Begleiten Sie uns auf eine literarische Weltreise!
Buch zum Bücherregal hinzufügen
Grey
Einen neuen Kommentar schreiben Default profile 50px
Grey
Jetzt das ganze Buch im Abo oder die ersten Seiten gratis lesen!
All characters reduced
Stumbling Forward - A Messy Guide to Growing Up Without Having It All Figured Out - cover

Stumbling Forward - A Messy Guide to Growing Up Without Having It All Figured Out

Alex Kallis

Verlag: Publishdrive

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Beschreibung

Growing up isn’t a straight line. It’s tripping over your own feet, starting over more times than you want to admit, and trying to laugh about it before you cry in the shower. Stumbling Forward isn’t another polished “self-help” manual with color-coded steps. It’s more like late-night notes from a friend who’s still figuring things out too.Alex Kallis writes with the honesty of someone who’s crashed into enough walls to know where a few of them are hiding—and still walks face-first into new ones anyway. These pages are raw, messy, and sometimes contradictory, because that’s what real life feels like. You’ll find stories, confessions, awkward detours, and a few practical experiments you can actually try (instead of just underlining them and forgetting).This book is for anyone who feels behind, lost, or “not enough.” It’s for the nights when you can’t shut your brain off, for the mornings you want to quit, for the moments you wonder if everyone else secretly got the manual. Spoiler: there is no manual. But there are sparks—moments of connection, reminders you’re not broken, and a little bit of hope that the stumbling itself is the way forward.Whether you’re 18 or 38, Stumbling Forward is here to remind you that growth doesn’t mean becoming perfect. It means becoming yourself. Messy, complicated, unfinished—you.
Verfügbar seit: 22.08.2025.
Drucklänge: 85 Seiten.

Weitere Bücher, die Sie mögen werden

  • New Moons For Sam - Becoming Kiwi - Life of a New Zealand Diplomat - cover

    New Moons For Sam - Becoming...

    Peter Hamilton

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A personal, intimate, memoir spanning 70 years, in three parts, describing my childhood in the UK and New Zealand, my 35 years as a New Zealand diplomat, and the hundreds of amazing individuals I met on the way, from farming folk to Kings, Queens and Presidents. Part One is the story of an English boy growing up on a farm in rural Devon and Somerset in an extended family, and then, aged 9, moving to rural New Zealand. It covers my school years, my year as a volunteer teacher, aged 17, at an all boys school, in the South Pacific Kingdom of Tonga and my year as a university student in a still divided Germany. Part Two describes my career as a junior, then senior, New Zealand diplomat, and my postings in Fiji, Canada, Geneva, Samoa, Germany and Singapore, the last three as Ambassador. Part Three argues that New Zealand should become a republic in the Commonwealth, with its own Head of State. It describes, too, my liberating journey from Anglicanism to freedom from any religion. I have aimed to tell the memoir with a sense of humour, humility and (for the most part) optimism!
    Zum Buch
  • A Model Crime - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    A Model Crime - From their pens...

    William Pett Ridge

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    William Pett Ridge was born at Chartham, near Canterbury, Kent, on 22nd April 1859.  
    His family’s resources were certainly limited. His father was a railway porter, and the young Pett Ridge, after schooling in Marden, Kent became a clerk in a railway clearing-house. The hours were long and arduous, but self-improvement was Pett Ridge’s goal.  After working from nine until seven o’clock he would attend evening classes at Birkbeck Literary and Scientific Institute and then to follow his passion; the ambition to write.  He was heavily influenced by Dickens and several critics thought he had the capability to be his successor.  
    From 1891 many of his humourous sketches were published in the St James's Gazette, the Idler, Windsor Magazine and other literary periodicals of the day. 
    Pett Ridge published his first novel in 1895, A Clever Wife. By the advent of his fifth novel, Mord Em'ly, a mere three years later in 1898, his success was obvious.  His writing was written from the perspective of those born with no privilege and relied on his great talent to find humour and sympathy in his portrayal of working class life. 
    Today Pett Ridge and other East End novelists including Arthur Nevinson, Arthur Morrison and Edwin Pugh are being grouped together as the Cockney Novelists.   
    In 1924, Pugh set out his recollections of Pett Ridge from the 1890s: “I see him most clearly, as he was in those days, through a blue haze of tobacco smoke. We used sometimes to travel together from Waterloo to Worcester Park on our way to spend a Saturday afternoon and evening with H. G. Wells. Pett Ridge does not know it, but it was through watching him fill his pipe, as he sat opposite me in a stuffy little railway compartment, that I completed my own education as a smoker... Pett Ridge had a small, dark, rather spiky moustache in those days, and thick, dark, sleek hair which is perhaps not quite so thick or dark, though hardly less sleek nowadays than it was then”. 
    With his success, on the back of his prolific output and commercial success, Pett Ridge gave generously of both time and money to charity. In 1907 he founded the Babies Home at Hoxton.  This was one of several organisations that he supported that had the welfare of children as their mission.  
    His circle considered Pett Ridge to be one of life's natural bachelors. In 1909 they were rather surprised therefore when he married Olga Hentschel.  
    As the 1920’s arrived Pett Ridge added to his popularity with the movies. Four of his books were adapted into films.  
    Pett Ridge now found the peak of his fame had passed. Although he still managed to produce a book a year he was falling out of fashion and favour with the reading public and his popularity declined rapidly.  His canon runs to over sixty novels and short-story collections as well as many pieces for magazines and periodicals. 
    William Pett Ridge died, on 29th September 1930, at his home, Ampthill, Willow Grove, Chislehurst, at the age of 71. 
    He was cremated at West Norwood on 2nd October 1930.
    Zum Buch
  • Charles Manson - The Man Who Murdered the Sixties - cover

    Charles Manson - The Man Who...

    David J. Krajicek

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Charles Manson was an unlikely messiah. Freshly paroled, he stumbled into San Francisco in 1967 just as thousands of impressionable young people were streaming into town for the Summer of Love. 
     
    Posing as a musician-come-guru-come-Christ-figure, Manson built a commune cult of hippies, consisting mainly of troubled young women. But what made this group set out on the four-week killing spree that claimed seven lives? Former Journalism Professor, David J Krajicek, seeks to discover just that. 
     
    This book includes: 
     
    Introduction into the counterculture of the sixtiesIn-depth profiles of Manson's followersBreakdowns of each murder, including diary accounts, interviews and legal testimonies from the killers themselvesAn account of the events in Manson's own wordsInsight into Manson's manipulations and psychology 
     
    Set against events of the time - the sexual revolution, the civil rights movement, race riots, space exploration, rock music -this is the story of Flower Power gone to seed.
    Zum Buch
  • Chicago Days Hoboken Nights - cover

    Chicago Days Hoboken Nights

    Daniel Pinkwater

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    As millions of radio listeners already know, no one has had a life quite like storyteller Daniel Pinkwater. In this comical collection of memories, Pinkwater tells of how he grew into the beloved figure he is today: a robust genius of the printed page and rotund genie of the radio. He shares a conversation with his father about art school that changed the course of his career, describes his inauguration as a sculptor in a sleazy Chicago art factory, and recounts setting off for a bright center of the American art scene— or at least as close as Hoboken, New Jersey. Finally, we hear as Pinkwater pictures his first true audience, children. Chicago Days / Hoboken Nights is a memoir about how a visual artist turned to writing, only to be hailed as a "comic master" by the Washington Post Book World.
    Zum Buch
  • What Autism Gave Me - A Devastating Diagnosis to a Triumphant Life - cover

    What Autism Gave Me - A...

    Michael Haigwood Goodroe

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    An Unexpected Story of Hope & Perserverance:  As a young child, something was wrong with Michael.   He lacked basic motor skills and was unable to follow simple instructions or answer questions.  Testing revealed a diagnosis of autism with a low IQ.  Experts insisted that leading an independent life would be impossible for him...and school was not an option.   Supported by documentation and interviews, Michael's heartfelt memoir traces the sustained challenges and turbulent journey he faced.  His life was plagued by failures, negative results, rejections from schools, and inability to complete simple karate moves or participate in activities --all which confirmed the hopeless situation.  But Michael was surrounded by support, and he was encouraged to keep trying no matter how many times he failed.  Developmental progress was not always obvious, but Michael was finding his own unique path.  What Autism Gave Me is a powerful reminder that the human drive to succeed is stronger than any diagnosis.
    Zum Buch
  • Labour Takes Power - The Denis MacShane Diaries 1997–2001 - cover

    Labour Takes Power - The Denis...

    Denis Mac Shane

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    With the strong possibility of Labour forming our next government, it is fascinating to consider the last time the party stood on the verge of power, back in 1997. At that time, future Europe Minister Denis MacShane had a ringside seat that he would occupy for the next decade or so, living through Cool Britannia, the Good Friday Agreement, Peter Mandelson's multiple resignations, Princess Diana's death and Tony Blair's seeming invincibility.
    New Labour may be remembered as an unstoppable force, but MacShane's diaries reveal that while, outwardly, all seemed to be going well, the personal rivalries, slights and petty jealousies between the party's big beasts meant that it was never far from disaster.
    MacShane was a regular in Downing Street from the moment of Labour's election victory, and his candid, intimate diaries show figures such as Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Robin Cook, Peter Mandelson, Clare Short and Alastair Campbell in a light in which they've never been seen before, detailing the personalities as much as the politics of Labour's most successful stint in government.
    Zum Buch