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“For instance, if you want to get more steps, start with a five-minute walk around the block every day. Be consistent with that for a week, then make it a 10-minute walk the next week, and so on.”
With a few genius products, you can transform your "sweaty mess" look into your "ready for anything" look. Check out the 8 products that'll have you looking flawless, even without showering after ...
wanted to stay in the business world. We were happy together and having a good time, but we were broke most of the time, allowing ourselves one monthly treat of dinner out at a local restaurant. But looking back it’s easy to see that New Year’s day in 1981 was really a turning point for us.
How to Live on Twenty-four Hours a Day is a short self-help book "about the daily organization of time" [1] by novelist Arnold Bennett.Written originally as a series of articles in the London Evening News in 1907, it was published in book form in 1908.
See yourself as a child: “If you look at yourself as a child, there’s nothing you can’t do … babies, there were times they couldn’t walk. As adults, we’re like, ‘oh, I can’t do this.
Every Day is about the story of A, a genderless person who wakes up occupying a different body each day of a sixteen-year-old living in the East Coast. As described by Frank Bruni of The New York Times, "A. doesn't have a real name, presumably because they don't have a real existence: they're not a person, at least not in any conventional sense, but they have a spirit, switching without choice ...
Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire in Everyday Life is a non-fiction book written by Luke Burgis and published by St. Martin's Press. The book was prompted by Burgis's experience losing a deal in 2008 to sell his company. According to the book, the episode brought on an existential crisis that led Burgis to René Girard and his mimetic theory ...
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM