Viva Editions are books that inform, enlighten, and entertain. The very name, "Viva!", is celebratory. And while Viva Editions is a line of books that are as fun as they are informational, the intention behind Viva is very serious—these are books that are truly helpful and intended to enhance people's lives.


Showing posts with label every day love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label every day love. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Keep those cards and letter coming!


Write letters and send postcards
The things that make me the happiest have an emotional and physical effect.  And even more so when you do something for someone else.  One of the most lasting of these things is a personal letter.
Being born in the transitional time between letters and computers, many people in my generation have already shunned snail mail as a way to communicate. This makes them rare, but a very inexpensive surprise. My grandmother was one of seven children, and they communicated with a round-robin letter. From mailbox to mailbox, they would add an update on their life and send it around to the next sibling. She taught me that letters are a valuable form of communication, something she’s emphasized as her memory slowly fades.
I got into the habit of writing letters and during the times where I was most stressed, a paper due, a newspaper deadline, or turmoil, I would write a letter. Letters live somewhere between thoughts and stories. They are a confidant and a piece of yourself that you can choose to scrap or share.
When I receive a letter, especially from someone who I haven’t heard from in awhile, I get a rush of endorphins, because I’m holding proof that the friend considered me. It’s the same rush I get when someone is thoughtful or goes out of their way to help me. Most friends reciprocate with a call to say how happy they were to open a personal note rather than another bill or W-2.
I followed epistolary literature in college, often using my break from studying as a chance to write letters. Perhaps letters will go the way of Wells Fargo wagons, but I’ll single-handedly support the post office as long as my friends have addresses and my fingers can write. Letters are my personal therapy, my rush of endorphins, my connection with those I love, and my alone time—my regular serving of happiness.
As the old Jimmy Durante song goes, “make someone happy.” A thoughtful, hand-written letter will do that EVERY TIME!

It's so important to make someone happy. 
Make just one someone happy…

Fame, if you win it,
 comes and goes in a minutes
.
Where's the real stuff in life, to cling to? 

Love is the answer!

 
Make someone happy. 
Make just one someone happy.
 And you will be happy too.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Excerpt of the Day: "Every Day Love" by Judy Ford


Falling in love: easy

Sustaining love: well, it’d be easier to complete a triathlon ten times over.

We long for love.  It’s a universal want.  But for some of us, sustaining love is difficult.  Counselor and author Judy Ford’s Every Day Love can help.  Filled with stories and experiences that are often overlooked as insignificant, this book sheds light on how to avoid pitfalls and celebrate the differences between yourself and your love.

Take a peek:

Not Easy Being a Sweetheart

You’ve probably experienced how your sweetheart can bring out the best in you and the worst in you? In the morning, sharing the paper, sipping coffee, making pancakes for the kiddies, looking forward to the evening out together—content and optimistic—all is right with the world. Your kids are smart and cute, your husband’s smart and cute, and you’re feeling on the smart and cute side yourself. In those smart and cute moments your heart swells up so big that you think it might burst.

Later it’s a whole new scenario. The kids make sandwiches, spill ketchup on the floor, leave crumbs on the counter. Your husband decides to remodel the bathroom. You’re glad to get the project started but secretly question his timing. Proud for showing restraint and not wanting to stir up trouble, you squelch your observations. But two hours before you’re scheduled to go out he’s still tearing down a wall and removing the sink.

“We have reservations across town,” you say. “Aren’t you going to get ready?”

He doesn’t respond.

“Are you going to get ready?” you ask a little louder. Still, no answer. To get his attention, you call his name. Firmly.

“What?” he answers.

“Why do you always do this?”

“Do what?”

“Why do you squeeze everything in at the last minute?”

“I thought you wanted me to remodel the bathroom.”

“Not when we have plans,” you snap.

“What’s your problem?” he snaps back. “There’s plenty of time.”

Next thing you know, you’re crying and slamming the door. “Geez,” you hear him mutter as he steps into the shower.

After all I do for you, you’re thinking. Later he confesses what he was thinking: I can never do anything right.

Without even knowing there are triggers, triggers get triggered. Buttons get pushed. Feelings get bruised. You hate to admit it but you’re hard on your sweetheart and hard on yourself. You know it’s impossible to get it right every time, but you want to. You expect to do better, you fail, you beat yourself up, you try again. You’re tired and cranky and when your sweetheart asks what’s wrong, you know you should be happy that he noticed, but his tone sounds more like criticism than concern.

“Nothing,” you snap.

“I was just asking,” he snaps.

Suddenly you’re embroiled in a snapping match.

You’d like to reach out, kiss and make up, but instead you walk on eggshells for a while. It’s hard. It hurts. It’s very confusing.

“I’m sorry,” you say.

You both mean it. You promise not to act that way again. You love your sweetheart, yet life around the home doesn’t always go in the direction intended.

It is not easy to be a person. It is not easy to be a sweetheart. A lover. A partner. A spouse. A friend. A parent. A child. A companion. A confidante. Much is expected, so many surprises. That smart, cute side we’re so proud of is not the only side. It seems there are multiple sides—our public side, our private side, and the secret side only our sweetheart knows.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Want to be in a happy relationship? (and who doesn't?!)

NATIONWIDE CASTING FOR FUN, SINGLE WOMEN & MEN
MAJOR CABLE NETWORK NOW CASTING THOSE WHO ARE MARRIAGE-MINDED!

* Are you tired of dating and ready to commit?
* Do you regularly date the wrong type?
* Are you willing to have your friends and family help you make the biggest decision of your life?
* Are you ready to be a part of a show that aims to challenge America's views on dating and marriage?

Magical Elves, the Peabody and Emmy Award-winning producers of Top Chef, Braxton Family Values and NBC's new upcoming Fashion Star, is currently seeking charismatic and attractive single men and women, 28-42 for a new relationship docu-series on cable's most popular TV network. We're looking for fun and open-minded individuals who are marriage-minded and serious about getting married.

Divorced is fine for us, but for this season we're not accepting applications from parents. Open to all ethnicities.

If you're hoping to help a friend or family member get married, PLEASE feel free to contact us or forward along!

TO SUBMIT:
Please email the information requested below to: casting@magicalelves.com

Be sure to include:
1. Your name (first and last)
2. Age
3. Contact phone number
4. City/Zip where you live
5. Three recent photos (jpg format please)
6. A bit about yourself and where you are with dating at the moment

Monday, August 1, 2011

We are meant to love 24/7 -every chance we get!

by Judy Ford

Viva Editions, $15.95, 263 pages

Life is too short not to show those you love how much you care every day. This is the basis of Judy Ford’s book Every Day Love: The Delicate Art of Caring for Each Other. Ford is a family counselor with 25+ years of experience and in her practice she found that it’s easy for people to fall in love. It is sustaining love from day to day that is the hard part.

Ford presents her ideas in a conversational style that is accessible and non-threatening. Each idea is followed by a love lesson – suggestions you can implement now to make important changes in your life. These lessons aren’t just meant for couples, but can be utilized to strengthen any relationship you want to improve. Each section is no more than a few pages so the book is perfect for browsing or reading on the go. But don’t be surprised if you read the book in one night. There are exercises for every type of learner. Ford suggests journaling, reciting daily mantras, and meditation, just to name a few. With this book, you’ll learn about yourself and your ability to love and be loved.

Reviewed by Kathryn Franklin

Friday, May 20, 2011

a love letter contest -enter and win!

San Francisco / Relationships / Relationship Advice
Write a love letter to Queen Elizabeth contest

May 20th, 2011 10:21 am PT
Janet Gallin, Love Letters Live
SF Love Letter Examiners
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Brenda Knight, San Francisco author and associate publisher of Cleis Press and Viva Editions, recently emailed me the following bit of information with the simple note, “You can have fun with this, right?” Well, yes, I can, and so can you.

Brenda has offered a prize of one of her wonderful books for the best letter to the Queen. Of course, you’ll be extolled on facebook and twitter as our winners and also be given the spot of honor here to share your winning letter with the Examiner.com readers.

Privilege has not shielded Queen Elizabeth or any of her family from sadness or tragedy. Personally, I think she has been absolutely heroic in maintaining her dignity through six decades of wrenching social changes and having to adapt publicly to unasked-for challenges in her family and political life. I think she deserves pile of love letters.

Remember that a love letter is not just for romance, but for any gratitude, appreciation, support, friendship or reviving times long past.

If you wish to write a formal letter, you should open with 'Madam' and close the letter with the form 'I have the honour to be, Madam, Your Majesty's humble and obedient servant'. This traditional approach is by no means obligatory. You should feel free to write in whatever style you feel comfortable.

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In honor of her coronation anniversary on June 2nd, please email me a copy of the letter you write to her at info@loveletterslive.com by contest deadline of noon May 29th. As Queen Elizabeth apparently does not have an email address (or a last name) you will have to write to her at home. Snail mail. And won’t that be nice when in another 200 years they are unearthed by someone and become part of her history and your part in it?

The address is:
Her Majesty the Queen
Buckingham Palace
London SW1A AA

I've just mailed mine and am eager to hear what you all say. And, thank you Brenda for thinking of this and offering the prize.

From me to you with love in the air,
Janet

By Janet Gallin, Love Letters Live
SF Love Letter Examiners
Janet Gallin hosts the weekly San Francisco talk-show" Love Letters Live" on KUSF, live-stream (KUSF.org. Click “Listen”) Wednesdays from 7:30 -8 p... Read more
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Continue reading on Examiner.com: Write a love letter to Queen Elizabeth contest - San Francisco love letter | Examiner.com http://www.examiner.com/love-letter-in-san-francisco/write-a-love-letter-to-queen-elizabeth-contest#ixzz1MuvEX0EU

Monday, April 4, 2011

love notes from our readers for "Every Day Love"

Ms. Ford ~

I have subscribed to Science of the Mind Magazine for the past 8 years. I think I remember seeing your book "Every Day Love" advertised before, but I never was moved to pick up a copy until the April issue....it must have been Divine Intervention. The monthly magazine arrived in my mail box early in March.

I went to Barnes and Noble a few days later gathered up a few recommended books, purchased a cup of coffee at the in-house Starbucks and started browsing through them...deciding which ones to purchase. I could not put your book down...I have it on my night stand and read several chapters each night. I knew almost instantly that I would be writing to you when I finished it. Tonight I finished it and am feeling a bit let down that that my nightly ritual with your book has ended.

I am in my 60's and have been in several relationships during my life...I think I finally got it right this time...reading your book made me realize that I have been doing many of the Love Lessons you talk about....your lessons have validated that I am on the right track...and you have offered many others that I will put into practice.

I have shared many chapters with my sweetie. Your book is so loving and so gentle...we could all benefit from treating our loved ones in this manner. It took me many years to get to this place...but I finally got it...thank you! I look forward to reading some of your other books.