Fill your freezer with the best selection of popsicles and share them with anyone who stops by your porch.
Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…
In Rest Is Sacred: Reclaiming Our Brilliance Through Practicing Stillness by Octavia F. Raheem (134 pages, 2024), rest is presented as a sacred and transformative practice. A dear friend introduced me to this book, and we chose to read it together over several months. That pace felt fitting, since Raheem strongly encourages readers not to rush through it in a single sitting or read it straight through.— “ I want you to read this book, one page, one line, or even just a few words at a time.”(xviii) She was absolutely right. As we moved through the book, my friend and I shared photos of passages that spoke to us, and I filled my copy with notes and marked pages—though my friend would call that sacrilege. This book is a gift. Written in short, restful sections, it is easy to pick up and absorb slowly. With poetic insight and deep reflection, Raheem reimagines rest as a spiritual practice that helps us reclaim peace and power amid life’s chaos. She invites us to slow down, reconnect, and see rest as a source of renewal, self-discovery, and emotional care. Blending humor, wisdom, and lived experience, she makes these ideas both relatable and practical.
Each section offers thoughtful encouragement to step away from the constant demands of grind culture. Raheem shows that rest can be a refuge—a place of clarity that reveals capacities we often overlook. Through this practice, we meet a different version of ourselves: more present, grounded, and whole. Ultimately, the book is an invitation to live with greater intention, rooted in stillness and purpose. Reading it became a self-care ritual for me, one that gently reawakened my truest self: unhurried, unbothered, and free.
“A people without knowledge of their past history, origin, and culture is like a tree without roots.” – Marcus Garvey, UNIA founder
Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…
QR codes that lead to an online menu are a terrific way for the restaurant to save on printing costs every time there’s a menu change, but they should have some good old-fashioned paper menus too. There are people in this world who don’t have a smartphone and that doesn’t make them unintelligent. Some people don’t want to depend on their phone for everything or maybe they’d just rather not use it. A tangible, tactile menu is appreciated by many guests and every restaurant should be prepared to dust one off if it’s requested.
Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…
Too many restaurants are using random objects to serve food on and, and as obvious as it may seem, every restaurant should have plates. The butter board trend has come and gone and people want to see their food served on something they know can be run through a dishwasher. Nobody needs a burger and fries served on a cutting board honed from the wood of an olive tree. All that is is an opportunity for half of the fries to slide right onto the table. Once when I was a cater waiter, I served appetizers on a skateboard. Creative, sure. Appetizing? Absolutely not.
Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…