![]() Ingrid’s immensely popular TED talk “Where Joy Hides and How to Find it” has been viewed more than 17 million times, so no one tell her how many people listen to this podcast, okay? She’s also the founder of the website The Aesthetics of Joy, which helps people to find more joy in life (and work) through design. Ingrid Fetell Lee is an experienced designer and author of Joyful: The Surprising Power of Ordinary Things to Create Extraordinary Happiness. Join us after the interview for Tangible Takeaways, where we’ll talk about the ideas and actions we can take with us and implement our own workplace cultures. This episode, we’re talking with author Ingrid Fetell Lee about joy-why it’s not the same as happiness, and what we can change about the places we work to make our jobs, and ourselves, more joyful. Welcome to The Work Place, where we’re hot on the trail of what makes great workplace cultures tick, and what we can all do to make the ones we work in better. ![]()
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![]() Daniel, Nourishing Broth for the Family Soul, Nourishing Broth: An Old-Fashioned Remedy for the Modern World, Parade Magazine,, Sally Fallon Morell, soups, stews, Wonton Soup 2 Comments on Parade. Sally Fallon Morell and Kaayla Daniels wonderful new book, Nourishing Broth removes all the guess work and provides you with various broth-making techniques-from simple chicken broth to rich consommé, shrimp stock and a variety of global stock-based recipes for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. After all, most beginning cooks are intimidated at the thought of staying in a kitchen for a long length of time.Ĭontinue reading : Nourishing Broth for the Family Soul Posted on OctoMaCategories Parade Magazine, Recipes, Soups & Stews, Vegetables and Fruit Tags bok choy, bone broths, broth, Classic Chicken Stock, cookbook review, Edamane, Kaayla T. Such changes encourages people to attempt Dad’s recipes. As his nine-to-five working daughter, it is my duty to rewrite his recipes starting with organic, low-sodium store-bought broth (preferably from a box, instead of a can or powder to avoid a metallic and salty taste). Of course he’s right, but when it comes to time, the quality of ingredients are sacrificed. We have playful arguments about whether homemade or store-bought stock makes a difference in recipes. ![]() Dad’s recipes start with making broth by scratch before proceeding to the actual preparation of a dish. ![]() ![]() Oh dear, I fear a rant coming on concerning the publishers. Well one good thing is that in the afterwards it was all but promised that we will be returning to Lovecraft County at some point - I just hope its sooner than later Yes the original story was as much one of discovery as anything else (and there was plenty going on) but here you have at least two stories where the characters knew exactly what they were doing and for me this opens more possibilities that first realised. ![]() So what of the stories - you have 3 here and they are all standalone (no surprise there really) however they all build on the myths of the Keys, what they are capable of and of the people who understand them. However with Joe Hill at the reigns I suspect we are not going to be in danger of that any time soon. The only concern being is that we are flooded with unrelated and isolated stories simply to exploit what is still in my eyes a unique and fascinating world. For me this opens the world up to so many more possibilities. That said there is plenty of scope for more stories to be told - and as in the case of Grindhouse totally new places to go to. These are all special one offs as the main story has now been concluded in the original run. ![]() This is a welcome return to Lovecraft County (although I will admit there are other specials out there so I am not sure what the order is). ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Screwtape explains that war can be good or bad for the devils’ cause. Wormwood reports to Screwtape that a war (World War II) has broken out in Europe, prompting Screwtape to send Wormwood a series of letters on fear, violence, and bravery. In this way, Wormwood can encourage the patient to focus too exclusively on vice, imperfection, and the material realm, and reject piety, perfection, and the abstract moral realm. Wormwood should try to prevent the patient from thinking about the history of Christianity, and instead influence the patient to focus excessively on the ugliness and imperfection of his peers and of family, especially his mother. Screwtape advises Wormwood to prevent the patient from thinking whenever possible, since reason will only encourage the patient to accept Christianity with greater fervency. Screwtape gives Wormwood advice on how to influence the patient in various small ways, thereby encouraging the patient to move away from God and toward “Our Father,” Satan. In the early letters of the book, Screwtape responds to the news that Wormwood is busy trying to tempt a young man, the patient, to move away from God-the Enemy, as Screwtape calls him-and embrace sin. Lewis, notes that he has no intention of explaining how he came to acquire these letters. ![]() ![]() The novel consists of 31 letters written by a devil named Screwtape to his nephew, a young devil named Wormwood. ![]() ![]() In Baxter’s trilogy we’re a long way away from the alternate-future, point-of-difference scenario. ![]() Robinson portrays his characters’ reactions to three different future scenarios (a nuclear war in The Wild Shore, capitalism run riot in The Gold Coast, and ecological utopia in Pacific Edge), but Baxter confronts his characters with three different revelations about the nature of the universe. Reviewer Nick Gevers compared the sequence to Kim Stanley Robinson’s “ Three Californias” trilogy, but really the similarity stops with the “thematic trilogy” description. The trilogy is thematic rather than diachronic: the novels describe three futures in three very different universes, but featuring a small set of common protagonists, some similar situations and Baxter’s characteristic concerns. Space (2000) and Origin (2001) are the second and third novels in Stephen Baxter’s “Manifold” series, following Time (1999). “ If you’re looking for serene contemplation of disaster and suffering, Baxter’s your man.” ![]() ![]() ◀ CTC ride to Stradishall, Lavenham and West Wratting ✴ ✴ Zendegi ▶Ī review of Stephen Baxter’s novels Space (2000) and Origin (2001), the second and third books in the Manifold trilogy. ![]() ![]() His mind was fertile, restless, questing and, it seems, surprisingly romantic. Through the uninhibited, unself-conscious love of his family, and the patience of his doctors, Christy learned how to be understood when he talked and to express himself first as a painter and then as a writer. People who had no idea they were being cruel referred to him within his hearing as an ''idiot'' and a ''half-wit.'' With his lips pulled over to one side, his eyes wobbling upward in their sockets, he spoke in a series of guttural syllables that would be translated by his mother.īecause he had the use of only his left foot, he was able to get around with difficulty, sometimes in a homemade wooden pramlike vehicle, pulled by his pals, and later in a wheelchair. ![]() ![]() He was unable to communicate through recognizable speech. The film opens today at Lincoln Plaza 1, Broadway at 63d Street.īorn in 1932 with cerebral palsy, the ninth of the 22 children his parents would eventually have (13 survived), Christy Brown grew up as an archetypal member of Dublin's working class - painfully poor, often deprived of essentials, yet also miraculously resilient.Ĭhristy's body was both twisted and paralyzed. Following are excerpts from Vincent Canby's review, which appeared in The New York Times on Sept. ![]() ''My Left Foot'' was shown as part of the recent New York Film Festival. ![]() ![]() ![]() The book opens in 1999 and a now 37-year-old Jackie comes from her dank basement in Boston where she has retreated from the sunshine and freedom of her own summer of love and heartbreak to tie up the legacy of a place and its place in her life.Īmy Mason Doan does a wonderful job of keeping the reader turning the page. … a wonderful job of keeping the reader turning the page.īut, first, she must deal with the estate and its legacy as a musical nirvana and the events that took her from bliss to devastation in the span of one summer. She returns to the place of her greatest happiness and greatest heartbreak, to sort and organize and pass the place on to someone new. ![]() Twenty years later Jackie is back, having inherited the property when her aunt died. She lands in a paradise of unstructured freedom at her famous uncle’s compound in the beautiful and rough terrain overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Since her mother died at her birth, Jackie never got to know her uncle and his family. ![]() ![]() She gets to leave behind a highly structured and upper-class life when her father and his new wife take an extended honeymoon. Jackie Pierce, nicknamed Lady Sunshine by her music icon uncle, is granted a summer break when she is 17. Not everyone gets to have two second starts in life. ![]() ![]() Three grandiose entrances to the front hall are marked with three comfortable looking settees. A grand staircase up right is partially hidden. There is an elegant creation of a front hall with lush red tones in the drapery and walls. Gertrude and Laura Cheveley knew each other as school girls who didn’t care for each other then, and don’t care for each other now.ĭouglas Paraschuk’s set design is quite stunning upon initial entrance to the Avon Theatre. She believes that an ‘ideal’ husband is someone who has no past actions, either in public or private, that will return to haunt either him or those whom he loves. ![]() Chiltern is concerned how this past historical choice will affect his faithful wife, Gertrude (lovely work by Sophia Walker who reveals an interesting performance range in the second act). Laura Cheveley (wickedly delicious work by Bahareh Yaraghi) for an indiscretion of a fraudulent money-making scheme years ago to build a canal in Argentina. ![]() Sir Robert Chiltern (a commanding performance by Tim Campbell) is blackmailed by the conniving Mrs. ![]() ![]() Heavner isn’t exactly mollified when Tempe, aided by retired police detective Skinny Slidell and a host of experts, puts a name to the dead man. ![]() Nettled by several errors in Heavner’s analysis, and even more by her willingness to share the gory details at a press conference, Tempe launches her own investigation, which is not so much off the books as against the books. Showboat Medical Examiner Margot Heavner makes it clear that, breaking with her department’s earlier practice ( The Bone Collection, 2016, etc.), she has no intention of calling in Tempe as a consultant and promptly identifies the faceless body herself as that of a young Asian man. Another sweltering month in Charlotte, another boatload of mysteries past and present for overworked, overstressed forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.Ī week after the night she chases but fails to catch a mysterious trespasser outside her town house, some unknown party texts Tempe four images of a corpse that looks as if it’s been chewed by wild hogs, because it has been. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Which is quite amazing considering this is simply book 1 out of the trilogy. The depth of this world is one that I feel I can keep exploring and still find new things each time I read through it. Every thing is kept very clean and tastefully done, nothing that would toss this story into the full on romance category, but I was surprised a little because I did not know. And I put that age suggestion only on this book because there are moments of nudity, sexuality, violent fight scenes scattered throughout this book. And since the writing as a whole is clearly written for the older young adult (like 16/17+) audience this childish style arguments where are bit annoying. A few of the back and forths between Trinity and Zayne seemed to be more ” ‘Mom she’s touching me!’ ‘No I’m not! I’m just pointing at her!’ ” between 2 bickering siblings rather than 2 young adults having a relatively serious conversations. Some of the plot seemed to just stop in between the real intense scenes or the fights. Unfortunately, I did feel like there were moments were the writing stalled out a little. Jennifer Armentrout does do a beautiful job at creating her own world and story for this book, that I will have to agree to. And where as I enjoyed this book, it didn’t reached that level of love for me. It was recommended to me since I enjoy Sarah Maas’ books so much (I love Maas’ stories a crap ton it is honestly stupid). I’m not going to lie I was a bit hesitant about this book when I got it. ![]() |