Language: English
The Teachings of Frances Ring is a powerful collection of psychological insights, life lessons, and human truths drawn from the author's transformative experience with an extraordinary psychologist. Through personal storytelling and carefully preserved teachings, David Bloom shares timeless wisdom on relationships, emotional healing, parenting, self-awareness, and personal growth.
Blending memoir with practical philosophy, the book presents clear and thought-provoking reflections on fear, forgiveness, independence, love, and resilience. Each teaching offers readers simple yet profound ways to better understand themselves and others while navigating life with greater clarity and emotional balance.
This book truly brings out a child's mindset. How innocent they are to the world, to their feelings, everything that's happening in their own little world. The book shows the insights of how a child lives a weekend out camping, where he gets scared, bored, excited. Where he notices the little sounds and sights nature gives you. The excitement he was when he caught his first fish was heart warming. I have a child of my own and reading this through his eyes really helped me see how children think, how they're brains aren't develop like an adults is, its the innocence that made me enjoy the read
ā Harry s.
Through a Childās Eyes: Eyes of Discovery by George Leonard Hayes Reading Through a Childās Eyes: Eyes of Discovery by George Leonard Hayes feels like stepping into the world the way a child sees itāfull of wonder, questions, and quiet moments of discovery. The book reminds us that children do not just look at the world; they explore it with curiosity, imagination, and open hearts.
As I read the pages, it felt like walking through fields, listening to the wind, and noticing the small details adults sometimes forget to see. The story invites readers to slow down and experience life the way a child mightāwhere nature feels magical, thoughts feel big, and every moment holds the possibility of learning something new. The author gently shows how a childās perspective can turn ordinary moments into meaningful discoveries.
ā Rose Gonzalez
First of all, I would not call this a children's book, nor would I really encourage my 6 year old to read this. The writing is beautiful, but doesn't really give off "childlike". The art work was nice. I feel a weird divide on this book. The artwork and title suggest a fun children's book, but the content not so much. It came off Sorento me as a book for adults, a reminder that everything we do as adults can effect our children.
ā Mandy
George is someone who feels small sometimes, but also really brave inside. When grown-ups donāt understand him, it makes his chest feel tight, like heās holding a secret. Thatās too big to hide. But he keeps trying anyway. Georgeās courage feels huge, even when heās scared. The unfair moments hit hard. Friendship becomes a kind of magic, one good friend can make the whole world feel safer. Kids connect with it because they know what itās like to have big feelings in a small body. They understand wanting to show the world who they really are.
ā Deborah D Lowe
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