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When Dylan attempts to mortgage his house to fund the expansion of the Peach Pit After Dark, Jim is notified alerting the Walshes to Dylan's financial troubles, which Valerie confirms. Donna's attempt to date both Gryphon and Ray comes to a pumpkin smashing conclusion while David is handcuffed to Clare's bed awaiting a locksmith. Kelly struggles with Jackie's return to modeling and is even more upset when she learns Erin is involved. Finally Valerie and Dylan get caught in the act.
Today’s Episode with Dylan Kersh:Dylan Kersh started out as an english and history teacher before he became a psychotherapist. He now works as a psychotherapist with adolescents and teenagers, as well as a therapist-tutor where he is able to use academics as an entry point into getting to know his clients.When Dylan was working at a charter school in Maui, he was teaching, coaching the JV basketball team, and running a few clubs. He was working this job as a teacher so that he could do the other stuff (JV basketball coach, club organizer) for free. He was not passionate about English and History, but was passionate about working with young people. He realized that what he truly enjoys is mentoring and guiding kids to follow their own dreams. This is where he switched career paths and started doing what he truly loves.After working through and recovering from his own past traumas, Dylan started taking steps in believing in himself, dreaming big, and taking creative risks to start his own private practice. When Dylan was in school to become a therapist, he began tutoring math as a way to make money. He made business cards, one job led to the next, and he was able to support himself through tutoring gigs.In terms of getting new clients, Dylan recommends to first have the mindset that you can do this, get your face and name out there, invest heavily in a professional website with testimonials, make business cards, and trust the process.Getting yourself out there means connecting with as many people as possible, meeting with experts, and finding and connecting with the people in your area who have influence and could make a difference in your career.There are meetings that won’t work out and meetings where you really click with that person. When you have successful meetings where you really click, it is important to ask “do you have any other colleagues that you think I should reach out to?” or “who else should I get in touch with?”.Resources that were most helpful to Dylan when he started to create his own reality and business include being a client for someone that you hope to be one day so that you understand the perspective of the client. This helps develop who you want to be for your client when you are in that role of the expert. Being in therapy was also another resource that was helpful for Dylan as well as the basic self care elements of physical exercise, sleep, and healthy living. True connections with clients are extremely important and that connection can only be possible if you take time to focus on self-care so that you are in the right shape to connect on a deeper level with your client. Another important aspect is being honest with yourself about what you need and how much work you can handle. The majority of Dylan’s job is working with people who are privileged. So, it has been important for Dylan to carve out time in his schedule to volunteer, provide support, and work in the world of the underserved and communities that are not as privileged. If you have a vision, you can always make it a reality. Dylan especially values never taking what you have for granted and not getting too wrapped up in the success.Enjoy the show? Leave us a rating and review:https://ratethispodcast.com/earnmoretutoringHelp our podcast grow! Become a patron here for perks and benefits: https://www.patreon.com/earnmoretutoringIs there something you would like to see on this podcast that you’re not seeing? Send us an email at info@earnmoretutoring.com
1:00 Intros 4:00 Entrepreneurial Spirit 8:00 Socially Distant Halloween Rager 9:00 Halloween Costumes 12:00 Movie Theaters 15:00 Stock Market 24:30 RIP Quibi (2020-2020) 27:00 Social Media 34:00 The Waffle House Challenge 41:30 When Dylan won $2K on Horse Racing 48:00 The guys make fun of Dylan for censoring himself 49:30 Fantasy Football 55:30 Dylan's Outdoor Wedding Story 1:05:00 Leftovers 1:07:00 Cartoon Artist tries ripping us off
After watching friends succumb to poor health and cut down in the prime of their life. Dave Skattum knew he had to make some major changes in his life to see his dreams come true. After 10 years of grueling work, not only did he make some miraculous transformations, he also found his passion in life; To Help Men Take Steps Towards Good Health. This show promises to be a place that will encourage you to take steps towards good health. We do three things; 1. Provide cutting edge teaching on men’s health topics, 2. Interviews with men who have done it and 3. Interviews with major influencers and pros in the men’s health arena. All focused around helping men move closer to good health.In this show Dylan and I talked about:Training for an IronmanA tragedy that changed his lifeHeroes who start at the bottom and work hard on their passion About Dylan Gillespie:Dylan Gillespie, 27yrs old, resides in Bozeman, Montana. Dylan is a professional triathlete, firefighter, and husband. When Dylan isn’t traveling the world competing in triathlon, training for events, or working at the fire department – you can find him at a coffee shop or baking sourdough bread. Dylan loves serving his community and meeting new people along the way. About Dave Skattum:Dave Skattum is a family man, a health guru and an inspirational speaker. In his late 40s, some life-changing experiences created a starting gate for him to make drastic changes to improve his health. Since then he has taken off 70 pounds, participates in Triathlons and Ultra Trail running, and has weaned himself off junk food. He enjoys nutritious foods, has become accurate in his thinking, and has taken his spiritual life to a new level.When speaking to an audience about his experience in getting healthy, he brings excitement and hope. Dave is a Certified Nutritarian, a CPT, distinguished Toastmaster and a Certified Instructor with the Napoleon Hill Foundation. To get in touch with Dave, join the online forum and to order his book visit http://www.the4pillarsofmenshealth.com The 4 Pillars of Men’s Healthhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/the-4-pillars-of-mens-health/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/dave-skattum-founder-of-the-4-pillars-of-mens-health-interview-with-dylan-gillespie-about-heroes-who-start-at-the-bottom
After watching friends succumb to poor health and cut down in the prime of their life. Dave Skattum knew he had to make some major changes in his life to see his dreams come true. After 10 years of grueling work, not only did he make some miraculous transformations, he also found his passion in life; To Help Men Take Steps Towards Good Health. This show promises to be a place that will encourage you to take steps towards good health. We do three things; 1. Provide cutting edge teaching on men’s health topics, 2. Interviews with men who have done it and 3. Interviews with major influencers and pros in the men’s health arena. All focused around helping men move closer to good health.In this show Dylan and I talked about:Training for an IronmanA tragedy that changed his lifeHeroes who start at the bottom and work hard on their passion About Dylan Gillespie:Dylan Gillespie, 27yrs old, resides in Bozeman, Montana. Dylan is a professional triathlete, firefighter, and husband. When Dylan isn’t traveling the world competing in triathlon, training for events, or working at the fire department – you can find him at a coffee shop or baking sourdough bread. Dylan loves serving his community and meeting new people along the way. About Dave Skattum:Dave Skattum is a family man, a health guru and an inspirational speaker. In his late 40s, some life-changing experiences created a starting gate for him to make drastic changes to improve his health. Since then he has taken off 70 pounds, participates in Triathlons and Ultra Trail running, and has weaned himself off junk food. He enjoys nutritious foods, has become accurate in his thinking, and has taken his spiritual life to a new level.When speaking to an audience about his experience in getting healthy, he brings excitement and hope. Dave is a Certified Nutritarian, a CPT, distinguished Toastmaster and a Certified Instructor with the Napoleon Hill Foundation. To get in touch with Dave, join the online forum and to order his book visit http://www.the4pillarsofmenshealth.com The 4 Pillars of Men’s Healthhttps://businessinnovatorsradio.com/the-4-pillars-of-mens-health/Source: https://businessinnovatorsradio.com/dave-skattum-founder-of-the-4-pillars-of-mens-health-interview-with-dylan-gillespie-about-heroes-who-start-at-the-bottom
Are you ready to move toward your highest evolution? If so, you'll want to hear this episode with guest Dylan Lyon. Dylan is a coach that works with radical consciousness and heart-based intuitive guidance to help people find their true self and live the life they're meant to live. In this episode, Dylan and I talk about his journey of choosing his own path in life. He talks about the divide between the wildness and the civilized world. He shares all about the work he does with meditation and psychedelics including how this can help you to explore your inner world. About Dylan Lyon: Dylan Lyon offers a rare blend of deep coaching, radical consciousness work and heart-based intuitive guidance in order to uplevel every area of your life and to help you get to the very core of what's held you back from embodying your most authentic self and living the life you were born to live. He brings forth insights cultivated over the course of 9 years of dedicated inner and outer journeying. His travels around the world created unique opportunities to study alongside some of the top doctors, healers and coaches on the planet. Dylan's gift to serve you comes from a deep well of experiential wisdom. He has the ability to go to places that others simply cannot or will not go and he does so with fierce courage, compassion and love. Connect with Dylan: Website - www.dylanlyon.com Course (Exploring Consciousness) - www.dylanlyon.com/exploringconcsiousness What You'll Hear: 3:15 Dylan's life story and how he lives his life 4:22 The unspoken agreement that people live in where they're forced to lie to themselves 5:45 When Dylan made the decision to walk out of society 8:52 What happens when you step into the unknown and walk away from society 13:28 Choosing his own path and his own life 16:09 The divide between the civilized world and the wildness 16:38 Dylan's take on society and the Coronavirus 20:57 How the collective should work through this pandemic 25:11 His advice for someone who wants to move toward their highest evolution 26:50 How that voice on the inside of you shows up whether you listen to it or not 28:31 The work Dylan does with psychedelics 34:17 How Dylan works with clients and how his course helps people shift their awareness 37:58 Learning how to navigate and explore your inner world 40:25 Why you can't trust the system 43:20 What inspired Dylan to put his course together 49:49 How cultivating a relationship with the psychedelic helps you cultivate a relationship with yourself 51:34 Why surrender is the first step to using the medicine 52:35 What working with mushrooms can produce 55:13 How psychedelics gives you access to who you really are If you look at the civilized work and think, “no thank you,” then you should subscribe to our podcast so you don't miss a single episode! Also, join the uncivilized community and connect with me on my website, Facebook or Instagram so you can join in on our live recordings, ask questions to guests and more.
When Dylan and Ryan first met, they had the most magnificent manager from Mexico two morons could have ever hoped for: Sam. From margaritas to mixologists, managers, and making American great again, Sam’s experience in this industry is nothing short of marvelous. Wait for your hosts Ryan and Dylan to seat you because the special … Continue reading Episode 5: Taco Tuesday
https://bryanaiello.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/52-MIrage-Side-Character-Fiction-W-Dylan-Moonfire-Mixdown-1.mp3 On episode 52 of Mirage, Dylan Moonfire is back to talk Side Character Fiction *** Dylan is a writer of mostly fiction, including stories and novels. Some of which have actually resulted in published novels. When Dylan writes its to know more than the story on the page, he easily loses himself in world-building and exploration. website: https://d.moonfire.us/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/dmoonfire *** Subscribe to my YouTube Channel for updates on my other show Origin: Stories on Creativity. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbSnMk6QPiULXmKDYmwCmIg Subscribe on Stitcher https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/bryan-aiello/mirage-speculating-on-speculative-fiction-author-and-other-topics?refid=stpr Subscribe on Itunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/mirage-bryan-aiello/id1261093328?mt=2 On Google Play https://play.google.com/music/listen#/ps/Iywh2sype4wvtcuq4ose2fuxhqq *** Music on the episode courtesy of: Anjulie That fat rat: fly away https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMg8KaMdDYo *** Follow me on twitter @bryaiello for updates on this channel and my podcast and my writing projects. My website is: http://www.bryanaiello.com Email questions and comments to: me@byranaiello.com Support the show on my poorly managed patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/BryanAiello
As the Beverly Beat's mandate strays further and further from journalism, it seems Steve has stumbled upon a lucrative revenue stream: The Love Fisher, a computer program that matches singles with ruthless efficiency. First Janet gets curious about how much better the Love Fisher is at picking dudes for her than she is at picking them for herself; then it's Steve's turn to find out what kind of lady the computer thinks he should be with. Will Janet decide she's settled for a good enough guy, and will Steve cling to her for dear life? Noah has apparently transitioned into defending his dead father's reputation on a full-time basis, and is still being very snitty about it to Matt. Then Matt produces a fat environmental impact report which, when Noah reads it (lol, sure he does), convinces him that his father was a big scumbag after all. Speaking of scumbags: Donna is growing ever less certain that shacking up with Noah is the right move, so it's probably just as well that he has the lawsuit to occupy his attention. In the wake of his breakup with Gina, Dylan decides to take off for Vegas with David, who is soon disgusted by Dylan's willingness not to have a one-night stand with Mary but to lie to her about how serious a relationship the two of them might potentially have. Mary then clings, which David encourages, leading to an awkward moment on Dylan's doorstep when both his brunettes show up at the same time. Gina's got her own problems, which begin with a lost filling and continue through Mel's correct diagnosis of her bulimia. When Dylan can't convince Gina to give him a fifteenth chance, he calls Kelly with a threat to start using again, summoning her to a bad neighbourhood and into the path of a predator. We discuss it all (with trigger warnings, because: yikes) in our podcast on "Dog's Best Friend."SUPPORT AWT WITH A PERSONAL MESSAGEWish your friend a happy birthday or just call them a squeef with a AWT Personal Message. It's $50 and helps keep us going. Start on our ad page now!READING THIS IN A PODCAST APP?Visual Aids and other show notes for this episode can be viewed on this episode's page on AgainWithThis90210.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
MJS 033: Dylan Schiemann Today's episode is a My JavaScript Story with Dylan Schiemann. Dylan talked about his contributions to the JavaScript community to what JavaScript is back in 2004. Listen to learn more about Dylan! [01:10] – Introduction to Dylan Schiemann Dylan was on episode 62 of JavaScript Jabber, which was about 4 years ago. We had him on to talk about the Dojo Toolkit. [02:00] – How did you get into programming? When Dylan was 7 or 8 years old, he and his father took basic programming class together. In Junior high, probably mid-1980’s, he received his first Commodore 64 computer. He picked up the Programmer’s Reference Guide, toppled on Assembly, and tried to write data to a tape drive. It got updated to a floppy drive. And then in high school, he took some Pascal classes. He learned the basics - ranging from BASIC, Pascal, and to Assembly. [03:00] – How did you get into JavaScript? As an undergraduate, Dylan studied Chemistry and Mathematics. He did some basic HTML and discovered the web roughly when he was a junior year in college. And then, he went to graduate school and studied Physical Chemistry at UCLA. He was studying the topology and reality of quasi-two-dimensional phone. If you imagine a bunch of beer bubbles at the top of a glass, and you spin it around really quickly, you watch how the bubbles rearrange as force is applied to it. He wanted to put his experiments on the web so he started learning this new language that had just been invented called JavaScript. So, he dropped out of graduate school a few years later. Eight years after that point in time, it was possible to show his experiments with Dojo and SVG. [04:25] – How did you get into Dojo and the other technologies? SitePen Right after grad school, Dylan helped start a company called SitePen. That let him really learn how JavaScript works. He started doing some consulting work. And he started working with Alex Russell, who had a project called netWindows at the time, which is a predecessor to any JavaScript framework that most people have worked with. Dojo Dylan got together and decided to create a next generation version of the HTML toolkit, which ended up becoming Dojo back in 2004. Things that they created back then are now part of the language - asynchronous patterns such as Promises, or even modules, widgets, which led to the web components pack. Over the years, they’ve built on that and done various utilities for testing and optimizing applications. [06:20] – Ideas that stood the test of time A lot of the things that Dylan and his team did in Dojo were on the right path but first versions ended up iterating before they’ve met their way into the language. Other things are timing. They were there very early and but to tell people in 2005 and 2006 that you need to architect the front-end application met some confusion of why you would want to do that. According to him, they never created Dojo to say that they want to create the world’s leading framework. [07:45] – JavaScript Dylan no longer answers the question of, “Oh, JavaScript, you mean, Java?” The expectations of 2004 were the hope of making something that might work in a browser. The expectation today is we are competing against every platform and trying to create the best possible software in the world, and do it in a way that’s distributable everywhere in the browser. The capabilities have grown. There are audio, video and real-time capabilities. They were ways to do those things but they were brutal and fragile. And now, we have real engineering solutions to many of those things but there are still going to be ways to do this. There were few people who are interested in this and maybe this wasn’t even their day job. But now, literally hundreds and thousands of engineers who write code in JavaScript every day. Picks Dylan Schiemann JavaScript user groups JavaScript conferences SeattleJS Phoenix TypeScript Meet-up London HalfStack Charles Max Wood Focuster BusyCal Asana Trello
MJS 033: Dylan Schiemann Today's episode is a My JavaScript Story with Dylan Schiemann. Dylan talked about his contributions to the JavaScript community to what JavaScript is back in 2004. Listen to learn more about Dylan! [01:10] – Introduction to Dylan Schiemann Dylan was on episode 62 of JavaScript Jabber, which was about 4 years ago. We had him on to talk about the Dojo Toolkit. [02:00] – How did you get into programming? When Dylan was 7 or 8 years old, he and his father took basic programming class together. In Junior high, probably mid-1980’s, he received his first Commodore 64 computer. He picked up the Programmer’s Reference Guide, toppled on Assembly, and tried to write data to a tape drive. It got updated to a floppy drive. And then in high school, he took some Pascal classes. He learned the basics - ranging from BASIC, Pascal, and to Assembly. [03:00] – How did you get into JavaScript? As an undergraduate, Dylan studied Chemistry and Mathematics. He did some basic HTML and discovered the web roughly when he was a junior year in college. And then, he went to graduate school and studied Physical Chemistry at UCLA. He was studying the topology and reality of quasi-two-dimensional phone. If you imagine a bunch of beer bubbles at the top of a glass, and you spin it around really quickly, you watch how the bubbles rearrange as force is applied to it. He wanted to put his experiments on the web so he started learning this new language that had just been invented called JavaScript. So, he dropped out of graduate school a few years later. Eight years after that point in time, it was possible to show his experiments with Dojo and SVG. [04:25] – How did you get into Dojo and the other technologies? SitePen Right after grad school, Dylan helped start a company called SitePen. That let him really learn how JavaScript works. He started doing some consulting work. And he started working with Alex Russell, who had a project called netWindows at the time, which is a predecessor to any JavaScript framework that most people have worked with. Dojo Dylan got together and decided to create a next generation version of the HTML toolkit, which ended up becoming Dojo back in 2004. Things that they created back then are now part of the language - asynchronous patterns such as Promises, or even modules, widgets, which led to the web components pack. Over the years, they’ve built on that and done various utilities for testing and optimizing applications. [06:20] – Ideas that stood the test of time A lot of the things that Dylan and his team did in Dojo were on the right path but first versions ended up iterating before they’ve met their way into the language. Other things are timing. They were there very early and but to tell people in 2005 and 2006 that you need to architect the front-end application met some confusion of why you would want to do that. According to him, they never created Dojo to say that they want to create the world’s leading framework. [07:45] – JavaScript Dylan no longer answers the question of, “Oh, JavaScript, you mean, Java?” The expectations of 2004 were the hope of making something that might work in a browser. The expectation today is we are competing against every platform and trying to create the best possible software in the world, and do it in a way that’s distributable everywhere in the browser. The capabilities have grown. There are audio, video and real-time capabilities. They were ways to do those things but they were brutal and fragile. And now, we have real engineering solutions to many of those things but there are still going to be ways to do this. There were few people who are interested in this and maybe this wasn’t even their day job. But now, literally hundreds and thousands of engineers who write code in JavaScript every day. Picks Dylan Schiemann JavaScript user groups JavaScript conferences SeattleJS Phoenix TypeScript Meet-up London HalfStack Charles Max Wood Focuster BusyCal Asana Trello
MJS 033: Dylan Schiemann Today's episode is a My JavaScript Story with Dylan Schiemann. Dylan talked about his contributions to the JavaScript community to what JavaScript is back in 2004. Listen to learn more about Dylan! [01:10] – Introduction to Dylan Schiemann Dylan was on episode 62 of JavaScript Jabber, which was about 4 years ago. We had him on to talk about the Dojo Toolkit. [02:00] – How did you get into programming? When Dylan was 7 or 8 years old, he and his father took basic programming class together. In Junior high, probably mid-1980’s, he received his first Commodore 64 computer. He picked up the Programmer’s Reference Guide, toppled on Assembly, and tried to write data to a tape drive. It got updated to a floppy drive. And then in high school, he took some Pascal classes. He learned the basics - ranging from BASIC, Pascal, and to Assembly. [03:00] – How did you get into JavaScript? As an undergraduate, Dylan studied Chemistry and Mathematics. He did some basic HTML and discovered the web roughly when he was a junior year in college. And then, he went to graduate school and studied Physical Chemistry at UCLA. He was studying the topology and reality of quasi-two-dimensional phone. If you imagine a bunch of beer bubbles at the top of a glass, and you spin it around really quickly, you watch how the bubbles rearrange as force is applied to it. He wanted to put his experiments on the web so he started learning this new language that had just been invented called JavaScript. So, he dropped out of graduate school a few years later. Eight years after that point in time, it was possible to show his experiments with Dojo and SVG. [04:25] – How did you get into Dojo and the other technologies? SitePen Right after grad school, Dylan helped start a company called SitePen. That let him really learn how JavaScript works. He started doing some consulting work. And he started working with Alex Russell, who had a project called netWindows at the time, which is a predecessor to any JavaScript framework that most people have worked with. Dojo Dylan got together and decided to create a next generation version of the HTML toolkit, which ended up becoming Dojo back in 2004. Things that they created back then are now part of the language - asynchronous patterns such as Promises, or even modules, widgets, which led to the web components pack. Over the years, they’ve built on that and done various utilities for testing and optimizing applications. [06:20] – Ideas that stood the test of time A lot of the things that Dylan and his team did in Dojo were on the right path but first versions ended up iterating before they’ve met their way into the language. Other things are timing. They were there very early and but to tell people in 2005 and 2006 that you need to architect the front-end application met some confusion of why you would want to do that. According to him, they never created Dojo to say that they want to create the world’s leading framework. [07:45] – JavaScript Dylan no longer answers the question of, “Oh, JavaScript, you mean, Java?” The expectations of 2004 were the hope of making something that might work in a browser. The expectation today is we are competing against every platform and trying to create the best possible software in the world, and do it in a way that’s distributable everywhere in the browser. The capabilities have grown. There are audio, video and real-time capabilities. They were ways to do those things but they were brutal and fragile. And now, we have real engineering solutions to many of those things but there are still going to be ways to do this. There were few people who are interested in this and maybe this wasn’t even their day job. But now, literally hundreds and thousands of engineers who write code in JavaScript every day. Picks Dylan Schiemann JavaScript user groups JavaScript conferences SeattleJS Phoenix TypeScript Meet-up London HalfStack Charles Max Wood Focuster BusyCal Asana Trello
KG MacGregor’s Recent Lesfic Reads In this episode, KG MacGregor joins Tara to talk about the lesfic that she’s been reading recently. Authors are readers too, so Tara was excited to hear about what KG’s been reading in between writing books. Learn more about KG MacGregor Website Facebook See our reviews and top 10 lists featuring KG MacGregor’s books Check out the books discussed here: Taken In by Erica Abbott CJ St. Clair left Savannah for Colorado years ago and never looked back. But a summons from a most unexpected source compels her to return to Georgia in the midst of a crisis. A murder accusation threatens to tear her family apart―unless CJ can unravel a case the police believe has already been solved. Her partner Alex has a struggle of her own, dealing with a tragedy from her past that might derail her career. As they cope with murder both recent and long ago, CJ and Alex discover how much claim the past has on their future. Get it on Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca Little Lies by Lila Bruce Getting shot was the last thing Lia Broderick expected to happen when she stopped by the bank on her way to work – that and having the gorgeous woman from the coffee shop down the street be the one to rescue her… FBI Special Agent Dylan McKenzie is a woman with a mission – locate Steven Horton, the witness who could single-handedly bring down the Giametta Crime Family. With Horton hiding from both the mob and the FBI, Dylan and her team are assigned the task of keeping tabs on Horton’s ex-wife after mounting evidence leads them to believe he will run to her. Keeping Lia Broderick under surveillance should have been just another day on the job for Dylan. But, when Lia becomes the victim in a bank robbery gone terribly wrong, Dylan has no choice but to break cover in order to step in and save her. Despite her best efforts to maintain a professional distance from the attractive accountant, Dylan finds herself being reeled deeper and deeper into Lia’s life. As the investigation heats up—both under the covers and out—it becomes clear that Lia is the key to finding the evidence that the mob is willing to kill to get their hands on. When Dylan is betrayed by a rogue agent, she suddenly finds herself on the run with Lia, uncertain who she can trust. And as the mob closes in, Dylan realizes that the greatest risk is the one she’s taking with her heart. Get it on Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca Take Only Pictures by Laina Villeneuve Kristine Owens is back in the saddle to deal with unfinished business from her last summer guiding horseback tours in California’s High Sierras. A dalliance with an attractive blonde biologist would be a dangerous distraction. She must stay focused on the path that leads to her independence. A summer assignment in Mammoth Lakes becomes even more attractive when Gloria Fisher crosses paths with Kristine. Playful wit, tight jeans, cowgirl boots—the sparks are real. But can they burn brighter than her lifelong career goals? Get it on Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca More info Come talk to us about these books and any other lesfic you’ve been reading lately at our Facebook group, The Lesbian Review Book Club. You can see all of our reviews, top 10 lists and author profiles on TheLesbianReview.com and don’t forget to send your emails, questions and more to Tara@TheLesbianReview.com
It only takes a quick scan of the news to be buried in the madness of our world. This week, I’ve been hugging my kids a bit longer than usual as neighborhood friends lost their daughter in a horrible accident. Jackie was a GOOD kid determined to do GOOD things in the world. I remember her and I talking before she graduated about how she hoped to find a way to take her love of dance and turn it into a career. She mentioned perhaps doing dance therapy or traveling to underdeveloped countries and working with kids around the arts. I encouraged her to try and make it happen. That it wouldn’t be an easy road, but if she really wanted to do it, she could. When Dylan got home from work and I broke the news to him his shocked was response was simply, “but she was so nice…” The biggest lie humans have tried to push on the world is that everything happens for a reason. I’ve never believed it and when madness like this happens it just reaffirms that life is random and unknown. Hug those you love every, single day. Work hard every day to do what you want to do in this world. Tomorrow is not promised to any of us and it never seems to be the bad people who are taken from us too soon. Only the good… Sandy, Ron and Ryan our thoughts, prayers and love are with you during this time. Your words last night at the vigil were beautiful and strong. I took them to heart. Rest in Peace Jackie. noC.C. Chapmanmarketing,public,relations,management,pr,media,new,media,business,cgc,cons