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New book tells readers to stop keeping stuff and start focusing on memories

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New book tells readers to stop keeping stuff and start focusing on memories

Instead, she helps families and senior citizens achieve “rightsizing,” a term she defines as “that perfect place between too much and too little.” While her work means she often assists clients before they move into a smaller apartment or assisted living facility, she says her job isn’t to make people get rid of the stuff they love.

“I help people identify the best things so that they can let go of all the other stuff that doesn’t matter so much,” she says.

That’s an important distinction considering that a senior citizen moving out of a longtime home will often have to give up 50-75 percent of their possessions before they get to their new place, she says. Now, she’s sharing some of the things she’s learned — and offering some tough, but fair, love and encouragement — in a new book, “Keep the Memories, Not the Stuff.”

Bryant started to realize just how difficult that process can be while growing up on a farm in North Dakota before she graduated from Hillsboro High School in 2000. Her grandparents died in 1992 and 1994, and her parents, then in their 40s, spent months emptying out two farmsteads full of stuff.

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</div>                        Bryant's own mother died in 2005, and her father moved out of the farmhouse into town — and at the age of 24, she had to sort through her late mother's possessions, trying to figure out what to do with everything and what she wanted to keep.</p>                            <p>After high school, she attended Northwestern College in Orange City, Iowa, and then pursued a master's degree in English and Great Plains studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She wasn't sure what she wanted to do for a career, so she started working in the student affairs office at a local university but quickly realized it wasn't her passion.</p>                            <p>That's when she heard about a job opening at a company that helped seniors who were downsizing or moving — and thought back on her own family experiences trying to do it alone. She says she figured the field could be the "perfect blend" of her skills, as well as her love of seniors and passion for organizing.</p>                            <p>"I thought, 'There's a real need out there for this,'" she says.</p>                            <div class="inline-element" readability="6.5">

An example of a room of “stuff” that Jeannine Bryant and her team at Changing Spaces SRS helped people sort through during a life transition in 2018. Special to The Forum

                              She started with the company, <a href="https://changingspacessrs.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Changing Space SRS in Lincoln, Neb.</a>, in 2008, and became a co-owner in 2010 and the sole owner in 2014 when the original owners retired.</p>                                                          <p>Along the way, she's become the author of two books, most recently "Keep the Memories, Not the Stuff," <a href="https://easyrightsizing.com/book/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">available to purchase online through her website</a> or <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Keep-Memories-Stuff-Jeannine-Bryant/dp/B08TZ3HTRJ/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&amp;keywords=keep+the+memories+not+the+stuff&amp;qid=1616517190&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Amazon</a>, and she also shares more advice on her website, <a href="https://easyrightsizing.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://easyrightsizing.com/</a>.</p>                            <p>Bryant says having too much stuff is something that affects just about everyone in America, driven by easy access to cheap products thanks to online shopping and mass production. It also means that families can find themselves saddled with callbacks to past trends and interests, such as a large number of collectible plates that none of the children want.</p>                            <p>That's why she says rightsizing is a good project for adults of all ages to take on — not just seniors who are moving out of their home or families clearing out an apartment after a loved one has died.</p>                            <div class="inline-element" readability="8.5">

Cover for “Keep the Memories, Not the Stuff,” a new book by Hillsboro, N.D., native and rightsizing expert Jeannine Bryant. Special to The Forum

                    What rightsizing even means varies, she says, and will change depending on how many things a person has to begin with, as well as their generational preference for keeping things or living more minimally, and what is important to them.</p>                            <p>In her latest book, Bryant says there are five categories that everything falls into when rightsizing: what to keep; what to give away to family or friends; what to sell; what to donate to charity; and what to throw away or recycle.</p>                            <p>But the task of sorting through a lifetime's worth of stuff is big enough, so she advises readers to just focus on the first two, at least to start: what to keep, and what to give away. Everything else, she writes, can become a distraction, and they'll be easy to finish once it's already been decided what to keep for yourself or family.</p>                            <p>Rather than obsessing over a possible sales price of that antique sewing machine, Bryant says people need to keep their eyes on the "big picture." </p>                            <p>"You need to decide, 'What am I keeping and what items do I want to give to my family members,' and then once you really internalize that and your choices, quite frankly, nothing else matters," she says.</p>                            <p>It's that "perspective shift" that she helps her clients make, and Bryant says it can feel like "tough love" working with people to realize some uncomfortable truths. That includes a big one: "Your stuff doesn't owe you anything." Just because a collectible cost $50 to buy doesn't mean it's worth $50, she says.</p>                            <div class="inline-element" readability="6.5">

Another full room that Jeannine Bryant and her team at Changing Spaces SRS helped clients sort through. Special to The Forum

Instead, she wants people to focus on the value or usefulness in terms beyond the dollar value. And that’s why her latest book offers another piece of tough-but-true advice: Your kids probably don’t want your stuff.

Bryant explains that people can feel pressured to keep something, even if they don’t personally want it. She advises readers to think about what they actually want, regardless of any else’s opinion — and stop trying to make relatives happy.

Still, she says it’s possible to help a grandkid or child see value in specific family heirlooms or keepsakes. Bryant recommends attaching a story or experience to prized possessions, such as pointing out the single item that came from the “old country” with an ancestor, to explain why it’s important to you — and why it might become a cherished item for them someday.

Similarly, sharing experiences can bond kids to their parents’ stuff, like rolling pins if baking is a family hobby, woodworking tools for craftier people or that classic car that you cruised in together.

“What is really being kept here is the experience, which created a memory in your loved ones’ mind,” she writes. “The object itself is merely representative of that experience.”

Ultimately, Bryant reminds readers that it’s all about the relationships to begin with — and that’s why we should aim to make our legacy about more than possessions.

“Give the kids your story not your stuff,” she explains in the book.

Report: Center-left candidate in Germany favors EU army

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Report: Center-left candidate in Germany favors EU army

File – In this Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020 file photo, German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz delivers his speech during the debate about Germany’s budget 2021, at the parliament Bundestag in Berlin, Germany. The center-left Social Democrats’ candidate to succeed German Chancellor Angela Merkel is backing the idea of a European Union army. But Olaf Scholz told weekly Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung that likely won’t happen in the near term.Markus Schreiber/AP


BERLIN (AP) — The center-left Social Democrats’ candidate to succeed German Chancellor Angela Merkel is backing the idea of a European Union army but says the creation of one likely won’t happen in the near future.

Olaf Scholz told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung newspaper that any EU force would need to be subject to the same parliamentary control as Germany’s army, which only can be deployed with approval from national lawmakers.

In interview extracts published Saturday, the newspaper quoted Scholz as saying that an agreement on military missions would need to “take place in European bodies that would certainly include the European Parliament as well.”



The idea of a European army has long been under discussion, with some of the bloc’s 27 member states in favor and others opposed. Scholz said establishing one was “not a topic for the short-term, though.”

Recent opinion polls for Germany’s Sept. 26 national election put the Social Democratic Party in third place, behind Merkel’s Union grouping and the environmentalist Green party.

Merkel has said she won’t run for a fifth term.

Healthcare should be at heart of EU-Africa partnership, say MEPs

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Healthcare should be at heart of EU-Africa partnership, say MEPs

EU-Africa relations should prioritise healthcare as part of a new partnership of equals, EU lawmakers said as they set out their priorities for talks on a strategic partnership between the two continents.

On Thursday (25 March), MEPs adopted their own blueprint that, they hope, will feed into the discussions on a new EU-Africa partnership by 460 votes in favour to 64 against.

The two blocs “must move beyond the donor-recipient relationship”, the Parliament report said, a mantra used increasingly often under Ursula von der Leyen’s European Commission.

The report by Chrysoula Zacharopoulou, a French centrist MEP, calls for the EU to support African regional integration and domestic production to help reduce dependence on foreign imports as well as the African continental free trade area launched in January.

Speaking during the European Parliament debate on Wednesday, EU International Partnerships Commissioner Jutta Urpilainen said that the Commission was seeking “a joined-up approach and a renewed partnership with our sister continent Africa.”

However, talks between the EU and the African Union have been derailed by COVID-19, which was declared a global pandemic two days after the Commission published its strategy for a “sustainable partnership.”

At the heart of the Commission blueprint was a focus on the green transition, energy, and digital transformation. Those remain, with the EU executive anxious to ensure that the EU’s carbon adjustment mechanism will not hurt African exports. Additional priorities have also emerged in the wake of the pandemic.

The EU is one of the leading donors to the World Health Organisation-backed COVAX initiative, which has started to distribute COVID vaccines to African countries in recent weeks. MEPs want to build on this by stepping up EU-Africa collaboration on health research and innovation to boost local production of equipment and medicine.

“Our African friends are our allies and all Europeans have to grasp the importance and the opportunity that this partnership offers to us,” Zacharopoulou told lawmakers.

The French MEP added that this should begin by “reinforcing Africa’s healthcare systems; we also have to implement an EU-Africa Green Pact.”

The report also calls on international lenders, such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, to do more to relieve the debt burdens of African countries, which have been exacerbated by the pandemic, pushing a group of countries, including Angola, the Republic of Congo, and Zambia into debt distress.

The G20 leaders are close to giving the green light for the IMF to issue $500 billion of Special Drawing Rights prioritising developing countries, to sit alongside the G20’s pre-existing Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI).

With most of Europe and a number of African countries now facing a third wave of the pandemic there are growing concerns that a planned EU-AU summit, which the Portuguese government is keen to host as part of its six-month EU Council presidency, will again be delayed.

[Edited by Josie Le Blond]

Partnership with a purpose: EU-Africa relations in 2021

The EU’s plans to strike a ‘strategic partnership’ with Africa were one the victims of the COVID-19 pandemic. After the European Commission set out its stall in a March 2020 strategic paper, summits were cancelled and it is unclear whether EU and African Union leaders will agree on an agenda with the ambition needed for a genuine ‘strategic partnership’ this year.

Eastern Illinois University professor writes new book on American religion

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Eastern Illinois University professor writes new book on American religion

… the future of American religion.
Burge teaches in a … journals, including Politics & Religion, the Journal for the Scientific … Study of Religion, the Review of Religious … of Communication and Religion, the Journal of Religion, Media and …

Faith and ritual: Religion in 21st century Britain

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Faith and ritual: Religion in 21st century Britain

Passover – one of the most important festivals in Judaism – begins this Saturday.

Through celebrations and rituals, different religions mark key stages in life.

A new series on BBC iPlayer, Being, explores what these ancient rituals mean to people in modern Britain.

From birth, to coming of age, marriage and death, how do five religions celebrate these crucial moments?

Producer: Harry Farley

Picture editors: Stephen Bulfield and Michael Latham

Four spiritual festivals converge this weekend

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Four spiritual festivals converge this weekend – Passover, Palm Sunday, Holi, the Hindu Spring Festival and the Aries solar Festival (full moon). The Tibetan in the Alice Bailey blue books, informs us that when the many different religious festivals occur together, it is a sign that the new Aquarian world religion is unfolding.

Saturday’s Passover (Pesach) is the festival of remembering when the Jewish people left the slavery in Egypt (left the Taurus Age) and began their long forty-year walk in the desert (for purification) , eventually entering Canaan, (Aries Age of the Law, the Ten Commandments). Passover begins Saturday evening at the sign of the first star.

Sundayis Palm Sunday, the Catholic festival of Christ completing His forty days and nights in the desert (note the number 40 in both stories). Palm Sundaybegins Holy or Passion Week. Palms (symbolizing peace, victory, respect) were waved, heralding the Messiah, the Promised One. In our days now, we await His return, the precipitation of the Aquarian Teacher to begin in 2025.

Sundayis also Holi, the joyful Hindu Spring Festival symbolizing good over evil. It is also the full moon, the esoteric Aries Spring Resurrection Festival, the first of the Three Spring Festivals, setting the spiritual template for the year.

The Aries solar festival (8 degrees Aries) is Spring’s first full moon. The Aries festival celebrates new life spring forth, the Easter festival. It is also about the Love of God and the Hierarchy for humanity.

Motherhood on the brink in Yemen

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Motherhood on the brink in Yemen

Motherhood – “It was the morning of a normal working day before fighting escalated close to the hospital. I heard a mother screaming at the gate”, midwife Shrook Khalid Saeed told UNFPA, at the Al Shaab Hospital in the district of Crater, in Yemen.

By the time she arrived at the entrance to the hospital, hostilities in the area had flared and a gunfight had broken out. “Bullets were coming from all the corners of the street”, she recounted. “When I arrived at the gate, I found the pregnant woman lying down and crying for help. I pulled her and rushed her inside a car. That is where all of it happened. In a few minutes, she had delivered a healthy baby boy.”

Childbirth can be harrowing in even the best of times but the cascade of humanitarian crises in Yemen have made the journey to motherhood more dangerous than ever. The country’s long-running conflict has depleted the health system. Currently only half of all health facilities are functioning.

The pandemic has only aggravated the situation, with roughly 15 per cent of the health system shifted to deal with COVID-19 cases. Only 20 per cent of functioning health facilities are providing maternal and child health services. 

Today, a woman in Yemen dies during childbirth every two hours, almost always from preventable causes. And now, the threat of famine looms.

“The situation is catastrophic,” said UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Natalia Kanem, during her recent three-day visit to the country.

© UNFPA Yemen

The UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Natalia Kanem (left) talks to a patient at the Al Shaab Hospital in Crater, in Yemen.

In place of joy, fear looms

Pregnant and breastfeeding women are especially vulnerable during times of food insecurity. Currently 1.2 million pregnant and breastfeeding women are acutely malnourished, and these numbers could double if humanitarian funding does not materialize.

“When I came to receive antenatal care at Al Shaab Hospital, I was very weak and pale. I could not stand straight”, 33-year-old Hafsa told UNFPA during Dr. Kanem’s visit. “My nutritional status was very poor. I was given medicines to supplement my diet, and I was advised to eat meat, vegetables and fruits.”

But good nutrition was beyond reach due to her family’s low income. When she delivered her daughter months later, the girl weighed only 1.8 kg. “The baby stayed in the hospital for a couple of days as I did not have enough breast milk to feed her”, Hafsa said.

Malnutrition puts both women in childbirth and newborn babies at serious risk.

“I’ve been in many maternity wards, and they are usually a place of joy. But in Yemen, I witnessed the devastation of malnutrition and hunger, with newborn babies on feeding tubes and mothers weakened by fear and exhaustion,” Dr. Kanem noted. “It is heartbreaking to see fellow members of the human family in such dire conditions.”

Violence at home

Women’s and girls’ vulnerability to violence has greatly escalated under the country’s crisis.

During Dr. Kanem’s visit, she spoke to women at a UNFPA-supported shelter.

One young girl, Alea*, told Dr. Kanem about being married off at age 13. Child marriage is increasingly being used as a coping mechanism by impoverished families. 

“When I told my father, I do not want to get married, my father and grandmother beat me with a water pipe. They said by getting married I will have a better life”, Alea said. “My life only got worse. My husband started to sell all my jewellery and when I inquired about them, he would beat me. I then ran to my father’s house, but he also beat me and chased me back to my husband. I was left with nowhere to go.”

© UNICEF/Abaidi

A nine-month-old girls is checked for malnutrition at a health centre in Sana’a, Yemen.

Escape to shelter

A neighbour helped Alea escape. She has been living at the shelter for over five months, attending training workshops and dreaming of returning to school.

“I spoke to young girls and pregnant women who had to flee for their lives and seek protection at UNFPA sites, which are among the very few safe spaces for women and girls”, Dr. Kanem said.

UNFPA is supporting eight such shelters and 51 women’s and girls’ safe spaces. Last year, UNFPA provided more than half of all health facilities in Yemen with essential life-saving medicines and reached more than 1.2 million women and girls with reproductive health services.

But much more support is needed. “The women and girls of Yemen deserve peace. For too long, they have been caught up in a conflict that is not of their making,” Dr. Kanem urged. “The world must act now.”

* Name changed for protection and privacy

Policy Experts Underscore Prospects for Change in Iran, Regime’s Utter Weakness

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Policy Experts Underscore Prospects for Change in Iran, Regime’s Utter Weakness


Policy Experts Underscore Prospects for Change in Iran, Regime’s Utter Weakness – Book Publishing Industry Today – EIN Presswire

























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The European Union

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The European Union

Valencia,March 20

When the Covid-19 epidemic got hold in Europe and vaccines were rapidly invented to counteract it, the European Commission told the individual countries of the European Union that they needn’t buy vaccines because the European Commission would buy and distribute all the vaccines.

The result has been an almighty mess up. While an individual, fairly independent country such as the UK has been able to buy and vaccinate millions, the individual countries of the European Union have had to sit and wait, vaccinating very slowly.

This is no surprise to those who can see clearly the reality of the European Union project today. The reality of the European Union today is as follows: A small group of a few thousand civil servants joined together with some mainly liberal left national politicians who call themselves the European Commission are attempting to run the whole of Europe from the little town of Brussels which is less than a fiftieth of the size of London.

This small group of people respond only to the pressure of Germany and Big Business. Like the Labour Party in the UK, they long ago ceased to represent ordinary citizens or working people, believing that from their lofty, privileged position they know best what should happen in each of the individual countries. For that reason they ignore referendums in individual countries and seek that the vote is taken again until they get the ‘correct’ result (Ireland, France, Denmark etc. had to vote again). Moreover, such is the certainty of this small number of people in little Brussels that they know best that these days they increasingly impose their diktats by fines and/or withholding funds.

Let’s not waste time here pretending that the European Union is in some way democratic because it holds elections and votes, has elected bodies, and has at least four chauffeur driven ‘Presidents’. These elected bodies are talking shops which provide the false facade of democracy where little really exists… the real power lies with the unelected European Commission in Brussels which is the only body which can initiate legislation. The rest is an empty, sterile facade.

There have been several attempts to control part or all of the vast, diverse European continent. The Italians (Romans) had a go over 2000 years ago, and the Germans had a couple of military attempts in the last 100 years. In the end they failed due to overstretching themselves and the resistance of individual countries.

The European Union liberal left political project to control all of Europe will fail for the same reasons and in due course will inevitably pass out of existence. It should have remained a straightforward and friendly free trade no tariff zone just like other free trade zones throughout the world.

The truth is that the liberal left political project to control all of the vast and varied continent of Europe from a little town in Belgium is a clapped out idea from the 1950s. The only certainty in Europe these days is that when there’s a penalty shootout on the football pitch, the Germans will always win!

Regards
Brian

Read more in this week’s print edition or go to e-paper

Sydney Books reviews ‘Six of Crows’ duology

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Juana Garcia/The Cougar

With an atmosphere any fantasy lover can get lost in, the “Six of Crows” series gives readers intricate world building in a limited number of books.

In the fantasy genre, Leigh Bardugo’s duology not only is able to set up clear surroundings for the plot in both books, but is able to do so while cycling between the points of view from six main characters.

With each separate character we learn a piece of the plot, all while getting a taste of the character’s personality, thoughts and impressions on what is going on. Being able to experience this with six characters at a time, and make all of them vary from one another, is a feat.

One of the six point of views the reader sees is Kaz Brekker, a complex character if there ever was one.

While the plot of the books focuses on the characters needing to complete a heist for a massive reward in return, it shows the different motivations they have and what completing this job means to each one.

The “Six of Crows” characters are not only so diverse in personality that makes each chapter from a different perspective vary from the one before it, but Bardugo has received praise in the diversity and representation written into her books.

This is not Bardugo’s only fantasy work, as she has another series “Shadow and Bone”. This series is held in the same world as “Six of Crows” called the “Grishaverse”. Characters of both book series will be featured in the upcoming Netflix show “Shadow and Bone”.

Seeing the world created within the “Grishaverse” on screen will be exciting as the trailers and sneak peeks already look promising to do the books justice.

To go through reading these books, especially if you are doing so to prepare for the upcoming show, there is a lot of hints to backstory that can’t be skimmed or skipped when trying to grasp the overarching plot.

In this world Bardugo builds, we learn about “Grisha,” which are people with powers or abilities, conflict between fantasy countries, as well as the power dynamics of characters in gangs and monopolies in the book’s main setting “The Barrel”.

With each little detail, the author helps paint the picture for each reader and truly immerse us into the world created.

Typically, fantasy readers see book series that consists of four or more books to cover all of the world building details, plot and character development, but Bardugo is able to do this all in the “Six of Crows” duology and do it well.

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Tags: book, book review, fantasy, Netflix, six of crows