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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Mark Docker

The Road Ahead

The Road Ahead

Mark O Decker

Lulu.com
2018
sidottu
OThe Road AheadO comprises the poems Mark Decker wrote in the years 1982 & 1983. These began some of the happiest years of his life, after a tumultuous decade of the 70Os. The 70Os were a time of graduating from college, moving to Washington, working in the White House, trying to establish a career, law school, Watergate, learning how to manage/juggle career and family. In the early 80Os, we find him happily married to his bride Molly, with two children - Mark (7) and Susan (1.5). Included with the poetry, interspersed throughout the poems, are images - some old, some newer - that the author pulled from his pictures and other items that bring back happy memories and which he hopes you will like as well.
The Watershed Years

The Watershed Years

Mark O Decker

Lulu.com
2019
sidottu
An Eagle Soars When I was young, a boy, in elementary and high school, I had broad wings; I flew like a hawk; High and graceful, gliding, riding all the thermals. I had domain over my territory. Then, came college, I was lost; A round peg in a square hole. Somehow, my wings were clipped; I mostly wandered, like Siddhartha, aimlessly For sixty months; I did not fly; I mostly crawled. Then, I met the love of my life, who told me I could fly; That she had watched me fly, and it was a beautiful sight. Ok, I thought, and I told her I was a sparrow; She told me ?no, you are an eagle?. I told her, ?Ok, let's say I?m a robin?; No?, she said, ?you are an eagle.? Ok, I said, I am a dove;? Again, she told me I flew like an eagle. I agreed, and said I was a hawk; She told me, ?no, you are not a hawk; you are an eagle?. Ok, I told her I was an eagle; and, I told her I could fly again; She told me ?eagles don't fly, they soar; Now, soar?.
The Watershed Years

The Watershed Years

Mark O Decker

Lulu Publishing Services
2019
pokkari
An Eagle Soars When I was young, a boy, in elementary and high school, I had broad wings; I flew like a hawk; High and graceful, gliding, riding all the thermals. I had domain over my territory. Then, came college, I was lost; A round peg in a square hole. Somehow, my wings were clipped; I mostly wandered, like Siddhartha, aimlessly For sixty months; I did not fly; I mostly crawled. Then, I met the love of my life, who told me I could fly; That she had watched me fly, and it was a beautiful sight. Ok, I thought, and I told her I was a sparrow; She told me "no, you are an eagle". I told her, "Ok, let's say I'm a robin"; "No", she said, "you are an eagle." "Ok, I said, I am a dove;" Again, she told me I flew like an eagle. I agreed, and said I was a hawk; She told me, "no, you are not a hawk; you are an eagle". Ok, I told her I was an eagle; and, I told her I could fly again; She told me "eagles don't fly, they soar; Now, soar".
Watershed Years, the Tail

Watershed Years, the Tail

Mark O Decker

Lulu Publishing Services
2020
pokkari
This is the third book in the "Watershed Years" series that contains poems the author wrote in years 1992 -1997. His thrid, and last, child - Kelly McEwan Decker - was born in 1990. This joy and starting a new career as an investment banker were the major new themes of his life.
Black & Decker The Hardworking Home

Black & Decker The Hardworking Home

Mark Johanson

Voyageur Press
2022
pokkari
The Hardworking Home presents a wide range of achievable home improvements that will help you upgrade your home to better meet your needs in this shifting world. From home office to home school to home entertaining, today’s households have necessarily become functional microcosms of society. Before the pandemic, less than five percent of full-time employees worked remotely from home. At the height of the outbreak, more than half did. And even when the dust has settled, it is estimated that at least a quarter of us will be performing our jobs from offices in our homes. Distance learning also will endure as an important educational tool. And while we back into less restrictive social distancing guidelines, it nevertheless makes sense to create a fun, vibrant atmosphere for entertaining ourselves and our guests within the safe confines of our homes. Some of the projects in The Hardworking Home are quite simple and others require a little more DIY experience. But the overriding commonality is that they have been curated with the forward-looking filter of making our lives better, more efficient, and more satisfying in a changing world landscape. Content includes: Introduction How we got here Goals and considerations Where to work? Distance learning Multipurpose spaces Repurposing what you already have Adapting Space Lamps and lighting choices Wall color and painting Practical home décor Noise reduction Air quality and whole-house ventilation Furnishings Separation tips for open spaces Making room for recess and relaxation Private spaces for external communication Work-related meeting areas Technology issues (Wi-Fi and beyond) Ergonomic solutions for working at the dining table Protecting furnishings and surfaces Efficient ways to stash your stuff Working together Convertible work spaces and desktops Partition wall Modifying countertops and cabinets Tambour hideaway (protecting electronics and equipment) Pantry conversion Island bumpout Slide-out work surfaces (and keyboard trays, printer bays, etc.) Under-cabinet lighting Under-cabinet storage Cord management Adapting dining rooms Adapting kitchens Adapting family rooms Creating activity/recess areas Movable work centers Dividing space Workspace under loft bed Corner workspace Creating living/working space separation Adapting bedrooms Renovating a spare room Creating Space Renovating a spare room (Features: ways to improve lighting) Creating an office in an unfinished basement (Features: furring walls, suspended ceiling, raised subfloor panels) Closet office conversion Renovating a garage (Features: garage floor refinish, new garage window, garage skylight, storage projects) Making an outbuilding habitable (Features: making a shed livable) Feature project: closet office Easy DIY Projects Rolling Modular Drop-down Kids Space-saving Rolling Hidden File-friendly Room dividers Plexiglass protectors Carrel curtains Desks Storage Privacy barriers
Cate Decker and the Kye

Cate Decker and the Kye

Mark R Trenta

Independently Published
2018
pokkari
Eleven-year-old Cate Decker encounters a spiritual mist in her basement while searching for her pet cat. Her curiosity begins an adventure into an alternate reality where she is mentored by a Native American Indian tribe known as the Kye. She learns she is the blood descendant of TehKo, (era. 6,125 BC) the first healer and shaman to the Kye. Guided by TehKo's grandson, KoBe, she is immersed into the Village of the Kye and their purgatory known as the Land of Dark Moon. Cate and KoBe travel their adventurous paths in both the world of the living and the spiritual world. Challenges and struggles require Cate to learn new skills to survive and accomplish her spiritual role as Bright Fire, warrior, healer, shaman, and leader. Ultimately, Bright Fire must learn trust from Cate's parents before she embarks on a mission to rescue the entire tribe from their torment by Dark Moon. An endeavor filled with mysticism, betrayal, trust, and revelations about who and what she is.
Keith Dockray's Road to Oblivion

Keith Dockray's Road to Oblivion

Mark Jones

Bristol Folk Publications
2020
pokkari
Keith Dockray's Road to Oblivion chronicles the life of a reclusive, manic-depressive, retired, gay, medieval historian/author and is a follow-up to the 2008 autobiography, Memoirs of a Yorkshire Bastard. It covers Keith's life from pension age (as was) to the grand old age of 75, or, in Keith's terms, the years of being a '...knackered, old bastard.' Part of being a knackered, old bastard involved outsourcing of what was meant to be another autobiographical work to his next-door neighbour. So, this is literally next-door to an autobiography It's a cheery, little read and the icing on the cake is that it's probably a road map for many of us, once we reach a certain age. As for a clue to Keith's opinions, the following quotes probably tell you a lot. "Now, after four decades of heavy smoking and drinking, I can contemplate a no doubt premature death with equanimity. Progressing to an inevitably lonely, and probably decrepit, old age in an ever more materialistic, technology-obsessed and paranoid society has no appeal whatever. My...fear is of an arrogant and over-powerful but philosophically bankrupt medical profession single-mindedly yet pointlessly dedicated to the preservation of life, of however poor a quality, at all costs. Euthanasia has got to be the better option; I hope, when the time comes, I have the nerve to take it." (2003.) "40+ years of hedonism are now definitely beginning to take their toll but] even if young again, I'd still reject the option of a healthy lifestyle...I've avoided doctors like the plague for most of my adult life, and certainly don't fancy the largely pointless existence now prescribed for elderly wrecks by the NHS..." (2009.) "Now in my 75th year, I'm strongly inclined to trust only doctors who are both humanists/atheists and firm believers in the right of the elderly to choose their own time/manner of death. Presumably, this means the NHS might well prove of no use to me whatever " (2018.) Yes, it's a cheery, little read.
Mark 1-8

Mark 1-8

Rodney J. Decker

Baylor University Press
2014
nidottu
Mark 1-8: A Handbook on the Greek Text offers teachers and students a comprehensive guide to the grammar and vocabulary of Mark. A perfect supplement to any commentary, this volume's lexical, analytical, and syntactical analysis is a helpful tool in navigating New Testament literature. Rodney J. Decker leads students toward both a greater understanding of the Greek text and an appreciation for the textual and rhetorical intricacies not available in English translations.
Mark 9-16

Mark 9-16

Rodney J. Decker

Baylor University Press
2014
nidottu
Mark 9-16: A Handbook on the Greek Text offers teachers and students a comprehensive guide to the grammar and vocabulary of Mark. A perfect supplement to any commentary, this volume's lexical, analytical, and syntactical analysis is a helpful tool in navigating New Testament literature. Rodney J. Decker leads students toward both a greater understanding of the Greek text and an appreciation for the textual and rhetorical intricacies not available in English translations.
Temporal Deixis of the Greek Verb in the Gospel of Mark with Reference to Verbal Aspect
Temporal Deixis of the Greek Verb provides a detailed grammatical study of the Greek verb in the Gospel of Mark focused on the question of temporal reference. Following the theory of verbal aspect proposed by several recent scholars, this book distinguishes between aspect and Aktionsart, semantics and pragmatics. It argues that temporal reference is not grammaticalized by the tenses of the Greek verb. Instead, koine Greek indicates these relationships through contextual means (temporal deixis). The full temporal range of usage of the verb in Mark's Gospel is examined, deictic indicators are catalogued, and selected passages are used to illustrate the ways in which time is indicated. This linguistic study provides a basis for more accurate exegesis of the text of Mark and other similar writings.
Industrial Society and the Science Fiction Blockbuster
Can blockbuster films be socially relevant or are they just escapist diversions to entertain the masses and enrich the studios? Not every successful film contains thoughtful commentary, but some that are marketed as pure entertainment do seriously engage social issues. Popular science fiction films of the late 1970s and early 1980s--such as George Lucas' Star Wars trilogy, Ridley Scott's Alien and Aliens, and James Cameron's Terminator films--present a critique of our engagement with technology in a way that resonates with 1960s counterculture. As challengers of the status quo's technological underpinnings, Luke Skywalker, Ellen Ripley and Sarah Connor echo the once-popular social criticism of philosopher Herbert Marcuse and speak directly to the concerns of people living in a technologically complex society. The films of Lucas, Scott and Cameron made money but also made us think about the world we live in.