Nobodys Ass Journey To Freedom
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Author | : Art Lester |
Publisher | : Lulu.com |
Total Pages | : 206 |
Release | : 2015-10-09 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 132644204X |
In a mountain jungle of Latin America two very different fugitives join forces to escape a common threat. Launching themselves into the unknown, they find that there are dangers ahead which they have never considered, and that freedom is more elusive than they knew. On the other side of what turns out to be a perilous journey, they discover where real freedom might be found.
Author | : Allan A. Zarbock |
Publisher | : Lulu.com |
Total Pages | : 314 |
Release | : 2011-06-12 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1257828886 |
At school, he's confronted with indifferent administrators, both over-demanding and hardhearted teachers, and a variety of bullies. At home, he's simply left alone--forgotten--to fend for himself. His father is long gone and barely a memory. His mother isn't abusive or cruel, yet she's more concerned with surviving her own life than being a mother to Nobody. Therefore, all Nobody can hope for in life is to survive, one minute at a time, which leaves little ambition for homework. Even though life seems like a sick, twisted joke with the laugh always at his expense, Nobody searches inside himself to find strength to endure and eventually overcomes his fate. Nobody understands that it's up to him to find his own path as he tries to decide whether or not to drop out of high school.
Author | : Howard Fast |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 296 |
Release | : 2015-03-26 |
Genre | : Political Science |
ISBN | : 1317470184 |
"Howard Fast makes superb use of his material. ... Aside from its social and historical implications, Freedom Road is a high-geared story, told with that peculiar dramatic intensity of which Fast is a master". -- Chicago Daily News
Author | : Osho |
Publisher | : Fivestar |
Total Pages | : 221 |
Release | : 2023-03-17 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : |
It is time, ripe time for a Zen manifesto. The Western intelligentsia have become acquainted with Zen, have also fallen in love with Zen, but they are still trying to approach Zen from the mind. They have not yet come to the understanding that Zen has nothing to do with mind. Its tremendous job is to get you out of the prison of mind. It is not an intellectual philosophy; it is not a philosophy at all. Nor is it a religion, because it has no fictions and no lies, no consolations. It is a lion’s roar. And the greatest thing that Zen has brought into the world is freedom from oneself. All the religions have been talking about dropping your ego – but it is a very weird phenomenon: they want you to drop your ego, and the ego is just a shadow of God. God is the ego of the universe, and the ego is your personality. Just as God is the very center of existence according to religions, your ego is the center of your mind, of your personality. They have all been talking about dropping the ego, but it cannot be dropped unless God is dropped. You cannot drop a shadow or a reflection unless the source of its manifestation is destroyed.
Author | : Lee E. Rhyant |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 193 |
Release | : 2022-04-01 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 0820361550 |
A powerful underdog story, Soaring delivers practical leadership advice, business lessons, and tips for success mined from the real-life strategies of Lee E. Rhyant’s forty years as a corporate leader. Born into poverty in the postwar South, Rhyant was the fourth of eight children raised by a family of African American sharecroppers struggling to survive the last decades of segregation. Soaring combines compelling storytelling with practical lessons to demonstrate the transformative power of perseverance. In the trajectory of his life, Rhyant has achieved many goals considered beyond his reach. Here he shares compelling stories of growing up in the segregated South, working at an early age, graduating from the HBCU Bethune-Cookman University and Indiana University, and ultimately excelling at leadership roles at General Motors, Rolls Royce Aeronautics, and Lockheed Martin Marietta. Rhyant’s life reveals a great deal about the economic, business, and racial climate in the South in the last quarter of the twentieth century and has much to teach students, business leaders, and interested readers about resiliency and determination.
Author | : Summer McStravick |
Publisher | : Simon and Schuster |
Total Pages | : 336 |
Release | : 2023-04-25 |
Genre | : Self-Help |
ISBN | : 075732469X |
Stuff Nobody Taught You by Summer McStravick teaches readers how to wildly, successfully, reinvent themselves and become who they’ve always wanted to be. Filled with humor, actionable steps, and brazen, intelligent straight-talk, Stuff Nobody Taught You fills you in on all those secrets you wished someone had told you about how to craft and keep a happy, passion-filled life. 2023 International Book Awards 1st Place Winner, Self-Help/Motivational Category Sometimes we need a good old cathartic do-over. We’ve been flatlining—emotionally spent and wrung out like an old washcloth. We want to feel a different way, be a different way. Somehow, we need to regain our purpose and direction and feel good again. We want to re-find the self-worth, confidence, and inner strength that got wiped away from years of frustration, disappointments, and emotional depletion. Stuff Nobody Taught You fills you in on all those secrets you wished someone had told you about how to craft and keep a happy, passion-filled life. The book takes you through a proven journey of self-discovery via a series of forty-five bite-size, easy lessons that will transport you to a world of amazing feelings and real transformation as you learn to: Find and release the inner patterns and blocks that have stopped or derailed you time after time. Climb out from feeling stuck, exhausted, directionless, or just not sure what you’re supposed to do next in life. Meet and love up your powerful, authentic self, where you trust your choices and start attracting good things in every area of your life. Each day, you’ll look forward to reading the next revealing chapter that feels as yummy as a best friend’s phone call. By, the end, you’ll shut the book with a satisfying, relieved, and exciting sense of your next steps. In short, Stuff Nobody Taught You resets your inner clock and shows you that yes, you can wildly, successfully, reinvent yourself and become who you’ve always wanted to be. It teaches you where your inner power lies and gives you permission to use it. And finally, it frees you up to find the brisk, fresh path that oftentimes turns out to be right there, already under your feet.
Author | : Linda Mahood |
Publisher | : UBC Press |
Total Pages | : 345 |
Release | : 2018-08-01 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0774837365 |
In the 1920s, as a national network of roads and youth hostels spread across Canada, so did the practice of hitchhiking. By the 1960s, the Trans-Canada Highway had become the main thoroughfare for thousands of young baby boomers seeking adventure. Thumbing a Ride examines the rise and fall of hitchhiking and hostelling in the 1970s, drawing on records from the time. Many equated adventure travel with freedom, but a counter-narrative emerged of girls gone missing and other dangers. Town councillors, community groups, and motorists called for a nationwide clampdown on a transient youth movement that they believed was spreading hippie sensibilities and anti-establishment nomadism. Linda Mahood unearths good and bad stories and key biographical moments that formed young travellers’ understandings of personal risk, agency, and national identity. Thumbing a Ride asks new questions about hitchhiking as a rite of passage, and about the adult interventions that turned a subculture into a moral and social issue.
Author | : Melanie Rippey |
Publisher | : Fulton Books, Inc. |
Total Pages | : 249 |
Release | : 2021-02-23 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1649524560 |
Memoirs of Nobody Special is full of funny, heartbreaking, trying, and awakening stories from Melanie Rippey’s life. It is an honest and lighthearted account of some of the events, mistakes, and lessons she has learned along the way. It is filled with heartwarming and personal stories from her childhood through her adult years. She talks about how she felt like nobody special for far too long and has finally decided to live life with happiness.
Author | : Richard Glukstad |
Publisher | : iUniverse |
Total Pages | : 126 |
Release | : 2007 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0595420842 |
If you are a red blooded American who really loves and wants to help your country, then this book is a must read for you! It gives Americans of all walks of life the chance to sit down and calmly look at themselves with the hope that they will take to heart the author's analysis and common sense suggestions. The book is not intended to be a complete makeover of America, but rather a way to save what's great and improve what may be in the way of our survival as the world's greatest superpower in history. Remember, nobody is perfect!
Author | : Tracy Sugarman |
Publisher | : Easton Studio Press, LLC |
Total Pages | : 290 |
Release | : 2013-01-01 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1935212958 |
(Published as a Morris Jesup Book in association with the Westport Library, Westport, Connecticut) Written by an intimate participant in the turbulent civil rights movement in Mississippi, Nobody Said Amen tells the stories of two families’ lives, one white, one black, as they navigate the challenging, tilting landscape created by the coming of “outside agitators” and social change to the Mississippi Delta in the 1960s. Owner of a great plantation, Luke Claybourne is a product of Southern attitudes, a decent man who feels responsible for the black families who make his plantation run, but who is loathe to accept the changes necessary for its survival. When he loses his plantation, his entire world is shattered. Led by his wife, Willy, and their friendship with a Northern journalist, Luke is forced to come to terms with a new way of life in the post--Civil Rights era South. Meanwhile, Jimmy Mack, a young black Mississippian leading a group of students who have come to Shiloh to help blacks gain the right to vote, has become a target of the Klan—savagely beaten while in jail and threatened with a burning cross. His love affair with Eula, a Claybourne employee, highlights the tensions and hazards of trying to love in the shadow of a racist world. Rich with a colorful roster of the people in Shiloh, Nobody Said Amen tells a triumphant American tale.