For Chicago Woman, The Way to Healing and Comfort is Through the Stomach
A minister carries out her mission to the aggrieved by sharing her mother’s recipes.
Every Christian receives a unique calling to serve in a ministry of their choice, and God provides him/her with the skill(s) or talent(s) to go on a mission. One Chicago minister received a calling to minister to people who deal with grief and loss, and this she does with food. Emma Talley Washington, who is also a teacher, penned The Secret to Healing and Finding Comfort: Recovering from Grief with Soul Food (food for the soul) as a gift to people who feel sorrowful and need a way to resolve their grief.
In this book, the author offers her late mother’s recipes, but with a disclaimer:
The book tears of a tiger is written by Sharon M. Draper and was published in 1994. The book tells the aftermath of 17 year old Andrew Jackson killing his best friend, Robert Washington, in a car crash after driving while impaired. The story heavily includes the turmoil that was caused from Rob’s death and the repercussions Andy faces after the accident.
So began a thrice-daily ritual on the raft, with pumpkin pie and spaghetti being the favorite subjects. The men came to know louise’s recipes so well that if louie skipped a step or forgot an ingredient, Phil, and sometimes Mac, would quickly correct him and make him start over.” Instead of just saying “they were starving” Hillenbrand instead talks about how they fantasized about Louie’s Mother's cooking. She uses detail of the cooking to develop how hungry they are and to show the lack of food they have. I know when I'm hungry I often think about my mother's mash potatoes and ham, and how she puts everything together and cooks.
Tracks and Love Medicine, both by Louise Erdrich, are only fragments of a much larger collection of Erdrich’s Native American works. Both pieces of literature are set in the early to mid-twentieth century and revolve around difficulties the Native American people go through in their struggle of preserving their culture and ways of life. Native American literature invokes a taste of modern influence alongside traditional Indian mythology to truly thicken a plot. Ancestral values are evident throughout this specific type of literature as well as the idea of balance within the world to create a true native atmosphere. Furthermore, there are major themes within this type of literature including Christian influence, family, and reservations. These all tie into the life of a Native American. Each major work explores the world of Native Americans through its narration, characters, and the overall plot.
This novel is set in a fictional community of Bayonne, Louisiana, in the late 1940s. The setting in this story is important because of it’s informative background about the main protagonist, Jefferson whom is unfairly treated and sentenced to death for something he didn’t commit. The novel expresses the racism,injustice,and segregation.
In most situations the term power is looked at between one person or group and another. The same perspective from the textbook “Interpersonal Conflict” written by Joyce Hocker and William Wilmot can be applied when looking at the lack of internal power when going through a phase of depression. The type of power, level of power, solutions, as well as the RICE perspective can all be associated with myself and my depressed state I went through for a few months.
Marcus Engel emphasized on communication and empathy when dealing with patients in his book, I’m Here: Compassionate Communication in Patient Care. As he struggled to cope with his hospital stay, certain health care providers helped him improve his mental and physical health. He wrote about the doctors, nurses, and other health care providers he met. In his book he mentioned how the behavior and tone of health care providers impacted him. He touched on various topics such as patient privacy, care, and interaction.
In society there are still differences in classes such as higher class, middle class, and lower class. In sociology, we observed a film called The Pursuit Happyness, where we witnessed the struggles a father went through to succeed. Chris Gardner, who was played by Will Smith, is living in his apartment with his wife and his son. Due to their struggles, the mother walks out on and leaves Chris struggling alone with his son. In the film Chris Gardner applies for an unpaid internship for a competitive stockbroker company where out of twenty men, only one gets the job. While he is on his internship, we see the hardships of getting kicked out of his apartment to staying at a shelter home to then sleeping in a subway bathroom with his son. Viewing the movie through a sociological lens, The Pursuit of Happyness will be analyzed according to the major three sociological paradigms: structural functionalism, social conflict theory, and symbolic interactionalism.
In his poignant and moving novel, A Lesson Before Dying, Ernest J. Gaines asks us questions that reignite our own quest for the meaning of compassion. What do you teach a man condemned to die? What lesson might be useful in the final month of a man’s life? Is there a futility that we succumb to when we accept the judgment of men? These are the questions faced by Grant Wiggins, a young, black school teacher who has returned to his small Louisiana hometown following his college education. Persuaded by his aunt to counsel Jefferson, also a young, black man who has been sentenced to die for an armed robbery in which he was an unwitting bystander. Not to exonerate him, but to teach him. To give him something to call his own before he leaves this earth: knowledge.
As I read Paul Kingsnorth’s introduction in Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist and Other Essays I quickly understood what his main purpose is. It is to make humanity realize what they’ve done and continue to do in this world. We’ve all caused an excessive amount of harm and the destruction of such an astonishing planet. In the text he states, “
If you are interested in learning some of the following: *Auras and chakras, from a psychic perspective *The beginning stages of working with someone's auras and chakras. *Spirit Guides & Angels (how to contact and work with them) *Ethereal Crystals and Gemstones, their uses in psychic healing *
Last Sunday at church Father Ron said something that hit home for me. He said that a mission begins with an invitation. I grew up in a rural area in the highlands of Nairobi, Kenya. Life was not easy and I always made a point of maximizing the opportunities I got. I grew up knowing that I wanted to be in a profession that really helped people improve their wellbeing. When I got the opportunity to go to university I choose to do Biomedical Science because I was very good at science and I thought that being a scientist was my calling. However, becoming an adult and having varying experiences like volunteering in a children’s home, working in the field doing research, working in a laboratory and currently working as a nurse aide has taught me
In conjunction with the previous example of pleasantries carried out between people we see this exemplified by Ned’s interactions with other women as they mindlessly brush him off. In an essay by Ellen Langer, “Mindfulness and Mindlessness”, we see that women as general social group are trapped by categories that we as people and members of society place others in through processes like naming and framing. We become so trapped by these labels that we react in the same pre-established way every time without having to consciously make the decision to do so. As Langer explains “ordinary people also engage in a great deal of complex behavior without consciously paying attention to it” to convey this very idea that, in this case women, make complex reactive decisions to a man, Ned, approaching them for any reason whatsoever in a way that is more often than not, defensive (Langer n.d.: 84). Much of the examples that Vincent collects and presents to us during the course of the novel can be seen as examples of this mindlessness and much of the internalized social agreements that people acquire over the course of their lifetimes becomes so ingrained within themselves that the responses that are given to the prescribed stimuli are effortless and carried out unconsciously.
The most universal goal every human has in common is the pursuit of happiness or “creation or construction of happiness” (Achor, 78). To be able to fulfill this wish of becoming happy, people often think the key to achieving happiness is success. In the book, The Happiness Advantage by Shawn Achor, he debunks this theory of success leading to happiness by illustrating the reverse theory of success. Through dozens of studies and experiments as forms of evidence, the author argues that an individual needs to achieve happiness in order to be truly successful. Achor 's argument is valid in that happiness should come before success because there is a clear advantage to being successful in an individual’s work life, personal sphere, and liveliness if they are happy first and foremost.
A powerful quote said by pre-socratic philosopher named Democritus says “Happiness resides not in possessions, and not in gold, happiness dwells in the soul”. In other words, happiness does not come from materialism but instead from the things money can’t buy. In the article The Secret of Happiness the author David Myers writes directly to Americans about how he believes we need to obtain a new “American Dream” that emphasizes personal happiness instead of materialistic happiness. Myers also believes happiness resides in the soul and he says people that think money is the key to happiness are actually less content with themselves and he uses various ways to prove this point. With that being said materialistic happiness vs personal happiness is an important issue, and Myers made a strong use of Logos by showing surveys and studies, Ethos by showing credibility in his argument but he could have used more Pathos by using more emotion and enthusiasm in his argument.
Empathy is often described as having consideration of someone else feelings. Webster defines empathy as, the feeling that you understand and share another 's experience and emotions. Empathy consists of having the ability to feel another person 's feelings and the ability to place oneself in another person shoes or situation. In counseling, the therapist is expected to show empathy for their clients whose experiences are different from the counselor. The role of the counselor is to support the client with any issues or concerns. The role empathy plays in counseling.