accident, I feel this may have ingratiated her more to me in the beginning as I just couldn't connect to her in the beginning. The insta-love didn't convince me at all unfortunately, however, I was championing this couple by the end.So while this wasn't a winner, winner I still enjoyed it at the end. Jewel E Ann tackles some hard subjects that make you think and loved the honesty with which they were dealt. I will say I seem to be in the minority and this may work for you, many of my friends have loved it.“Love is not a rational emotion. It jumps out of planes and dives off cliffs. It leaves a permanent mark on everything it touches. I can do the right thing or I can love you, but I can’t do both.”When You Love Someone...Set Them Free EXTRAORDINARY!!! HEART-WRENCHINGLY BEAUTIFUL!!! It deserves more than 5 stars!This book, for me, was just WOW! It truly and completely moved me. It was an incredible story of love. It made me cry and it broke my heart and I absolutely loved every single word.Sometimes we need to break to be made whole. And Bodhi and Henna’s love...it was worth EVERYTHING!Two things that really hit home and I will keep with me:1. Life is about truly LIVING. So LIVE! We don’t get a second shot at life. Make it count!2. When you truly love someone. Completely, unconditionally, with everything that you are...you set them free!Bodhi and Henna’s love for eachother was infinite. No matter the obstacle; neither time nor distance could stop the connection they had. An epic kind of love.Read this book!!!! A top read of ALL TIME for me! One I will NEVER FORGETđź’—They say timing is everything Timing is everything. When Henna meets Bodhi their timing is all off. Their random ride share at Coachella has Henna instantly smitten and Bodhi giving in to his curiosity about this girl. Concerts don't last forever and they go their separate ways.Starting her senior year of high school at age 19 due to an extended recovery from a life changing accident, Henna is resigned to just get the year over with and graduate, until she meets the new guidance counselor. Timing is everything.I wasn't sure I was going to like Henna's character. She seemed like a flippant pothead at first, lol, but the more I learned about her the more I liked her. She's a free spirit who leads with her heart more than her head, but it works for her. Bodhi was a character I was immediately drawn to because he was broken, broken by the results of his own actions and choices, and he was living with the repercussions of that every single day. Their love is intense and pure and soul deep, but timing is everything. The supporting characters were all pivotal and the moral choices and dilemmas involved made me pause and really think about the situations at hand. This had more angst than I anticipated (fist pump) and my eyes leaked more than once. I loved it.

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Saturday, June 15, 2019

48 Laws of Power Free Pdf

ISBN: B00X0TKUS0
Title: 48 Laws of Power Pdf

Amoral, cunning, ruthless, and instructive, this piercing work distills 3,000 years of the history of power into 48 well-explicated laws. This bold volume outlines the laws of power in their unvarnished essence, synthesizing the philosophies of Machiavelli, Sun Tzu, Carl von Clausewitz, and other infamous strategists. The 48 Laws of Power will fascinate any listener interested in gaining, observing, or defending against ultimate control.

DANGER: read at your own risk there seems to be a lot of love and hate surrounding this book, so if you are curious but unsure, this review should help you decide whether or not to buy the book, and how it will impact youFirst, to understand the 48 laws of power, you must know two key ideas1. you CAN NOT escape the power game. thinking you can "not participate" is as foolish as thinking that you could somehow escape gravity or make the sun stand still. Robert Greene explains why in the intro with some excellent examples2. the 48 laws of power are neither good nor evil; they are just LAWS. If someone pushed a man off a cliff would you blame gravity for for his demise? This is the mindset you must adopt in order to learn a lot from this book.Things I Liked- NEW PARADIGMafter reading the 48 laws, you will never see the world the same way again. once you understand some of these laws you will see many underlying currents and motives you did not see before.- INCREASES POWERone of the main reasons to buy the book. you wil become exponentially more powerfull by knowing and understanding these laws-CRYSTAL CLEARevery law is clearly outlined with "transgression" of the law, "observance" of the law, keys to power, and a "reversal"-GREAT STORIESthe 48 laws are packed with mindblowing and sometimes humorous stories of people in history practicing these laws. this is helpful as some of the concepts are quite abstract.What I didn't like-RISKYan old proverb says " A man who plays with snakes will eventually be bitten". If you begin to use the 48 Laws improperly, you could get yourself in some dangerous situations, lose friends, piss off a lot a people, and destroy relationships- REQUIRES DISCERNMENTif you you are looking for a highly concrete book that the says "do xyz and you will accomplish vyx" look elsewhere. the Laws require good judgement and and and prospecting nature to practice and apply-NOT FOR EVERYONE If you are aghast at the idea of manipulation and deceit then read with caution.OVERALL: If you want to have more power or a better understanding of why different situations turn out the the way they do, you should definitely read the 48 laws of power by Robert Greene. If you want to be naive, easily manipulated, weak, you should ignore this book and go watch some netfilx.Thanks for readingKnow Thy Enemy The best offense is a good defense.The world is full of people, all of us filled with desires, dreams, wants, needs, jealousy and a sometimes uncontrollable drive to secure, for ourselves, all that we deem necessary to feel safe and in control. Everyone wants to win. Everyone wants that house on the hill, enough of everything they need and even more of everything they want. After desire is met, many of us also want to give to those who have less.Most of us begin with the best of intentions, some get lost along the way. Deceit, treachery and ruthlessness emerge as the competition heats up. All bets are off, morality becomes optional and the ends justify the means.The 48 Laws of Power is what you get if The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli and The SocioPath Next Door by Martha Stout were merged into one. It is the other teams playbook - the schemes, the thoughts, the reasoning, the strategy and, most importantly, the mindset of those who strive to get ahead by stepping on you and me.In football, teams spend countless hours studying their opponent, understanding what they do in various situations, their tendencies, weaknesses, strengths and character. The more they know about them the better they are able to prepare. It enables them to create game plans, plays, personnel changes and play calling specifically targeted at the other teams weaknesses. They build an offense that is fully prepared to counter everything the other team might present. If the other teams plays dirty, is overly aggressive, has a particular strength that seems unbeatable, a good game plan can provide the slightest of edges that can end in victory.This is also true in life and in work. Especially work. It is in business that we all start at the bottom and stare up the funnel - the positions are fewer as we rise, while the benefits, salary and prestige increase - and we feel pitted against our peers in gaining a coveted position at the next level.Some of us can take this competition in stride. We believe that doing our best will merit promotion. That our talent alone should speak for or worthiness of advancement. Honest competition, you against me, and let the best win.Others believe in adding an additional element to the mix. They believe that talent will get you only so far. They believe that they must prevent you from doing your best in order to win the day - that their best is not good enough or does not provide the sense of certainty they desire. They want to crush the "enemy" and secure what is "theirs."We have all worked with these people. We all know these people. They often live among us, invisible to the naked eye, revealed only when the battle is on, when they turn their backs or leave us out in the cold when we need them most.I learned about these people in college in a Political Science Seminar populated by some very ambitious Pre-Law students and assorted other scoundrels. This was a great class, great teacher, great discussions and a wonderful rapport among the students. My eyes were opened near the end of the semester. This particular teacher had a rule of only giving out a set number of A's and B's, the rest of the class would receive C's or lower. The instructor pitted us against each other, we would be graded based on the rubric he provided and in comparison to our classmates. He would rank our papers and distribute grades accordingly. For a group of kids looking to get into law school the possibility of getting a C was unbearable. Then the fit hit the shan!We were to write an extensive research paper using original source documents and primary resources. The limited number of materials available in our library suddenly began to "disappear." Promised rides to other library's vanished. It was a feeding frenzy, every one worked alone, kept to themselves, trusted np one and looked over their shoulder at all times.It was ugly!As a simple kid from a small town, I was heart broken. I had never witnessed that level of mean, self-serving behavior before. I reacted with hurt, anger, disillusionment and animosity toward the teacher and my peers.While I still don't like the method, reading The 48 Laws of Power has helped me understand what was going on and why. People are complicated. When we get pushed against the wall, when we feel that our ability to thrive is being threatened or see our desires within our reach, we sometimes resort to behaviors we would never consider at any other time. We do things that we look back on with tremendous remorse, regret and confusion. "How could I have done that!"But we cannot control what others will or won't do. What get's us in trouble, turns us into victims, is when we assume others are using the same playbook we are. In thinking they share our values, ethics, morality and sense of obligation to be a good person. When we do this we become somebody's prey. We need a good defense. We need to understand that there are people out there waiting to prey upon our trust and vulnerability.There are also those with weak character who will fail us when we need them most. It is not their intention, they are simply unclear on their values and make decision out of fear.So, I recommend reading The 48 Laws of Power. I do not suggest that it be used as a guide for conducting your business or relationships. The historical events and persons described in the book are some of the most shameless and heartless people to have ever lived. These are the bad people. This book teaches you how they think, how low they will go (lower than you can conceive) and helps you be aware of the evil that lurks in the hearts of us all. Like the football team it helps us create a game plan for our lives that is driven by our values, seeks the best in people, but is also vigilant in defending against the worst.

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Monday, May 27, 2019

Unbelievable Pdf

ISBN: B07LH6975N
Title: Unbelievable Pdf 7 Myths About the History and Future of Science and Religion
Unbelievable explodes seven of the most popular and pernicious myths about science and religion. Michael Newton Keas, a historian of science, lays out the facts to show how far the conventional wisdom departs from reality. He also shows how these myths have proliferated over the past four centuries and exert so much influence today, infiltrating science textbooks and popular culture.

The seven myths, Keas shows, amount to little more than religion bashing—especially Christianity bashing.

Unbelievable reveals:

· Why the “Dark Ages” never happened
· Why we didn’t need Christopher Columbus to prove the earth was round
· Why Copernicus would be shocked to learn that he supposedly demoted humans from the center of the universe
· What everyone gets wrong about Galileo’s clash with the Church, and why it matters today
· Why the vastness of the universe does not deal a blow to religious belief in human significance
· How the popular account of Giordano Bruno as a “martyr for science” ignores the fact that he was executed for theological reasons, not scientific ones
· How a new myth is being positioned to replace religion—a futuristic myth that sounds scientific but isn’t

In debunking these myths, Keas shows that the real history is much more interesting than the common narrative of religion at war with science.

This accessible and entertaining book offers an invaluable resource to students, scholars, teachers, homeschoolers, and religious believers tired of being portrayed as anti-intellectual and anti-science.

So much more than just history -- Astute, Factual, and Well Reasoned If you like history, science, tech, philosophy, theology, or culture, READ IT! People NEED to read this to avoid the dominant cultural myth that is moving millions toward falsehood and error.The past is the key to the present. Okay, I know that I'm using that out of context, but really, isn't an understanding of the past NECESSARY to forming accurate assessments for navigating the future?If major TV programs endorse MAJOR FACTUAL ERRORS significantly deluding the public, who's going to set them right?We need more of Key's astute, factual, and well-reasoned thinking. Not only is well-grounded history presented, but the origins and spread of the myths are precisely traced. Keas' reading well over a hundred historic textbooks on the subject is evident in his clarity and conclusions. But the book is not sloughed down in details. The author does not claim an omniscient perspective like some textbooks, but clearly states his research and its limits. Unlike the myth-makers he critiques, the author shares many of his findings openly regardless of whether they support his view or not. (I don't think Kepler, cited in the book, would want it any other way.) It should be noted that the author's conclusion and content does come up against those purporting the War hypothesis and so-called Copernican principle. But his conclusion moves on from there in a way that really shook me in its relevance.In the same way that overly excitable YouTubers might be screaming that god is about to be created in AI or else descend in the form of ET--so this book is a much needed dose of reality for the seeming majority of TV broadcasters and the American public.From medieval times and the Renaissance to contemporary times and projections about the future, Keas takes his readers further in and further up while reining in the extravagant and hurtful claims of the myth-makers past and present.Eye Opening This well research book confronts the myth that religion (and most specifically the Christian faith) has been and remains in conflict with science. In fact, scientists like Kepler and others viewed their study of the universe as part of their worship of the creator. Kepler's work was a hymn to God, as Keas documents. More importantly, Keas traces the myth that mankind has been reduced from "created in the image of God" to "just another speck on just another speck in the vast universe" and challenges that myth. This book is well researched, and will challenge you with vast historical sources, specifically how the study of the universe as been presented in science text books throughout history.I particularly enjoyed the chapters on the study of life on other planets (ET for short) and the assumptions that will be made if and when they ever arrive on earth. Scientists will accept their far advanced technology as magic, with almost a godlike worship of the same.Read the book, it will make you think.The natural sciences offer no evidence for unnatural entities Obviously this book is attempting to advance religion by making false claims about what scientists do and their discoveries using the scientific method. Scientists are not at war with religions. Promoters of religions are constantly attempting to discredit evidence of the natural world. You won't see religion promoters in the USA being critical of faith healers, flat Earthers, or those claiming the Universe being only a few thousand years old. One thing you will see are Xians forming alliances with radical Islamists to promote creationism aka intelligent design.

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Thursday, May 9, 2019

Daisy Has Autism Download

ISBN: 1946824356
Title: Daisy Has Autism Pdf
Author: Aaron J. Wright
Published Date: 2019-01-29
Page: 358

Aaron J. Wright is the product of a public education and a member of a family deeply entrenched in public education. He is a Nurse Practitioner and the parent of two children, one with autism. Professionally he has worked with severely injured adults and children for nearly two decades. Outside of work, he has been a staunch advocate for disabled students in public education and youth sports. He firmly believes in the benefits of a public education and access. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his family and three distinctly different dogs.

Daisy Has Autism tells the story of one family’s harrowing experience with public special education, and captures the story universally experienced by millions of special needs families. In sleepy Davis, California, the Russell family remarkably find themselves first navigating the complexities of autism with their dog and then with their daughter. While seeking to enroll their daughter in special education at their local public school, the Russells quickly find themselves at odds with a school district determined to escape its responsibilities. What they experience, and how they prevail, will resonate with every parent who has struggled to have their special needs child appropriately served.

Shining a light on the darkness of special education This book is real! It is so relatable to my own story of navigating district special education. I literally had to pause and come back to it because it flooded me with emotions and my memories of how hard things were. I love the humor, I love the real relationships, and I would highly recommend this book to any teacher, parent, or anyone who works around a child or adult with a disability. The struggles are real and the people who come in and out of a child’s life can have such a tremendous impact. This impact can be both positive or negative, unfortunately, as you will read in this book. It’s great that there is a light being shined on this hidden dark world of special education.Every parent will benefit from reading this book. I did. Every parent, whether they have a neurotypical child or one with additional needs, should read this book. This is the real face of special education in the public system and it is a gift that a parent struggling with a system that is failing their child has written their story; most of us lack the energy and time.This is also a story that every school district administrator, assessor and clinician should read. Teachers see and know about these issues but are hamstrung. It is easy for people to make generalizations but each and every one of these special needs kids is as equally and fiercely loved and this book highlights how difficult it is for the people who love them to get them their basic, legal rights.It is also a beautiful story of a family that loves each other.Definite must-read! Other reviewers have done an excellent job summarizing Daisy Has Autism, so I will focus my review on how reading this book made me feel. I've lived in Davis over 50 years, and attended Kindergarten through High School here. Having a close friend who is an elementary school teacher in Davis prepared me for what was described in the classroom scenes. What I wasn't prepared for was the bureaucratic nightmare this family endured. Logic and truth were no part of the school system's process when deciding what was best for their daughter, yet this family never gave up. The fact that this is how our school system operates enrages me.This was a book I couldn't put down - but not just for the injustice, but the touching insights into this family and how they coped with such an uphill battle. This is so much more than an account of a child who has autism. It is a beautiful story of a family - and some of the most touching scenes were about the family dog. Aaron has done an excellent job of capturing their experience, and artfully conveying it in this book.

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Friday, May 3, 2019

The Body Keeps the Score Pdf

ISBN: B00OBT7KAO
Title: The Body Keeps the Score Pdf Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma

A pioneering researcher and one of the world's foremost experts on traumatic stress offers a bold new paradigm for healing Trauma is a fact of life. Veterans and their families deal with the painful aftermath of combat; one in five Americans has been molested; one in four grew up with alcoholics; one in three couples have engaged in physical violence. Such experiences inevitably leave traces on minds, emotions, and even on biology. Sadly, trauma sufferers frequently pass on their stress to their partners and children. Renowned trauma expert Bessel van der Kolk has spent over three decades working with survivors. In The Body Keeps the Score, he transforms our understanding of traumatic stress, revealing how it literally rearranges the brain's wiring - specifically areas dedicated to pleasure, engagement, control, and trust. He shows how these areas can be reactivated through innovative treatments including neuro feedback, mindfulness techniques, play, yoga, and other therapies. Based on Dr. van der Kolk's own research and that of other leading specialists, The Body Keeps the Score offers proven alternatives to drugs and talk therapy - and a way to reclaim lives.

The new Bible for Trauma This is the new Bible for anyone affected by trauma, or who works in the field. Van der Kolk has synthesized the most important new breakthroughs in neuroscience, psychology and body-centered therapies, to create a coherent blueprint for understanding and treating trauma. He writes simply and lucidly, and brings his deep insights to life with engaging anecdotes.I suffered PTSD and severe anxiety for many years, and tried all the usual therapies (CBT, medication, analysis, diet, exercise, acupuncture, vitamins, group therapy etc.). Frankly, nothing really worked until I discovered - and applied - the somatic (body) techniques espoused by van der Kolk, and other luminaries such as Peter Levine, Pat Ogden, and Eugene Gendlin. It took me a long time to understand – and accept – their message that trauma impacts the more ancient (reptilian) part of the brain where talk-therapies just can't reach, let alone affect.The only way to ‘communicate’ with this pre-verbal system is through the body, which can signal to the brain stem that it is OK to begin the process of unfreezing the emotional paralysis that has plagued us for decades. So much depends on our willingness and capacity to feel and experience what is going on inside us - not just think about it.Of course, it is also important to understand what is going on at a cognitive level in order to make sense of things. So there is certainly a role for traditional talk therapy, but it is not the main game. By combining a bottom-up (somatic) and a top-down (cognitive) approach, as van der Kolk suggests, it is possible to move towards genuine healing - not just a suppression of symptoms. This is not theoretical for me. I have experienced it.The other truly great book on this subject is Peter Levine’s ‘In an Unspoken Voice’, which explains his ‘somatic experiencing’ (SE) therapy. Levine’s book is arguably narrower in scope than van der Kolk’s, but his writing has such a poetic quality that it communicates more than the words themselves. The first time I read Levine’s book I felt my body respond to his truths at a visceral level. It is a deeply healing and magical work.UPDATE 2018: One of the treatments that Bessel van der Kolk mentions in his book - MDMA (Ecstasy) - was recently granted ‘Breakthrough Therapy’ status by the FDA for phase 3 trials. This is because the phase 1 and 2 trials were so successful, that nearly 70% of participants no longer had PTSD after just 3 MDMA sessions (most of these participants had suffered PTSD for decades). Do yourself a favour and Google MDMA therapy and MAPS (the organisation running the trials) – and watch people tell their stories on YouTube. They will make you weep with joy and hope.

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Sunday, April 28, 2019

Advice for Future Corpses (and Those Who Love Them) Free Pdf

ISBN: 150118217X
Title: Advice for Future Corpses (and Those Who Love Them) Pdf A Practical Perspective on Death and Dying

“In its loving, fierce specificity, this book on how to die is also a blessedly saccharine-free guide for how to live. . . . Tisdale does not write to allay anxieties but to acknowledge them, and she brings death so close, in such detail and with such directness, that something unusual happens, something that feels a bit taboo. She invites not just awe or dread—but our curiosity. And why not? We are, after all, just 'future corpses pretending we don’t know.'” —New York Times“Tisdale (Violation: Collected Essays), a former nurse, offers an intimate insider’s look at dying, aimed at both caregivers and mortally ill people. By turns philosophical and pragmatic, Tisdale gently prods readers to make plans while they can … Tisdale’s forthright narrative voice, charmingly bossy in style (“Be very careful about odors.... You don’t want to be the most nauseating thing that happens in the day”), is so generous and kind in spirit that readers will gladly follow along.” —Publishers Weekly“Sallie Tisdale’s elegantly understated new book pretends to be a user’s guide when in fact it’s a profound meditation. It also pretends to be about how to die. Actually, it’s about how to live.” —David Shields, bestselling author of Reality Hunger"Reading the book is like having a nice, long chat with an unsqueamish friend. . . Tisdale writes warmly, sharing what she knows with a natural gift." —Portland Tribune“When a title sets the tone for a book, readers can see themselves invited into a conversation with kindness. . . [Advice for Future Corpses] is written in a gentle tone, but without euphemisms, as you would hope to hear from the person who sits beside to tell you that you are going to die. Someday.”  —popmatters.com“[Tisdale] could not be more earnest and authentic in adopting a compassionate understanding of death and dying. . . This book is packed with a great wealth of information.” —Choice ConnectPraise for Sallie Tisdale "The work of caring for others is at the center of Tisdale’s writing, and it proves an endlessly complex and engaging subject." — Laura Marsh, The New Yorker"Sallie Tisdale is the real thing, a writer who thinks like a philosopher, observes like a journalist, and sings on the page like a poet" —Meghan Daum, author of The Unspeakable "I read Sallie Tisdale and within a few seconds I am under her spell. It matters not whether she's writing about the tyranny of weight loss, the startling lives of blowflies, or what it's like to work in an oncology ward (she is a dedicated nurse as well as a brilliant writer), I'm all in, all the time. I will go anywhere she wants to take me. An alternate image—climbing into a submarine with Tisdale at the controls and diving down down down, into her singular sensibility, her genius for language,her love of our deeply imperfect world." —Karen Karbo, author of Julia Child Rules: Lessons on Savoring Life  Sallie Tisdale is the author of several books, including Violation, Talk Dirty to Me, Stepping Westward, and Women of the Way. She has received a Pushcart Prize, an NEA Fellowship, the James D. Phelan Literary Award, and was selected for the Shoenfeldt Distinguished Visiting Writer Series. Her work has appeared in Harper’s, The New Yorker, The Threepenny Review, The Antioch Review, Conjunctions, and Tricycle. In addition to her award-winning writing career, Tisdale has been a nurse for many years, including a decade in palliative care. She lives in Portland, Oregon. Visit her online at SallieTisdale.com.

A NEW YORK TIMES BOOK CRITICS’ TOP 10 BOOK OF THE YEAR

In its loving, fierce specificity, this book on how to die is also a blessedly saccharine-free guide for how to live.” —The New York Times

We Are All Future Corpses

Former NEA fellow and Pushcart Prize-winning writer Sallie Tisdale offers a lyrical, thought-provoking, yet practical perspective on death and dying in Advice for Future Corpses (and Those Who Love Them). Informed by her many years working as a nurse, with more than a decade in palliative care, Tisdale provides a frank, direct, and compassionate meditation on the inevitable.

From the sublime (the faint sound of Mozart as you take your last breath) to the ridiculous (lessons on how to close the sagging jaw of a corpse), Tisdale leads the reader through the peaks and troughs of death with a calm, wise, and humorous hand. Advice for Future Corpses is more than a how-to manual or a spiritual bible: it is a graceful compilation of honest and intimate anecdotes based on the deaths Tisdale has witnessed in her work and life, as well as stories from cultures, traditions, and literature around the world.

Tisdale explores all the heartbreaking, beautiful, terrifying, confusing, absurd, and even joyful experiences that accompany the work of dying, including:

A Good Death: What does it mean to die “a good death”? Can there be more than one kind of good death? What can I do to make my death, or the deaths of my loved ones, good?

Communication: What to say and not to say, what to ask, and when, from the dying, loved ones, doctors, and more.

Last Months, Weeks, Days, and Hours: What you might expect, physically and emotionally, including the limitations, freedoms, pain, and joy of this unique time.

Bodies: What happens to a body after death? What options are available to me after my death, and how do I choose—and make sure my wishes are followed?

Grief: “Grief is the story that must be told over and over...Grief is the breath after the last one.”

Beautifully written and compulsively readable, Advice for Future Corpses offers the resources and reassurance that we all need for planning the ends of our lives, and is essential reading for future corpses everywhere.

Practical You don't have to know anyone that is dying (though we all are in process), nor do you have to have a terminal diagnosis to enjoy and find benefit from this well written, informative book. I am in a book group and this is an excellent book to use to begin to explore one's emotions about death and dying. Even after working in hospice and being in the health care field for over 30 years, I found a lot of benefit from this book. As such, I find myself paying even closer attention to my feelings and words around the living and the dying. Blessings to Sallie Tisdale for a wonderfully useful book.The book I've been searching for In a world where the global anti-aging industry will top $400 billion in 2018, it Is astonishing to me how little public discourse there is about the biggest psychological challenge facing every one of us. I’m a 70 year old psychologist, and In the privacy of my office or in the intimate conversations with friends who are passing 40, 50, 60, 70…I hear the almost universal fears of aging and death, often in a throwaway joke meant to hide the underlying unease. Everyone worries when they lose their keys that it might be incipient dementia. The relentless and futile battles against gravity are fought on a daily basis with skin creams, leg lifts, and desperate hope. We care for our ailing and dying parents but pray that our own end will be easier, later, less messy, less complicated by family dynamics and medical contradictions. And yet, here is an absolutely beautiful book about the realities of what will happen to each and every one of us, and as of the time of my writing this the book has been out for months and has gotten only 9 reviews. It does seem that the one cultural note we play to handle mortality is denial. I’ve been searching for years for a book that tells the truth without sugar coating or delicacy but with great compassion and respect, without religious dogma or false hopes, but with a loving acceptance of our mortal natures. For me, personally, and for many I know, there is no peace at all in endlessly chasing youth and lying awake at night terrified of the inevitable losses of beauty, mobility, independence, relationships, etc. But I have derived considerable comfort from Tisdale’s stark invitation to experience our common humanity in all its astonishing and mysterious complexity. I will recommend this book to all who are brave enough to open their eyes and wise enough to know that it’s a powerful answer to fear.Not always comfortable but terribly necessary, with wit and compassion I heard about this book from someone who works in palliative care. I am a psychotherapist but have always been on the phobic side when it comes to death and dying, particularly my own. Sallie Tisdale is brilliant in her decision to go through different aspecta for the dying human being as well as for the witnesses or companions. There is nothing trite about this book, no set steps and if anything, Tisdale winds up joining us in all the possibilities--in authentic fear and longing, in messiness and even humor. She joins us or she kind of welcomes the reader to join her there. Amazingly to me, Tisdale is a Buddhist who never claims any immunity from her own moods and unrealistic wishes; she is a witness also to her own humanness all the way through. She doesn't make death go away, duh!, but she makes it easier to think and talk about. This is not a book to read only once and it makes the most enlightened of us (or so we thought) reconsider our own burial plans as well. Yes, not convenient, but excellent and I think, necessary.

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