Mentally Challenged

Why Name Call?

by Cori Coleman


Formats

Hardcover
$25.49
$15.70
Softcover
$13.99
$11.99
E-Book
$7.99
Hardcover
$15.70

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 4/15/2010

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 230
ISBN : 9781452006741
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 230
ISBN : 9781452006734
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 230
ISBN : 9781452006758

About the Book

The fundamental principle of any change is the willpower to activate it. Where does this will power surface, within the mind. Inside each and every individual are characteristics that will define exactly who he or she is designed to be. God has a purpose for each and every one of us, but this purpose is not easily recognized and activated, as we tend to suffer various challenges in life. These challenges hinder us from awakening that special part of us necessary to excel. In life, you will soon realize everything is programmed from where you go to school to how you will decide to brush your teeth. Tradition is based upon controlling a mass amount of people who have no purpose and selling them a predestined future. And to that lies the question, what state of mind can undergo such manipulation – a state of mind that is challenged. Throughout time, certain unique individuals have been marked and labeled with one of the biggest titles to misrepresent a human being. While some suffer from specific mental conditions such as autism and schizophrenia, these are not mental challenges. Challenges are what you can overcome and mental disabilities are what these individuals have to live with. Understand this difference, because mental challenges, the true challenges in the mind, lie directly within us. Whether it is thinking before you react or realizing that you have a choice in life. I have set up a list of factors that render us challenged mentally. In life, these are the challenges that prevent us from becoming advanced individuals. Advanced individual’s makes for advanced people, and advanced people make a better way for a positively advancing society, which is highly probable of influencing the necessary change. In chapters like Talent is Talent, Coleman talks about how society has fixed our minds on believing that you can only achieve in what activity you are permitted to do. Parenting is a very delicate chapter because it focuses on preparing our children to become educated. Which indeed is a contributing factor to the necessary change, within us and around us. Various chapters throughout this book are going to guide you; all you have to do is be willing to consider and utilize the information. Self-reflection is a practice, and a practice that Coleman’s book will implement into many lives by recognizing and specifying what mental challenges can help improve who you are. If you ever wanted better from yourself then it will take patience, consideration, and a mirror. A special mirror has been created within the chapters of the book to help you create yourself into the image of you, which God has designed. With this book you cannot fail yourself because you can overcome and reverse the effects of these challenges. You may be wondering what the difference is from this book and other self-help projects. Nothing. This book is just like those other self-help titles because it is another crucial and delicate piece to the puzzle. Mentally Challenged: Why Name Call is a contributing body of knowledge devoted to help create a stride within you to know and value yourself better. If you want better, you are going to have to face you first, and here is your chance to make it all happen. Create yourself or discover yourself, the choice is yours.


About the Author

Cori Coleman is first a father and second, a devoted writer who brings promising flow, passion, and thrill to literature. He began writing at age 14, which is when he composed his first twenty-two-page book of poetry. His poems were driven by frustration with young relations with teenage girls and lack of loyalty in friendship. Puzzled up until age 16, Coleman sought out to write down how he felt about what he observed. Not yet capable of understanding why certain individuals made the decisions they made and reacted as they instantaneously did so, Cori’s interest grew as his curiosity blossomed into multiple questions, enforced by passion for answers. In Coleman’s senior year of high school he was going through big trouble with his grades. By the end of the first semester, administrators called him into the office to inform him that if he failed any class, he would not graduate. Most of his time in high school was spent asking questions, why did this girl date this guy, why did that guy fight the other guy and why so angrily, and also why were more students deciding to engage in hooking class, having sex, and popularity. Grades became second nature to his first nature, observation. Learning about people’s behaviors in life was so fascinating that he wrote a thirty-page report on youth and young adult behaviors in and outside the school system. Before Cori had the opportunity to present his report to his guidance counselor, an unfortunate accident occurred, which resulted in him being expelled from high school for two quarters of school. During this suspension, it stumbled upon him the very idea to kick-start the writing pattern, which leads him to various common logical discoveries in human behavior. These discoveries caused him to write small articles no more than four to five pages at a time on various topics. Each article pertained to some form of behavior, which was observed, either previous to the suspension, or prior to. While out of school, Coleman was instructed to complete Saturday school, home school, and night school. After maintaining above a 3.8 GPA in all classes, he was allowed to go back to school in the fourth quarter. After returning in the fourth quarter the pressure was on as he only had two months to bring all of his grades back up to passing, for if he didn’t he would have surely failed and had to repeat his senior. Coleman struck like lighting as he recovered so quickly and by May 30th 2007, he found himself walking across the stage in his cap and gown accepting his diploma. After such a tough senior year, it dawned on him that none of what he went through was simply just for him; he had reviewed all of his articles and had come to the conclusion that he composed some sort of mirror. But, not just any mirror this was a mirror for reflection, a mirror where one of many individuals and eventually all, could look deep into the mirror and reflect on those characteristics they find best describe them for better or worse. This mirror brought much intuition to his theories of change and creating methods of it within the societies surrounding individuals with certain challenges in life. It took but a year from graduation when Coleman began to realize that all he had observed was for a good and better purpose. As he reviewed his articles over and over and continuously until God spoke directly into his spirit, an idea he stumbled upon so vividly it could have touched his nerves (literally) came to fruition. Mentally Challenged: Why Name Call became a body of information dedicated to separating stereotype from first level facts. It was this very project Coleman set his ambitions high and his devotion higher to become one of the many inspirational individuals dedicated and determined to see better fortune in society, in households, and more significantly in people.