In his 1995 book, “Leading Minds,” Howard Gardner studied the lives of great leaders. His main conclusion was, a leader...
Designer-wellness advocate Jean Lim Goulbourn is a picture of equanimity nine years after the loss of her daughter. Natasha died...
Every sunny day reminds me of her, because she loved the sun and the sea and the summertime. I still...
Through the years I have often wondered how my daughter Pia had been coping with the loss of her younger...
DEAR EMILY, On my way to process papers to work abroad, I met a guy I asked directions from. We...
My problem is my niece, who is an old maid at 42. Her father was my only sibling. He, his wife and two other children died in a bus accident, and my niece, who was nine years old at that time, was the only survivor in their family. She was left to live with a cousin of ours who had no children. My niece had learning difficulties and finished only high school and took some vocational courses later. She now supports herself as a freelance manicurist.
Lately I’ve been grappling with forgiveness. When I grapple with something, I like to read up on the subject. I’d like to believe that over the years, I’ve become a much more forgiving person than I was 10 or even five years ago. I guess it comes also with having been through a lot of situations or circumstances where I learned that clinging to the pain simply does no good.
I am the love child of a secretary and her boss, for whom she worked for 20 years. An only child, I am now 40, with a family of my own.
I am a 24-year-old teacher in a public school with a master’s degree, and I’m a candidate for my Ph.D. ...
When I first received the letter of “Furious Teacher” in my e-mail (published Aug. 14), what I wanted was to help a single, unwed, pregnant woman who I felt was being given a raw deal by her unenlightened superior.