Posts Tagged "L"


Edited by Victoria Maizes and Tieraona Low Dog  Women have made it clear that they desire a broader, integrative approach to their care. Here, for the first time, Integrative Women’s Health weaves together the best of conventional treatments with mind-body interventions, nutritional strategies, herbal therapies, dietary supplements, acupuncture, and manual medicine, providing clinicians with a roadmap for practicing...

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By Debra Laaser   Infidelity doesn’t have to ruin your life – or your marriage If you have been devastated by your husband’s sexual betrayal – whether an isolated incident or a long-term pattern of addiction – you need to know you don’t have to live as a victim. If you choose to stay in your marriage, you have options other than punishing, tolerating, or ignoring your spouse; in fact, extraordinary growth awaits a woman willing to...

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By Harriet Lerner In The Dance of Intimacy, the bestselling author of The Dance of Anger, outlines the steps to take so that good relationships can be strengthened and difficult ones can be healed. Taking a careful look at those relationships where intimacy is most challenged – by distance, intensity, or pain – she teaches us about the specific changes we can make to achieve a more solid sense of self and a more intimate connectedness...

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By Pam Havey Lau   Young women long for relational connection. Yet, without realizing it, more mature Christian women often distance themselves from women in their twenties and thirties because they use different language to talk about God or have different views on church and theology. In A Friend in Me, Pam Lau shows readers how to be a safe place for the younger women in their lives. She offers five patterns women need to...

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By Rita Nakashima Brock & Gabriella Lettini   The first book to explore the idea and effect of moral injury on veterans, their families, and their communities. Although veterans make up only seven percent of the U.S. population, they account for an alarming 20 percent of all suicides. And though treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder has undoubtedly alleviated suffering and allowed many service members returning from combat...

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