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#empowering book
supplements-product · 5 months
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Easy DIY Power Plan Digital - Ebooks
Powering Up My Home: A Review of "Easy DIY Power Plan Digital"
Soaring electricity bills and unreliable grids were becoming a constant source of stress. The idea of taking control of my own energy needs was appealing, but the technical aspects seemed daunting. That's when I discovered the "Easy DIY Power Plan Digital" by [Author Name]. This ingenious ebook has empowered me to build a functional home power system, even with my limited DIY experience.
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A Straightforward Guide for Energy Independence
The "Easy DIY Power Plan Digital" cuts through the complexity of alternative energy systems. Written in a clear and concise manner, the ebook breaks down the process into manageable steps. It starts with the fundamentals, explaining different renewable energy sources and the components needed to build a functional system. Even with no prior electrical knowledge, I felt confident following the easy-to-understand instructions and diagrams.
Focus on Affordability and Accessibility
What truly impressed me was the emphasis on affordability and accessibility. The plan cleverly utilizes readily available materials, with the author suggesting ways to source up to 90% of them from your garage or a local junkyard. This significantly reduces the initial investment, making the project feasible for budget-conscious homeowners like myself.
Step-by-Step Instructions and Detailed Materials List
The heart of the ebook lies in its detailed instructions and comprehensive materials list. Each step of the construction process is meticulously explained, accompanied by clear visuals. The materials list provides specific details about each component, making the sourcing process a breeze. I particularly appreciated the troubleshooting tips scattered throughout the ebook, providing solutions to common challenges faced during construction.
From Ebook to a Functional Power System
Following the "Easy DIY Power Plan Digital," I was able to successfully build my very own home power system. The sense of accomplishment and the satisfaction of generating my own clean energy are truly rewarding. While the system doesn't completely replace the grid, it has significantly reduced my dependence on traditional electricity sources, leading to noticeable savings on my monthly bills.
An Empowering Resource for Energy-Conscious Homes
Whether you're a seasoned DIY enthusiast or a complete beginner like me, the "Easy DIY Power Plan Digital" offers a valuable roadmap to achieving energy independence. The clear instructions, focus on affordability, and readily available materials make it an empowering resource for anyone looking to take control of their energy needs. If you're interested in exploring renewable energy solutions for your home, I highly recommend checking out this informative and practical ebook.
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ffcrazy15 · 1 month
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There's this way of doing female-ness in Christianity that I call "pastel flower journal Christianity." I've got nothing against pastel flower journals per se, but for some reason people believe it's the end all and be all of female spirituality, and I think it's a real disservice towards young Christian women.
One of these days I'd like to start a prayer-and-reading group or something for young women, but there would be no floral themes or over-focus on how "God thinks you're beautiful even if the world doesn't" (a true statement, but it's wayyyyy too often the focus in women's spiritual reading). Instead we would be reading:
Seneca's Letters from a Stoic
Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning
Sheed's A Map of Life
Portions of Pieper's book on leisure
Kreeft's Three Philosophies of Life
Guardini's The Lord (or something similar)
Therese's Story of a Soul
and some select portions of the Nicomachean Ethics.
(Also they're all getting the porn talk. I don't know why we give the porn talk to young men but not young women. There's this idea that women don't use porn and they only need the talk about "guarding their heart." Bullshit. There's porn on the YA shelves of Barnes and Nobles and before that there were bodice rippers. Young women need the porn talk too.)
Every young woman needs to be getting a basic grounding in virtue ethics, logic, natural law, scholastic philosophy and Biblical hermeneutics if they're going to get by in today's spiritual landscape. Enough faffery and emotionalism in young women's spiritual education! Give them real food to chew on, not pasty sentimentalism!
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ad1thi · 1 month
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Justin baldoni decided to adapt It Ends With Us because he thought that stories about domestic violence, and specifically escaping and life beyond domestic violence deserved to be platformed.
Instead of being supported, he’s been mean girl’d by the cast; that’s treating the film like its this cutesy rom com : and I think this rly encapsulates everything that’s wrong with the book, and the fanbase it’s amassed
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Adult!Villain and Teen!Hero are hilarious, an whole ass adult beefing with a OP high schooler? Comedy
Honestly, doesn't do it for me. (Sorry) I know it's a very common trope and it's totally valid if you or anyone else likes it!
(I don't think I'm drawn to antagonist &/ protagonist dynamics for the comedy in general. It's not what interests me about it. But that's partly also a semantics thing, e.g. 'rivals' versus 'enemies', 'villain' as in 'supervillain' which can mean like megamind versus 'villain of the story'. I can appreciate comedy in a story about rivals, idk, I can't explain the distinction.)
Anyway. Like, to me, this gives:
horror in the power imbalance between children and adults
themes of children/teenagers having to step up to save the world because of the actions or inaction of older generations
themes in the way adults are not taught its unacceptable to have public beef with a teenager + lessened boundaries in how we treat each other in public spaces
themes in the whole creepy child trope, e.g. a teenager who is so powerful and the ways that this can backfire
themes in identity formation and the myriad different masks we might wear as teenagers and how someone can pick up on just one part of who you are growing to be and hate it.
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I need all newcomer FNAF fans to understand that William is not a normal child killer. Not in the sense that he has some great depth, but rather he is fixated on killing/hurting children to a weird degree. There is no normal degree, but he somehow found a weird degree.
I made a post about this a couple years back, and I did get the facts slightly off, so I will give an updated take. Ahem
He did not just kill 5 children at Freddy's, when Freddy's opened 2 years later he got a fake identity to kill 5 kids again. He used his apparently very wealthy company and his insane level of technological genius to build several highly advanced machines that function like they are from the 22nd century, have stuff like 'voice mimic lure' and many other advancements, and he used these godly accomplishments to kidnap and kill more children. He discovered Scarecrow-esqe hallucinogenic gas and used this for, you guessed it, torturing kids in his underground lab. They had like a whole fake house down there with a bed and a dinner table and everything bro was intricate.
After he became undead, he went to a fake pizza place he knew was a trap juuust so he could see if there were any actual kids here to kill.
So film fans if you are asking yourself if William is just a normal child killer, the answer is no. It is more that he is on some sort of crusade upon children everywhere and dedicates his entire existence to killing or hurting more kids. It's his goal in life, it drives him. He would invent time travel but only if every time the device was used to travel in time, it kicked an orphan in the balls.
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yandere-daydreams · 2 months
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Hi. I love the eloquence in which you write your stories, it is truly exceptional. Is there by any chance a book that has inspired you in the sense of writing? Or do you have any books that you recommend to your readers? I would love to know! I hope you have a great day.
thank you very much for the compliments but,,, my dude, you absolutely must know that i only read monster smut and the most queer-coded horror i can get my gay little hands on. any perceivable eloquence is solely due to the my own force of will and the lesbian vampire the lives inside my soul and yearns to write sapphic bodice rippers for repressed victorian housewives but must settle for animated dilfs. i would apologize to you but then i would also have to apologize to her and that would make her too powerful. alas.
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daphneblakess · 15 days
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actually i don't think we need any more stories about Womanhood™ from cis white women that end with the protagonist realizing what she wanted all along was to be a mother
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aeronbracken · 7 months
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Elden Ring is like... what if a fantasy world in which women could be more significant than men was made but correctly
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uncanny-tranny · 10 months
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This might be a weird piece of advice, but instead of complimenting somebody (especially children) with an overarching, nonspecific compliment (like "smart" for example), it can be better to compliment somebody for their effort or for the work they have done.
I was always complimented as the "smart kid," and was always doted on for being "smart," but I found that it really stressed me out as a kid because being "smart" was a good thing, but I had no idea what they meant by it. I stressed out about it because it felt like, at any time, my status as The Smart Kid could - and would - be taken away at anybody's discretion. I wish my efforts in being a Smart Kid would have been highlighted, because maybe that would have made me feel less like my status mattered rather than my efforts.
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elisabethbabarci · 16 days
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evilios · 1 day
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Just found out Jennifer Saint released Hera. I have extremely low expectations based on her writing career. Scared, actually. This book is advertised as an "empowering" text "reclaiming Hera as a feminist hero" and this is not a good look. Oh, Gods.
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bcloudsetior · 3 months
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“Power is the ability to get what you want. Power is the ability to be the one making the decisions."
~Madoc, The Wicked King.
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lovedeathplan · 20 days
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Wrath Goddess Sing was fantastic I have no words it's so heartfelt and raw and uncompromising and empowering. And literally cosmic. Please everyone read it
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ceciliatllis · 9 months
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I saw someone on here mention how Alys and Elizabeth Woodville do not have any striking parallels and just felt the need to write about how they do in fact have quite a few different similarities. I've always been a huge enthusiast when it comes to The Wars of the Roses and find that period of history incredibly compelling (not to mention GRRM himself has acknowledged how it inspires ASOIAF and his work as a writer which is clearly evident in some of the characters he's created) so I felt compelled to write about this and share my own thoughts.
Both Alys and Elizabeth were polarizing women accused of being devious and using witchcraft/sorcery to "bewitch" a powerful royal who was exceedingly above them in rank; Elizabeth was reviled by the court as she was not an advantageous match for Edward IV politically at all and she and her family’s rise in status caused envy among many. She was older than him, already had children of her own, and was a widow; all of these aspects made her a scandalous woman which the court looked down upon with great disdain and scrutiny. Even now, historians continue to debate whether she actually loved Edward IV and returned his affection or if her primary goal was centered around using him to advance her rank and that of her family. Similarly, the maesters in F&B (as well as numerous people within the fanbase) create a villanious and cartoonish sort of figure when describing Alys as she is perceived as an unsuitable and unlikely match for Aemond - an unusual servant who has had several stillbirths and sees visions is a clear departure from the chaste, agreeable maiden they expected him to fall for. In addition, Elizabeth and Edward were said to have been married in secret whereas Alys and Aemond were ALSO rumored to be married secretly before his death according to Alys (she is referred to as his widow by other characters in F&B so it seems this was an accepted consensus among people and not something she invented). Another detail that stands out and further binds them together is that Elizabeth's father's title was Baron Rivers. Perhaps all of these links are simply coincidental (although I highly doubt that since this is GRRM) but it would be disingenuous to insinuate they do not exist whatsoever because one does not wish to see them.
While opinions vary greatly when it comes to Alys's motivations and true feelings (just as historians disagree about Elizabeth's personality and her relationship with Edward IV), I think it's fascinating to see how the negative reactions to controversial/mysterious women oftentimes mimic how female historical figures were unfairly judged and lazily reduced to common, reductive labels still recycled in the media today (such as forcing them into restrictive boxes where they're either a calculating seductress or helpless damsel). Many people seem to believe that strong-minded female characters can only be written as emotionless caricatures who use their charms (such as their sexuality) to get ahead for their own ambitions and while that trope is commonly seen in film/television and used as a storyline, I believe these ambitious and cunning women can be shown to have agency of their own while still being vulnerable, lonely, and open to love/companionship. That does not make them less empowering or intelligent by any stretch of the imagination; it makes them human. Women can contain a myriad of different traits and motives while still being interesting. That's how I hope the writers will approach Alys and it's also what I believe to be the more intriguing route to go when it comes to well-rounded, complex storytelling.
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slaughter-books · 7 months
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Day 8: JOMPBPC: Empowered Women Empower Women
❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🩷
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omg-hellgirl · 19 days
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Women friends are really the strength and backbone, because I think they understand you so much better than someone who is of the male species. It's incredible to believe that genitalia can cause so much brainrot.
— Angie Bowie, about how female friends helped her get through her divorce.
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