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No "terrible twos"
When my daughter Karen was two years old, she started throwing tantrums. These were so severe that she would finally fall asleep, exhausted. When she had tantrums during our Playcentre gatherings, my friends would suggest that I take her home instead of staying to help them tidy up. When we went grocery shopping, her screams would fill the supermarket aisle, and her sister, Julie, would cling to me for comfort.
How could I prove that hate and fear were not part of our lives?
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
December 17, 2001 issue
View Issue-
Random thoughts at Ground Zero
Bill Dawley
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YOUR LETTERS
with contributions from Henry Anetor, Nancy J. Doty, Carole Dardamanis, Dinny McFadden
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items of interest
with contributions from Berta Delgado, Tanis Helliwell, Michael Lerner, Mikal Gilmore, Muzaffer Iqbal
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Thinking for yourself
with contributions from Ron Ballard
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A war historian's spiritual perspective
By Jerry Collester
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A pacifist's building block of peace
with contributions from Paula Green
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If the future looks dark, trust God
By Lydya Gwakou
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Race, identity, tolerance, and world peace—a life story
By Mayannah Dahlheim
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Towers of strength
By William E. Moody
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Traveling ... lost and tired? You've got a guide
By Elizabeth Weir
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A late-blooming Pansy
By Beverly Graham
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Chasing rainbows
By Kim Shippey Sentinel staff
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No "terrible twos"
Anne Melville
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Eczema healed and fear of storms overcome
Jane Chatterton
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Finding strength and freedom in Spirit
Adelaide Rosenthal
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Terror banished
José Francisco Sanchez
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Christianity and hate
John Selover