I am so much more

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I am so much more than a victim.

I am a survivor.

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10 Superfoods Women Should Eat

My reaction to “10 Superfoods Women Should Eat” {E658E462-3D75-42CF-8DFB-76D21C88B0CD}quinoa-2

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Who is my Heisenberg?

May 20, 2017 @ 6:29 a.m.

Who is my Heisenberg?

I have a mental illness. This is not something I chose. This is not something of which I am proud. This is not something I want any more than Walter White wanted to have cancer. But our earnest desires couldn’t save either of us from the painful truth.

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Book of Kells Now Free to View Online

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What it means to be human

10557218_10152631694479656_500612965268380230_nDon’t expect to get the answer from Heather Zinger. And according to her, you won’t find it anywhere – no matter where you may look.

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Four Moorhead mayoral candidates tout their strengths at public forum

Mark Hintermeyer

Mark Hintermeyer

Dear Editor,

I am writing in response to the article published October 9th titled “4 Moorhead mayoral candidates tout their strengths at public forum.”

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October is Pregnancy & Infant Loss Awareness Month

The Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Movement began in the United States on October 25, 1988 when then-American President Ronald Reagan designated the month of October 1988 as Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month.

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Morbid Obesity & Other Impairments

I saw this image posted on facebook yesterday and couldn’t ignore it.

(https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10200612476900927&set=p.10200612476900927&type=1&theater)Image (more…)

How to support someone with PTSD – part one

I have recently been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. It is an aptly named “disease” – though it is not a mental illness. It is a normal reaction to a traumatic life event.

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The Clothesline Project Comes to NDSU

* get help
* get out
*get a (better) life

by Jacqueline Dotzenrod – HPR Contributing Writer

Women of the Midwest fondly say “farewell” to those bygone days when prairie wives would haul water from the well, heat it over a fire and scrub their knuckles raw over a washboard to clean the laundry. But there is one aspect of this chore coming back into style – the clothesline.

This week at the North Dakota State University campus, the clothesline is serving a new role in giving students and faculty a chance to air out unpleasantness from their past. The Clothesline Project is a nationwide movement that began in 1990 as part of an annual “Take Back the Night” march and rally in Hyannis, Massachusetts. Since then, women have come forward to create shirts and the line continues to grow.

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