Kelly McGee has narrated 16 audiobooks on Listento.it by 9 authors, with an average listener rating of 5★ across 1 ratings. The most-rated is Wicca Herbal Magic.

Ever wondered how herbs can be used alongside Wicca? Maybe you’re curious about medicinal and culinary herbs and how they can enhance your witchcraft? Perhaps you are looking for the next best tradition to explore or for a new magical application?
Now you can easily explore the uses, benefits, and basic applications of herbal magic!
Learn how vast and varied herbs are in magic. Discover how to incorporate herbal magic into rituals you already use for Wicca. You’ll even get access to unique recipes and spells to get started with your new herbal magic practices.
The natural magic in herbs and flowers can completely change and enhance the energy of any spell or ritual, and even open the door to casting all kinds of new spells.
More than that, herbal magic and green Wicca allow you, as the practitioner, to explore other potential hobbies, activities, and lifestyle changes that expand your world as a Wiccan.
You will learn about:
Using magical and medicinal herbs for teas
Starting your very own herb garden, so to have all the plants for your magical desires, right at your fingertips!
Different ways of preserving your own herbs and building up a magical apothecary or spice rack
Learning how to meditate with Herbs
Properties and features of the most famous Herbal Oils and Baths
So, if you are looking to expand your Wiccan studies and you want to know more about herbs and natural magic - to make it a wonderful addition to your lifestyle and to your home - then this is the book for you!
Scroll up and click the buy now button!
©2019 Monica Candle (P)2019 Monica Candle

Wondering about Wicca? Look no further. Within this book is a collection of knowledge that will satisfy any type of listener interested in the craft. Whether you are new to Wicca or an experienced witch. It will bring you insight into the magic of Wicca, its philosophy, its leaders, and its future. Witchcraft, simply put, is the spirituality of harmonizing with the cosmic and earthly forces of the divine. Through reverence, spell casting, and potion-making, Witches draw from their personal energy to influence the powers of the world in their favor. The solar, lunar, and seasonal cycles of Earth are fundamental to the rhythm of witchcraft as well as the elements, earth, fire, water, and air. Witchcraft values free will, learning, and responsibility for others and the Earth. This book is a document meant to educate, enlighten, and guide learners of Wicca for practice or study. Open your mind be the witch you was born to be. Each and every one of us has magik inside of us.
©2016 Theresa Smith (P)2016 Theresa Smith

Congratulations on your decision to learn about the gastric balloon or to get it! You're about to find out more about this tool that can help you lose weight, and also about the healthy habits that can keep you losing weight and keep it off for years to come. That's a big deal! If you're looking into the gastric balloon system, you've already been fighting obesity for quite a while. You've tried diets, and haven't found a permanent solution. The balloon is designed to lend a hand as you jump-start your weight loss. For three or six or even 12 months, the balloon will be in your stomach, reminding you of what you should and shouldn't eat. When you get the gastric balloon, your doctor should also provide you with complete support. The balloon is supposed to be used along with a diet and exercise program that teaches you healthy habits for life. Regular visits with a nutritionist can get you on the right path and help you learn strategies for making the right choices. This book is not a substitute for a complete nutritional and medical support program under the guidance of your own medical care team. Your healthcare team may include your primary care physician, the doctor who put in your gastric balloon, a nutritionist, and any other healthcare experts you work with. We assume you also are working closely with your doctor and supporting team during the process. This book can accompany you through your gastric balloon journey and is designed to assist you with each of the steps you will encounter on the gastric balloon experience from beginning to end. It is set up in chapters that progress from learning about the gastric balloon and considering it, to losing weight with it, to life after the balloon is removed. It starts by giving you information about the balloon, moves forward with you as you get ready for the procedure, then as you lose weight for months with the bariatric balloon. It will remain a valuable asset once you have the balloon removed and work to maintain the new lifestyle you will have adopted. You will find practical advice on food choices, restaurants, and handling cravings. Along the way, we provide an assortment of healthy meal plans to help you plan your diet throughout your journey. Most chapters also have a challenge to give you a chance to test your skills and your new awareness of nutrition, tools you can use, and how to develop habits that can help you lose weight and improve your health. We hope this book can play a small role in your healthy bariatric balloon journey. To your satisfying and long-lasting weight-loss success!
©2017 Alex Brecher (P)2017 Alex Brecher

“Immigration during the first five years of the 1850s reached a level five times greater than a decade earlier. Most of the new arrivals were poor Catholic peasants or laborers from Ireland and Germany who crowded into the tenements of large cities. Crime and welfare costs soared. Cincinnati's crime rate, for example, tripled between 1846 and 1853, and its murder rate increased sevenfold. Boston's expenditures for poor relief rose threefold during the same period.” (James McPherson) It is not uncommon that a failed movement or group from the past might be cited as a “cautionary” example for the world today. In the wake of contemporary debates over immigration, the “Know Nothings” have been regularly cited as an example of how dangerous nativist attitudes can become and, indeed, have proven to be in America’s history. Several columnists, for instance, have striven to make comparisons between the Know Nothings of antebellum America and President Donald Trump’s immigration policies, helping, in part, to generate modern interest in a political party that many Americans have heard of, but tend to know little about. The Know Nothing movement can actually be tied to a number of violent episodes and ethnically charged riots that occurred during the last 1850s. The debate over immigration in the 1850s was more than a clash of worldviews - it touched upon the core of America’s values. While nativists, like the Know Nothings, believed that immigrants who embraced politics from their native lands represented a threat to America’s values, those who opposed them argued that it was precisely America’s values that made immigration a necessity and a valuable component of American life. As the Republicans and Know Nothings spread from the ashes of the Whig Party, the Republicans, led by President Lincoln, rejected nativism and embraced a kind of American exceptionalism. Lincoln did not believe that America was “better” or even more “moral” than other nations, but his brand of exceptionalism advanced the view that America represented a great experiment, one that proposed that a society based on the ideals of the Declaration of Independence (i.e. life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness). Should it fail, Lincoln believed it would shatter the hopes of the rest of the world, as people sought to overcome despotic and tyrannical forms of rule. Thus, to the Republicans, when it came to the issue of immigration, America’s economy and democracy itself were at stake. At the same time, there was quite a bit more to the background of this short-lived, but widely impactful “third party” than xenophobia and religious intolerance. In places like Boston, where the Know Nothings took over nearly all of the city’s elected offices, including capturing the state’s governorship in 1854, the Know Nothings were largely viewed as a progressive party. While the North’s Know Nothings supported the party’s national anti-immigrant positions, it also embraced an anti-slavery policy, supported an expansion of the rights of women, believed that industries should be more heavily regulated, and supported a variety of measures intended to support the labor class. Accordingly, in order to understand the Know Nothing party’s nativism, it requires more nuance than simply condemning them as xenophobes. It is typical in the contemporary media and in political commentary to cite a caricature of the Know Nothings as an example of “hate” and a dark xenophobic history, but the movement grew out of the controversial political landscape of the mid-19th century, and the party achieved prominence and power across wide sections of the society.
©2020 Charles River Editors (P)2020 Charles River Editors

A combo that will guide you through the hard times. Book 1: I think a lot of people have had their fair share of breakups. There are only a few individuals here and there who have had only one or zero relationships. Each time it is over, it hits us like a ton of bricks. What happens in our minds after a breakup? What should we do? What are the best ways to get your life on track and to eliminate feelings of misery and pain? In this book, you will find answers. Topics like the following will be addressed: The stages of mourning over the loss of a loved one you lost Coping strategies and small tips to grow and overcome feelings of despair or heartache Seven proven steps to heal your broken heart, elaborately explained How to get rid of old memories and instantly create new ones Several ways you can find support amongst friends, family, and professionals Important lessons we can all learn from having a broken heart And much more! Book 2: When a breakup happens, we tend to think it is a negative thing. However, there are many untapped opportunities that come around when a breakup occurs. There are specific steps the author advises you to take to heal your grieving heart and make the most of those opportunities. Here are some of the things you will find in this book: The reason why you should allow yourself to feel real heartache and why it is actually a good thing. Reasoning behind the "avoid social media" rule What not to do when you break up with your partner How to increase productivity, health, and creativity with the new time you have Benefits and advantages you will have after a breakup Ideas to pamper yourself when you need a little light at the end of the tunnel How meditation, finding your "Zen" and other spiritual factors can ease your mind and get you back on track.
©2017 Cammy Dawson (P)2017 Cammy Dawson

Embrace this advice to start a new life. When a breakup happens, we tend to think it is a negative thing. However, there are many untapped opportunities that come around when a breakup occurs. There are specific steps the author advises you to take to heal your grieving heart and make the most of those opportunities. Here are some of the things you will find in this book: The reason why you should allow yourself to feel real heartache and why it is actually a good thing Reasoning behind the "avoid social media" rule What not to do when you break up with your partner How to increase productivity, health, and creativity with the new time you have Benefits and advantages you will have after a breakup Ideas to pamper yourself when you need a little light at the end of the tunnel How meditation, finding your "Zen", and other spiritual factors can ease your mind and get you back on track Curious yet? Then don't wait and start listening so you don't have to remain in the dark. Save yourself the misery of common mistakes and learn from what I have learned. I will see you in the first chapter!
©2017 Cammy Dawson (P)2017 Cammy Dawson

“I never meet a ragged boy in the street without feeling that i may owe him a salute, for I know not what possibilities may be buttoned up under his coat.” (James Garfield) He was the only sitting member of the House of Representatives elected President to date, but he served only about half a year in the office. He was the second president in less than 20 years felled by an assassin’s bullet. Yet James A. Garfield, a man little known outside his own party before his “dark-horse” nomination by the Republican Party in 1880, was significant in a number of ways. Garfield’s short term marked the first entrance of a “reformist” strain into the presidency that sought to root out corruption and political favoritism in government. Much of what we know as the modern federal bureaucracy has its roots in Garfield’s advocacy of a professional civil service to fill most positions in the government, rather than filling those positions through political patronage, the “spoils system” that went back to the administration of Andrew Jackson. He did not live to see his proposed reforms enshrined in law, but Garfield’s contribution to the history of the United States should not be underestimated. In 1880, Garfield ran as a Republican for president, and one of his supporters was a man named Charles Guiteau, who wrote and circulated a speech called “Garfield vs. Hancock” that aimed to rally support for the Republican candidate. Though few knew it, Guiteau’s family had already deemed him insane and attempted to keep him committed in an asylum, only to have him manage an escape from confinement. Garfield went on to narrowly edge Winfield Scott Hancock in the election, and Guiteau, harboring delusions of grandeur, believed he had helped tip the scales in Garfield’s favor. As such, he believed that he was entitled to a post in Garfield’s nascent administration, perhaps even an ambassadorship, and he continued to rack up debts while operating under the assumption that he would soon have the government salary to pay them back. However, despite lobbying around Republican headquarters in New York City and even approaching Cabinet members, no post was forthcoming for the troubled man. Eventually, in May 1881, Secretary of State James Blaine told him to never show up again. Enraged by the perceived slight, Guiteau bought a revolver and plotted to kill the president. He got his chance on July 2, 1881 at a railroad station, shooting Garfield in the back twice and bragging to the authorities, "I am a Stalwart of the Stalwarts...Arthur is president now!" Garfield would live for nearly three more months, and the poor standards of medical care in the 1880's would end up being responsible for the fact he did not survive wounds that he would’ve survived at the end of the 19th century. Indeed, Guiteau would cite medical malpractice at trial, stating, "I deny the killing, if your honor please. We admit the shooting". Those kinds of statements and his generally odd behavior helped ensure Guiteau’s lawyers would claim he was insane, one of the first high profile attempts to use that as a defense against a crime. However, that never had much chance of succeeding, and claims of insanity were heartily rejected by prosecutors. Garfield was the second president to be assassinated after Abraham Lincoln, and today he is often remembered as one of the presidents to die in office after being elected every 20 years starting with William Henry Harrison’s 1840 election through John F. Kennedy’s 1960 election.
©2020 Charles River Editors (P)2020 Charles River Editors

“I wanted to become an Andrews sister. My wish was that they could become a quartet and I’d be the fourth singer.” (June Allyson, actress) The vaudeville era of the early 20th century dominated American entertainment with an endless array of “specialty” acts. Thousands of performers emerged from familiar American lives to test their novel talents with a voracious public in search of the next fad. Violin concertos were played on bicycle pumps, and contortionists defied gravity and the limits of human anatomy. Animal acts of every variety sought to up the ante in bringing the exotic to the American stage. One thread held most of these oddities together. Whatever the talent, it was virtually obligatory in most cases that both humans and animals incorporate singing and dancing into the act. This was particularly true for women regardless of the talent level or genre of specialty. Acts based on family groups became increasingly common, and the genre of sister acts caught fire in the 1920s. Many of these female sibling groups emerged from Midwestern farms and small towns outside the large cities, a phenomenon that is still in play as young women from the American heartland arrive in Las Vegas and Los Angeles on an annual basis to search for stardom. However, in the vaudeville era, the exotic and the odd were often prized above quality, and in the words of author Colleen Cowie, many “performing girls were just pretty young things” of negligible qualifications at best. The appetite for simple beauty and acts based on mindless themes extended to men as well and typified the sort of entertainment a family member might devise for shows in a typical American living room. One female singing group, a hometown trio from Minnesota, stepped into the waning years of sister acts with a quality that at least in their case revived a national interest in the genre. The public psychology that opened the door to the Andrews Sisters has been analyzed extensively through the decades, and their extraordinary success likely originated from multiple fascinations. Gary Giddins, noted biographer of Bing Crosby, is particularly qualified to venture his theory. Crosby worked extensively with the trio from the small town of Mound in the east central portion of the state. Giddins asserts that Patty, LaVerne, and Maxene Andrews created their “unique sound” in part through the development of a “very bright harmonic sense,” first achieved by the older sister, LaVerne. The trio mastered a virtuosic use of close, intricate harmonies, coupled with a precise and a seemingly telepathic rhythmic sense that could be honed for performance in a short period of rehearsal time. These qualities were enveloped in a timbral sheen reminiscent of multiple trumpets. At the root of it, the trio represented one of many thousands of families in which the children attempted to imitate the reigning stars. In this rare case, they did it better than anyone. While building on the genre of boogie-woogie, generally a feature of the African American music scene, the home-grown trio tapped into the grief of the First World War, then rode the ensuing wave of nostalgia that typified WWII. They filled a wartime and post-war need for emotional restoration in the same way vaudeville had served in 1918. Establishing a national boogie-woogie fad as an alternative to the typical 4/4 swing of white society, the sisters coupled the repertoire with an inherent quality of optimism and celebratory Americanism. Unlike most fellow performers, they eschewed the endless theme of brooding romantic love and instead exhorted a country at war to raise its collective morale through a rare demonstration of musical zest.
©2020 Charles River Editors (P)2020 Charles River Editors

The best advice I can give you about what to do after you feel dumped. I think a lot of people have had their fair share of breakups. There are only a few individuals here and there who have had only one or zero relationships. Each time it is over, it hits us like a ton of bricks. What happens in our minds after a breakup? What should we do? What are the best ways to get your life on track and to eliminate feelings of misery and pain? In this book, you will find answers. Topics like the following will be addressed: The stages of mourning over the loss of a loved one you lost Coping strategies and small tips to grow and overcome feelings of despair or heartache Seven proven steps to heal your broken heart, elaborately explained How to get rid of old memories and instantly create new ones Several ways you can find support amongst friends, family, and professionals Important lessons we can all learn from having a broken heart And much more! Curious yet? Then don't wait and start listening so you don't have to remain in the dark. Save yourself the misery of common mistakes and learn from what I have learned. I will see you in the first chapter!
©2017 Cammy Dawson (P)2017 Cammy Dawson

The ultimate combo you can use to heal your broken heart and move on. Book 1: I think a lot of people have had their fair share of breakups. There are only a few individuals here and there who have had only one or zero relationships. Each time it is over, it hits us like a ton of bricks. What happens in our minds after a breakup? What should we do? What are the best ways to get your life on track and to eliminate feelings of misery and pain? In this book, you will find answers. Topics like the following will be addressed: The stages of mourning over the loss of a loved one you lost. Coping strategies and small tips to grow and overcome feelings of despair or heartache. Seven proven steps to heal your broken heart, elaborately explained. How to get rid of old memories and instantly create new ones. Several ways you can find support amongst friends, family, and professionals. Important lessons we can all learn from having a broken heart. And much more! Book 2: Getting over a breakup is tough, and it doesn't make sense to deny this fact, no matter what anyone tells you. There are specific things you can do to speed up the process and heal your broken heart, not bottle it up inside. In this book, you will find words of comfort and advice. You will hear about things like: Why crying or getting angry is okay and how long to do it. Affirmations, morning routines, and exercises. The best ways to keep yourself busy, distracted, and engaged with others. How to explore your creativity and enhance your positive outlook on life. Effective ways to see the best in yourself and understand that everything happens for a reason. Healthy habits and activities to explore. Specific questions answered about what to do with your time, when you bump into your ex, or find yourself talking about him or her. Book 3: When a breakup happens, we tend to think it is a negative thing. However, there are many untapped opportunities that come around when a breakup occurs. There are specific steps the author advises you to take to heal your grieving heart and make the most of those opportunities. Here are some of the things you will find in this book: The reason why you should allow yourself to feel real heartache and why it is actually a good thing. Reasoning behind the "avoid social media" rule. What not to do when you break up with your partner. How to increase productivity, health, and creativity with the new time you have. Benefits and advantages you will have after a breakup. Ideas to pamper yourself when you need a little light at the end of the tunnel. How meditation, finding your "Zen" and other spiritual factors can ease your mind and get you back on track.
©2017 Cammy Dawson (P)2017 Cammy Dawson

In the span of scarcely more than a half century, the West developed from a handful of scattered fur trapping enterprises, predominantly inhabited by males, to a region full of burgeoning rustic communities. Before the government’s official “closure” of the frontier as a lawless expanse, Western societies were essentially living apart from traditional American rule of law. What judicial structures were at work across the West were erratic, often willing to exercise extremes without evidential justification and manipulated by major corporate interests of the day, most notably cattle. As this suggests, despite the fact westward expansion is, more often than not, characterized as a conflict with nature and indigenous cultures, inherent danger existed as frontiersmen, family homesteaders, entrepreneurs, and cattle giants fought for a share in the new frontier life. At times, those in search of wealth, whether from a gold rush, an iconic technology, or from the acquisition of land and livestock, went beyond the decimation of the indigenous peoples. That portion of the frontier offered to the more modestly endowed settlers by federal legislation emerged as an economic irritant to bigger companies and the elite. In some economic quarters, they exerted an extreme effort to sabotage the prevailing structure and remove lower classes from the government’s promise. Where older America depended on the slave culture to sustain its rural existence, cattlemen serving Atlantic appetites for meat-forged empires of unthinkable dimensions in the West. With a weak system of law enforcement and unlimited availability of federal acreage open for public use, cattle barons granted themselves land rights and legal authority without limit. Once in control, they dared anyone to correct them, individual or institutional, and in light of their commercial contribution to the markets back east, there was little chance of government reprisals against their usurpation. Ultimately, major cattle interests inevitably collided with a parallel migration of settlers seeking small plots of land and modest holdings in cattle, sheep, and seasonal farming. This was not a problem the wealthy observed at a distance, but the claim of a lesser segment of society made against them for rule over America’s new ground. The age of the cattle boom was, lamentably for industrialists coveting the vast tracts of the West, also the founding of a new Pacific-oriented population. Once the Whitman family reached the Walla Walla Valley in search of a Protestant mission, securing a foothold in the most distant and alien territory, the Oregon Trail swelled with travelers intent on doing the same. The demand for choice land involved not only quantity of acreage, but controlled access to lakes, rivers, springs, creeks, wells, and unimpeded routes for cattle drives. In holding property rights to the smallest stretch of flowing water, the simple homesteader could create considerable peril for a vast, lucrative cattle enterprise. In the reverse, a settler could be driven off his land by the withholding of streams through specific property management and by the destruction wrought by ravenous and unchecked herds. Many such conflicts ended in violence between business and personal interests. On July 20, 1889, in the Wyoming Territory, in an unbridled display of vigilantism, a group of powerful cattle magnates and their hired hands executed a pair of homesteaders, perceived as intruders seeking land they did not deserve. In turn, they dared the region’s pallid legal system to confront them over the matter. The shock of this specific event, still a subject of interest in the range country, marked the first and last illegal hanging of a female in the Wyoming country.
©2020 Charles River Editors (P)2020 Charles River Editors

Congratulations on downloading Wicca: Spirit: The Fifth Element and thank you for doing so. The following chapters will discuss the Spirit, Akasha, and a related Wiccan symbol, the pentagram. The Spirit is said to be the fifth Element of the Wiccan tradition, the substance that unifies the four material Elements. Each Element occupies its own apex on the Wiccan pentagram. Chapter one discusses the pentagram's symbolic history. In chapter two, listeners can expect to make sense of the ways that Wiccans relate to and make use of the pentagram. Chapter three covers the four material Elements of the Wiccan tradition: Air, Fire, Earth, and Water. Chapter four takes a closer look at what Wiccan practitioners consider to be the fifth Element, the Spirit. Lastly, chapter five delves into historical ponderings concerning the existence of Akasha, prominently known as Aether during earlier times.
©2016 Theresa Smith (P)2017 Theresa Smith

In the time period between the fall of Rome and the spread of the Renaissance across the European continent, many of today’s European nations were formed. The Catholic Church rose to great prominence. Some of history’s most famous wars occurred. And a social class system was instituted that lasted over 1,000 years. A lot of activity took place during a period frequently labeled derogatorily as the “Dark Ages”, and while that period of time is mostly referred to as the “Middle Ages” instead of the Dark Ages today, it has still retained the stigma of being a sort of lost period of time in which Western civilization made no worthwhile progress after the advances of the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome. In reality, this oversimplification of the Middle Ages overlooks the progress made in the studies of sciences and philosophy, especially during the High Middle Ages. It also ignores the fact that one of the most important inventions of the last millennium was created in Germany during the Late Middle Ages, the printing press, which allowed the Renaissance to move across the continent and help position Western Europe as the wealthiest region in the world. If anything, the one aspect of the Middle Ages that has been romanticized is medieval warfare. Indeed, the Middle Ages have long sparked people’s imaginations, thanks to imagery of armored knights battling on horseback and armies of men trying to breach the walls of formidable castles. What is generally forgotten is that medieval warfare was constantly adapting to the times as leaders adopted new techniques and technology, and common infantry became increasingly important throughout the period. Starting around 1000 CE, there was a gradual consolidation of power in the region after the fragmentation of the Early Middle Ages, and it brought about the rise of more centralized states that could field large armies. The Normans, one of the first groups to do this, were notable for their discipline and organization, and it’s little surprise that they were the last foreigners to successfully invade Britain under William the Conqueror in the mid-11th century. The Middle Ages have always gripped people’s imaginations, and knights, fair ladies, castles, jousting, and feasts make for a pleasant picture, but the reality was quite different. People were dirty, disease was rife, war was cruel, and life was short. People died in bizarre ways, frequently insisted they saw visions in the sky, and invented marvelous devices seemingly way before their time. British writer L.P. Hartley famously wrote, “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.” Europe in the Middle Ages was more like a different planet. The Weird Middle Ages: A Collection of Mysterious Stories, Odd Customs, and Strange Superstitions from Medieval Times includes all kinds of tales about people and events during the era.
©2020 Charles River Editors (P)2020 Charles River Editors

In 13 Things Mentally Strong People Don't Do author and psychotherapist Amy Morin offers a fresh perspective on mental strength and behavior. She points out 13 things to avoid, thus hopefully arming the listener with knowledge to avoid having to learn by trial and error. She explains each "Don't" with excellent examples and case studies, and gives the listener tools to avoid those mistakes by offering what "to do" in simple to understand terms. Having overcome tremendous emotional heartbreak, Morin uses experiences from her own life, as well as those from clients she has counseled. The listener will be more informed about destructive behavior after listening to this book. Don't miss the hit book based on Amy Morin's viral blog post that details the 13 negative behaviors that are holding so many people back. This straight-to-the-point summary will leave you feeling empowered to take back your life and overcome challenges you face, both large and small Note: this is a summary and analysis of the book and not the original book.
©2017 FastReads (P)2017 FastReads

This FastReads Summary & Analysis offers supplementary material to help you distill the key takeaways, review the books' content, and further understand the writing style and overall themes from an editorial perspective. Whether you'd like to deepen your understanding, refresh your memory, or simply decide whether or not these books are for you, FastReads Summary & Analysis is here to help. Absorb everything you need to know in under 20 minutes per book! This FastReads Summary & Analysis bundle includes: Summary of The Code of the Extraordinary Mind: 10 Unconventional Laws to Redefine Your Life and Succeed On Your Own Terms by Vishen Lakhiani Summary of Ego Is the Enemy by Ryan Holiday Summary of When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times by Pema Chodron Summary & Analysis of Stick with It: A Scientifically Proven Process for Changing Your Life - for Good by Sean Young Summary of Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things by Jenny Lawson + 1 secret bonus book! Each summary includes key takeaways and analysis of the original book to help you quickly absorb the author's wisdom in a distilled and easy-to-digest format. FastReads' summaries mean you save time and money listening to only what you need. This six-book bundle covers everything from dealing with adversity and finding happiness to creating healthier habits and cultivating a better life. Improve your life from the inside out!
©2017 FastReads (P)2018 FastReads

If you are interested in self-hypnosis, then get this book, written by a person with real life experience in this field. Hypnosis is an amazing tool that can literally reshape your life. If your life is not quite how you envisioned it, then it's time to take a look at what kind of information you have programmed into it over time This incredible book can show you how to get your mind and body in sync, how to write effective self-hypnosis scripts, and tell you everything you need to know about hypnosis. Sample a simple self-hypnosis induction, learn how to access your mind to solve problems, travel down a lazy river or float on a cloud, all via hypnosis. This book will help you tackle any problem you may have including weight loss, lack of confidence, smoking and other addictions, stress management, relationship issues, pain management and even help you develop a prosperity consciousness. All you really need is the desire and the motivation to make changes. This simple little book can show you how to do that, in terms you can understand. Download it now!
©2016 HowExpert (P)2016 HowExpert