The adage, “You can’t judge a book by its cover,” is not always accurate, which I discovered when the mail arrived and I opened the package containing Lead with Your Heart: Lessons from a Life with Horses. Immediately impressed with the beauty, quality and uniqueness...
By Adam Pober J. David Core sets out to write a book to fill a specific niche: a guide for the religious to understand the atheist in their lives. His book, Believe It, You Know an Atheist, does an admirable job with a difficult subject. Most current positive books on...
This quote by Raymond A. Moody Jr. M.D. Ph.D., author of Life After Life, made me pick up Eben’s Alexander’s M.D. Proof of Heaven: “Dr. Eben Alexander’s near-death experience is the most astounding I have read in more than four decades of studying this phenomenon....
The cover image and title caught my eye at once, and when I read the subtitle of this book, One Woman’s Quest to Conquer Skepticism, Cynicism and Cigarettes on the Path to Enlightenment, I thought to myself, now that’s my kind of spirituality book. First, I’ll say you...
The Illustrated World’s Religions: A Guide to our Wisdom Traditions, was first published in the late 50s as The Religions of Man by religion scholar Huston Smith. This edition is a great overview of many of the world’s religions, and goes further...
@Paula_JKnight And trying to heal your inner child by having a child is a selfish act. To put that on a kid sure is not thinking about the kid first. One can argue that a person is not ready to have a kid Until they deal with healing their own inner child. #pronatalism
As you know ; ) points to the deep #pronatalist assumption that we are all supposed to want children. If we think we don't, we also don't know our own mind, bcz we will eventually realize we do want them. Hogwash, but so ingrained! twitter.com/ChildFreeBC/st…