Rebecca Campbell is a bestselling author, oracle creator and devotional artist who leads activating workshops internationally, giving people an experience of their soul. Through all of Rebecca's creations she encourages people all over the world to spend more time with their soul and connect to their own Inner Temple. www.rebeccacampbell.me
Provoked: Dark Protectors #5 by @RebeccaZanetti #AudioBook @KarenWhiteReads @KensingtonBooks #KLover #Revisit http://wp.me/p3OmRo-5gr
Welcome to week four in the Countdown to #1 Summer Series here at CMB.
In Rebecca Solnit's A Field Guide to Getting Lost, we explore what it means to be lost, why we might do it, and how it contributes to our personal growth as humans. That's why this is a pick for the Soft Heart Book Club, an online leftist book club where we read books to inspire our exploration into how to be better humans. Getting lost doesn't come so easily to us as humans. We're often afraid of the unknown and would rather stay in the area we're already comfortable with. And with modern tools like Google Maps to keep us company, we're more able than ever to keep the unknown at bay. But if we never let ourselves get lost, will we ever learn what it means to be found? Part of the journey of being human is finding ourselves. So we must allow ourselves to realize how lost we are before we can even start the journey of finding. This can be getting lost in place (like putting down Google maps while in unfamiliar territory) or getting lost within ourselves (what is really happening in our interior?) Letting ourselves sit in the unknown is a practice, but one that we cannot grow without. We can reduce our anxiety, our worrying about the future, about other people, when we let ourselves get more comfortable with the unknown instead of made-up stories. Why would we rather sit in the discomfort of a worry than make peace with the unknown? Solnit's collection of essays asks us to make space for the strangeness and vastness of the world, both interior and exterior, so that we can make space for our fullest selves. Check it out here, and join the Soft Heart Book Club for more book recommendations and to commune with other soft hearted humans looking to explore what it means to be a caring human in the world.
Stricken mit Rebecca – Heft 66
Stricken mit Rebecca – Heft 46
When I first started this blog, I wrote my list of favorite picture books for young children [https://www.theartofsimple.net/twaddle-free-books-for-preschoolers-my-top-10-favorites/] because my oldest was three. But I blinked, and just like that, she’s now nine and a half. My, how time flies. I love age nine, but it’s totally pulled the rug out from under me—I feel like out of nowhere, my girl is on that cusp heading in to a (very) young adulthood, while still keeping a toe or three into littl