GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch | |
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Isis7 (OP) User ID: 25804806 United States 07/09/2014 01:07 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch She: A Celebration of Greatness in Every Woman By Mary Anne Radmacher & Liz Kalloch Foreword by Jane Kirkpatrick ISBN: 978-1-936740-72-7 Trade Cloth, $18.95 7” x 9”, 144 pages Publishing on International Women’s Day, March 8, 2014 |
Isis7 (OP) User ID: 25804806 United States 07/09/2014 01:09 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch "This boldly unique book champions powerful women and affirms the inherent power within every woman. Part cheerleading, part mentoring, the authors augment their own wisdom with guidance from an all-star lineup of noteworthy women, including Emily Bronté. Hillary Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, Eleanor Roosevelt, Maya Angelou, Katherine Hepburn, and Rachel Carson. There are reveries on the characteristics of strong women (purposeful risk taker, intrepid traveler, nurturing, willing) and letters addressed to each of those aspects within the reader. All of it is encased within beautiful illustrations which make each page a stand-alone work of art." —Anna Jedrziewski, for Retailing Insight |
Isis7 (OP) User ID: 25804806 United States 07/09/2014 01:12 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch "SHE fills the spirit with memories of women long past, washes our contemporary souls with the infusion of strong, beautiful women present, and melts frozen seas within us that we might sail with confidence into new vistas.” —Jane Kirkpatrick |
Isis7 (OP) User ID: 25804806 United States 07/09/2014 01:29 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch Recent News, Reviews, and Announcements How to silence your inner critic — PsychCentral recommends SHE When Someone Doubts Your Dreams Or Decisions (Including Yourself) By Margarita Tartakovsky, MS [link to blogs.psychcentral.com] Here’s a link from their recent Portland, OR segment on ABC’s affiliate: [link to www.katu.com] These fierce and feisty females (authors & quoted) offer their best advice for our life’ journey on the topics of: * Leadership, friendship, purpose, adventurousness, * Cooperation, collaboration, risk-taking, resourcefulness, * Creativity, blending the past to create in the present, the spiritual alignment of the artist in creation Biographies While she is based in Seattle, WA, Mary Anne Radmacher's words and art travel the world to homes, hospitals, offices and school rooms. People use her classic combination of phrase and image to celebrate and commemorate from birth to remembering eulogies...and all the significances in between. In addition to her own original web store at maryanneradmacher.net < [link to maryanneradmacher.net>] , her words are found on web sites, in commencement speeches, in trade and professional journals, in eulogies and on diverse commercial products. Mary Anne's work is licensed to such internationally recognized firms as Quotable Cards and Brush Dance. [link to www.maryanneradmacher.net] Liz Kalloch is a designer, illustrator, painter, teacher and writer who lives in San Rafael, CA. She has created beautiful work on such books as Coleman Barks’ The Enlightened Rumi: An Illustrated Journal and on Thich Nhat Hahn Calendar. Her design work includes product design, package design, book design, cd packages and identity, and has included clients such as: Red Wheel/Weiser Press, Brush Dance, The Daniel Pearl Foundation • Parallax Press, Twentieth Century Fox, Walt Disney Productions, Warner Brothers, Chronicle Books, Institute of Noetic Sciences, and Brush Dance. [link to lizkallochdesigns.com] Samples for both Liz and Mary Anne’s creations are just a click away: [link to www.brushdance.com] [link to www.brushdance.com] |
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Phennommennonn Forum Administrator 07/09/2014 09:12 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch Thread: Arizona Town Meeting EPA And Governor Talk About Chemtrails!!! - People Are Dying!!!!! political correctness is a doctrine.... fostered by a delusional, illogical minority...... and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media; which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end. |
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Isis7 (OP) User ID: 25804806 United States 07/09/2014 10:48 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Re: GLPVC's TheRawFeedLive | Wednesday Night Trifecta | 3 hours 3 shows @ 7 -10 pm ET |Mary Anne Radmacher and Liz Kalloch why have you taken the name ISIL the goddess of the dead and the underworld.. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 59944529 that is pretty fucking spooky. This article is about the ancient Egyptian goddess. For the militant group, see Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. For other uses, see Isis (disambiguation). These are not one and the same! Get that through your head! [link to en.wikipedia.org] Isis (Ancient Greek: original Egyptian pronunciation more likely "Aset" or "Iset") is a goddess in Ancient Egyptian religious beliefs, whose worship spread throughout the Greco-Roman world. She was worshipped as the ideal mother and wife as well as the patroness of nature and magic. She was the friend of slaves, sinners, artisans and the downtrodden, but she also listened to the prayers of the wealthy, maidens, aristocrats and rulers.[1] Isis is often depicted as the mother of Horus, the hawk-headed god of war and protection (although in some traditions Horus's mother was Hathor). Isis is also known as protector of the dead and goddess of children. The name Isis means "Throne".[2] Her headdress is a throne. As the personification of the throne, she was an important representation of the pharaoh's power. The pharaoh was depicted as her child, who sat on the throne she provided. Her cult was popular throughout Egypt, but her most important temples were at Behbeit El-Hagar in the Nile delta, and, beginning in the reign with Nectanebo I (380–362 BCE), on the island of Philae in Upper Egypt. In the typical form of her myth, Isis was the first daughter of Geb, god of the Earth, and Nut, goddess of the Sky, and she was born on the fourth intercalary day. She married her brother, Osiris, and she conceived Horus with him. Isis was instrumental in the resurrection of Osiris when he was murdered by Set. Using her magical skills, she restored his body to life after having gathered the body parts that had been strewn about the earth by Set.[3] This myth became very important during the Greco-Roman period. For example it was believed that the Nile River flooded every year because of the tears of sorrow which Isis wept for Osiris. Osiris's death and rebirth was relived each year through rituals. The worship of Isis eventually spread throughout the Greco-Roman world, continuing until the suppression of paganism in the Christian era.[4] The popular motif of Isis suckling her son Horus, however, lived on in a Christianized context as the popular image of Mary suckling the infant son Jesus from the fifth century onward.[5] |