book review

Deceptively Sneaky

Posted by Jessica Harlan on January 17, 2008 - 6:19am.

Two new cookbooks aim to help moms feed their kids square meals... in roundabout ways.


Asanas In Your Pajamas?

Posted by Su Avasthi on August 29, 2006 - 2:02am.

Can a workout get any better than yoga in bed?

And I mean a real yoga session with your PJs on -- for those of you whose thoughts just turned tantric.





Small House Movement Takes on McMansion

Small House Movement Takes on McMansionPosted by Kimberly Delaney on August 25, 2006 - 9:59pm.

Since 1950, there has been a steady decrease in the size of U.S. and Canadian families, and in the amount of time those families spend at home. So why have home sizes doubled? In her book Little House on a Small Planet (Lyons Press, September 2006), green building consultant, supervisor and teacher Shay Salomon posits that against this unsustainable trend stands a growing movement of small house people who live their values by putting their family, community and environmentalism above space, status and granite countertops.




Trusting Your Intuition For Success

Trusting Your Intuition For SuccessPosted by Jennifer Merritt on August 19, 2006 - 7:34am.

Before the likes of Bridget Jones and Carrie Bradshaw there was Karen Salmansohn. As a successful author, motivational coach, and LIME radio personality, Salmansohn has taught women "How to Succeed In Business Without a Penis" and "How to Make Your Man Behave in 21 Days or Less Using the Secrets of Professional Dog Trainers." Self-described as a creator of "self-help books for lazy people and those who wouldn't be caught dead with a self-help book," Salmansohn's latest venture is "Gut: How to Think From Your Middle to Get to the Top," (September 2006, HOW Publishing). What, you ask, makes Salmansohn so qualified to teach you to trust your intuition?



Saving the Earth, Somewhat

Saving the Earth, SomewhatPosted by Hillary Rosner on August 12, 2006 - 5:59am.

Here’s a tip for the week ahead: Take a kid for a walk in the woods, and explain to her why forests are so important. They absorb CO2 and release oxygen. They guard against erosion. They provide food and shelter to zillions of the planet’s creatures. Teach a child about forests, and encourage her to help these ecosystems thrive.

So suggests 365 Ways to Save the Earth (Abrams, 2005), for the day of August 16. This relatively compact coffee-table book, with an introduction by Elizabeth Kolbert, features stunning photos of nature around the world – from Greenland’s glaciers to Kenya’s flamingos to Uganda’s mountains to the deserts of Egypt and the treasures of Australia’s oceans. But the tantalizing pictures, from French photographer Philippe Bourseiller, are just one half of the book – the motivation for the accompanying messages. 365 Ways is a how-to guide, a daily manual for living a more Earth-friendly existence.


Book Review: Autobiography of a Yogi

Book Review: Autobiography of a YogiPosted by Jeremy Lehrer on August 5, 2006 - 6:00am.

So you have a regular spiritual practice—you go to yoga three times a week, let's say, or you meditate every day. Yet the practice feels less fulfilling than it used to: You've somehow lost touch with the core teachings that define the purpose of your spiritual struggles. This is no doubt one of the reasons that svadhyaya, scriptural study, is one of yoga's main ethical precepts. The natural tendency of the human mind is to forget, and it's necessary to be reminded of where we are and where we're going.




California Dreaming: The Spiritual Tradition?

California Dreaming: The Spiritual Tradition?Posted by Spiros Antonopoulos on July 10, 2006 - 5:22am.

When John Muir, a wilderness mystic and founder of the Sierra Club, wrote, “When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe,” he was reflecting on his profound relationship with California’s pristine alpine wilderness. But Erik Davis posits something further. In his kaleidoscopic history of spiritual California, The Visionary State, Davis proposes that Muir was also making room for an innovative, new “rootless tradition.” California dreaming, it seems, has it own dream logic.




Lessons From Martina Navratilova

Lessons From Martina NavratilovaPosted by Paul Freibott on June 8, 2006 - 10:16pm.

I wasn’t expecting to learn much about fitness from a woman who’s nearly 50, even if that woman is tennis champ Martina Navratilova. And as a relatively young male (37), the last thing I anticipated was feeling jealous, but that’s what happened.

After six years of aches and pains every morning, I’ve forgotten what it feels like to wake up feeling refreshed. Until I stretch and have a hot, muscle-relaxing shower, I’m useless and grumpy. In my daily life, I walk a lot, practice yoga, and eat very few processed foods, but I do it all with rickety bones and somehow still have a chronic energy deficit.




Got a Minute? Meditate!

Got a Minute? Meditate!Posted by Paul Freibott on June 8, 2006 - 10:15pm.

I’m wary of anything that promises to change my life, especially if it has a quick-fix whiff about it. In my experience, profound change has always required patience, commitment, and most noticeably, my precious time. But what if that last ingredient wasn’t necessary?



User login


Join Lime Now, it's free

Meet New People

earthsjourney (View Profile)

Interests: Horseback riding, watching the silence of the snow, obviously anything creative, cooking
Inspiration: Like most of you, when I heard of recycling to save the earth, I naturally assumed I needed to separate my plastics, newspapers and glass. I was helping. That was all I needed to do. Then one day, I was searching around for something fun, some art, and I came across this abstract piece. It was gorgeous - it looked like a naturally formed wave of icy white water bursting into the air. When I looked closer at it, I saw that it was made from recycled plastic caps. I was in shock. What kind of imagination and talent does that take to look at a plastic cap and see more to it then what it actually is? How can someone be so ingenious that they can take something that we normally throw away and create such a piece of beauty with it? This is the thought process that I could not stop pondering and it took over my mind, body and soul and soon enough became my muse. I began Earth's Journey for this reason. I wanted to show the world that there was more to saving the earth than just recycling. There is beauty in things we can't even imagine, and so many ways to help our planet flourish. There are products out there that we all could use to completely decorate, furnish and run a home... all environmentally safe. You can buy organic bedding, non-toxic cleaning detergents, solar power, or make a change in a small way by using energy-efficient light bulbs. But the best part of recycling and being eco-friendly is the beauty that you'll find here, with all of our different artisans. As you can see I'm very passionate about this type of artistic creativity, and I hope you will be too. I invite you to sit back, relax and ... Be Inspired by Green!

More new members | Create your profile