The “Mental Illness Recovery Series” book has 100 inspirational stories that explores the exhausting, but noble journey of recovery.
📍🌍🌏🌎 Where to buy it 😊 = http://awakesociety.com/mental-illness-recovery-book/ 📍🌎🌏🌍
Mental disorders found in the book:
🔻Depressive disorders
🧠Anxiety disorders
🔺Bipolar & related disorders
🧠OCD & related disorders
🔻Eating disorders
🧠Schizophrenia spectrum & psychotic disorders
🔺Conduct disorders
🧠Dissociative disorders
🔻Neurodevelopmental disorders
🧠Personality disorders
Sperm fertilizing an egg.
The wave does not need to die to become water. She is already water.
Thích Nhất Hạnh (via purplebuddhaproject)
@positiveseed
Our Youtube
London is testing out self-driving shuttles.
by Alvéole
1. See each day as a fresh start and a new beginning.
2. Don’t be a copy of anybody else – enjoy discovering and being your true self.
3. Be proactive, take control and look for opportunities. You’ve only got one life so make sure you stay in control.
4. Don’t focus on the obstacles or things you cannot change. Just ask yourself “What next? or else “What can I do instead?”
5. Appreciate your limits and then set clear boundaries. You need to care for yourself to be the best “you” you can be.
6. Decide on your values and what matters most to you. Then live in a way that’s consistent with those values.
7. Don’t put life on hold as the months turn into years … and there’s always the chance that some important doors will close.
8. Set goals for yourself – then plan the steps to take you there.
9. Learn from other people that you value as role models – but ignore the naysayers and the hypercritical.
10. Let go of the past, and old hurts and grievances. Don’t be afraid to ask for help, or to see a counsellor.
Curiano Quotes Life - #LifeQuote, Love Quotes, Life #Quotes, Live #Life #Quote, and Letting Go Quotes. Visit this blog now Curiano.com
Life is a journey, not a competition
@ fanfic writers who feel pressured to write things they’re not comfortable with: rule #1 of writing: YOU DO YOU FAM. DON’T LET PEOPLE PRESSURE YOU. DON’T. IT TAKES AWAY THE JOY OF WRITING. YOU WRITE WHAT YOU LOVE, AND WHAT YOU FEEL COMFORTABLE WRITING. OKAY?
1) Mechanism of a pocket watch
2) Clock faces
3) Diagrams for the setting-out of a sundial
4) Clock with chimes
5) Bi-metallic pendulums, constructed to resist changes in length, and therefore period, due to temperature variations
6) Construction of clepsydrae or water clocks
7) Construction of sextant (?) dial
8) Compensation balances, and escapements
9) Mechanism of a timekeeper
10) Clock work.
Engravings (1809-1810) with watercolour by John Pass (active 1797-1815). Published by J. Wilkes.
Images and text information courtesy Wellcome Collection.