Showing posts with label audiobooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audiobooks. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 February 2021

Best Spiritual Audiobooks for Finding Fulfillment

Our everyday routine can be so exhausting that finding sufficient time to nurture your spirit becomes a hard nut to crack. Spiritual audiobooks come in handy in helping you keep up with your everyday activities while at the same time growing spiritually healthy. Here are some of the best spiritual audiobooks for finding fulfillment.

The Battlefield of the Mind

If you are baffled by negative thoughts, this audiobook will help you learn how to transform your negative thoughts into beautiful positive attitudes. Joyce Mayer uses biblical backing and personal experiences to support the concepts shared. Pat Lentz’s soft tone as she narrates will help you to follow through.

Everybody Always

This audiobook is majorly about love and how to be an emblem of love in a world full of negative minded individuals and setbacks. Bob Goff asserts that everybody can be better versions of themselves by irrationally expressing love and making the world a better place. You should Listen to Goff’s sincere tone to understand that love is a significant factor in living a fulfilling life.

The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success

Mention new age movement, and the author Deepak Chopra tops the list. In this audiobook, he offers a guide to his listeners on how to find fulfillment in life through intention and desire, dharma, giving, detachment, karma, least effort, and pure potentiality. He uses Hindu teachings to express his ideas.

If you are looking for the trending ebooks on spiritual uplifting, visit Delevu.com.

Wednesday, 30 December 2020

From Football to… Bobsledding?

2020 has been a rough year for professional sports. While many leagues managed to resume play, be it with “bubbles” or other methods designed to reduce the spread of Covid-19, some leagues, like the Canadian Football League, lacked the funds for such ambitious endeavours and had to cancel their season altogether. The move left a lot of CFL players out in the cold, so to speak. Some sought to play in other leagues, while some were content to take the season off and spend time with their families. Some, like Montreal Alouettes running back Shaquille Murray-Lawrence, decided to try something completely different.

“It was very nerve wracking,“ said Murray-Lawrence in an interview with the CBC. ”Once I got in the sled, it was just the longest 50 seconds of my life. I didn’t know if I was going to make it. I didn’t know what was going to happen. I couldn’t breathe. But when it’s over, I was like ‘Hey, man, I think I could do that again.’”

Murray-Lawrence was talking, of course, about bobsledding. And he wasn’t the only footballer to pick up the sport. Along with Murray-Lawrence, Saskatchewan Roughriders defensive back Jay Dearborn and B.C. Lions running back hopeful Kayden Johnson joined the Canadian national bobsled program after the CFL cancelled its 2020 season. The trio had been training at the ice house at Calgary’s Canada Olympic Park, but recently moved to the sliding centre in Whistler, B.C., which was built for the 2010 Olympic Games. Bobsledding may seem like an odd choice for these three athletes, but they seem to be enjoying themselves, and may even continue in the sport once the CFL resumes play.

Looking for the latest in trending content? Visit our online library at Delevu for a wide variety of ebooks, audiobooks, music, and more. Accessible anytime, anywhere, from your favorite devices.

Monolith Madness Grips the World

First Utah, then Romania, then California. For those who have yet to hear, these are the locations where mysterious monoliths have appeared, seemingly out of thin air, only to subsequently vanish. Each 10 to 12 feet tall, the first one emerged in the Utah desert on November 18 and vanished on November 27. The second monolith appeared outside the Romanian city of Piatra Neamt on November 27 and disappeared on December 2. The third and most recent of the monoliths appeared at the top of Pine Mountain in Atascadero, California, on December 2 and was taken down on December 3.

While conspiracy theorists have claimed that anyone from government surveillance specialists to extraterrestrials may be responsible for the monoliths, it’s a group of community artists who have claimed credit. Known as “The Most Famous Artist,” the group posted a photo of the monolith on their Instagram account saying only “monolith-at-a-service.com.” The photo of the three-sided metal monolith included specs of the artwork noting: “Authentic dimensions and museum quality materials; edition of 3+1 artist proof; delivery and installation included; Blockchain certification of authenticity, signed and dated ‘The Most Famous Artists 2020’” The monolith comes with a hefty price tag, however, $45,000, and a four to six week delivery timeframe. It remains to be seen if any more monoliths will pop up, or if the group feels as though they’ve done enough marketing.

Looking for the latest in trending content? Visit our online library at Delevu for a wide variety of ebooks, audiobooks, music, and more. Accessible anytime, anywhere, from your favorite devices.

Saturday, 5 December 2020

What is The Right to Repair?

You may have read about it recently, as the movement is trending and growing in popularity, but just what is The Right to Repair? Simply put, it’s a movement gaining considerable traction in the United States and Europe, led by consumers demanding that manufacturers change their designs in order to make their products more repairable. As you may have guessed, many of the products in question are tech products, but the movement doesn’t exclusively center around tech even though it may seem that way at times.

Just what’s so hard to fix in all our latest devices and products? Well, take cell phones. When was the last time you bought a phone with an easily replaceable battery? True, some fixed batteries bring about certain benefits like waterproofing, but those benefits ultimately come at great expense to consumers. "In the latest models, the battery and the display are often glued to the gadget's body, which also makes it waterproof. It's a low-cost compromise enabling manufacturers to focus on thin design rather than reparability. That cannot be achieved when you screw the parts together," said Dorothea Kessler, communications director at iFixit Europe.

If ever the phone in question should need a new battery, the owner usually has two options: replace it altogether, or bring it back to the manufacturer for a replacement that usually isn’t worth the cost. The Right to Repair movement seeks to change all that, and aims to bring back a certain degree of repairability to new products. Though the movement is young, it’s gaining ground quickly, and the team here at Delevu encourages you to do some more research.

Looking to keep up to date with the latest in trending content? Visit our online library at Delevu for a wide variety of ebooks, audiobooks, music, and more. Accessible anytime, anywhere, from your favorite devices.