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"content": "25 Subjects For Basic Life Skills<br /><br />By Meadow Clark<br /><br />A couple years ago, I compiled a list of 25 basic life skills that should be taught in school (but aren’t).<br /><br />The readers all chimed in with some great additions to the list. Some of you had thoughtful objections. Interestingly, a lot of you called for a curriculum for each class.<br /><br />I had no idea there would be a great interest in more class material for these hypothetical classes for life skills.<br /><br />As I said before, it’s not the government’s job to bring up children, nor should it be. But for all the time spent in school, wouldn’t it be ideal if young people left with skills that would truly enrich their lives?<br /><br />I’m not the only one saying we need to train our children better in basic life skills.<br />A lot of young people get tossed into the world and must learn the hard way how to navigate important life skills like personal finance and career searches. They sometimes discover these painful lessons by crawling back out of debt and spending hours poring over books. Since 2018 – when I wrote that past article – there have been calls to teach finance in high school.<br /><br />Just look at these headlines that came out not long ago:<br /><br />Magaziner pushes for mandated financial literacy courses<br />New bill would require all SC high school students to take ‘personal finance’ course<br />General Treasurer pushes for personal finance classes <br />This is not to say that the financial literacy courses won’t be provided by special interests. They very well may be. But it does show people recognize there is a disconnect in education, and that families are perhaps too overworked or fractured in some cases to provide important wisdom.<br /><br />E-Course: Complete Guide to Wildcrafting and Foraging (Ad)<br />It turns out that there’s a great interest in mastering these skills at any age! Myself included. I know I’d love to take these classes any time. Note: these suggestions are geared toward adults, so discretion is advised.<br /><br />Here, by popular demand, is a selection of educational materials for each of the original 25 life skills: a curriculum for adults.<br />We can put these skills to use and pass them on to the next generations.<br /><br />Editor’s Note: I know lots of you are homeschool parents. But please accept before reading this article that many kids are sent to public schools for a wide variety of reasons. Please do not turn this into an argument about homeschooling vs. public schooling or an insult festival toward parents who send their kids to school. That’s not productive. Let’s talk about what is taught vs. what is missing. And also, keep in mind that school is the only chance that some children have to learn new ideas because their parents are either disinterested or close-minded. While most of us try to teach our children these excellent skills at home, many young people are not raised in households like ours. ~ Daisy<br /><br />1 Individual Thought<br />Cutting Through the Matrix website<br />The Untethered Soul by Michael Singer<br />Order of Chaos, a fictional movie<br />The Road Back to You: An Enneagram Journey to Self-Discovery by Ian Morgan Cron<br /><br />2 Personal Finance, Saving, & Budgets<br />The Index Card by Helaine Olen<br />Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey<br />Articles and podcast by Ellen Brown<br />The Complete Tightwad Gazette by Amy Dacyczyn<br />The frugality section of this blog, The Organic Prepper<br /><br />3 Health & Nutrition<br />Green Smoothies for Life by JJ Smith<br />Eat for Health (extremely vegetable based but extremely effective for the most stubborn weight, health issues) by Joel Fuhrman<br />DDPYoga.com – not your mama’s yoga! Comes with a reasonable, easy diet plan.<br />Allen Carr’s Easy Way to Stop Smoking <br />Allen Carr’s Quit Drinking Without Willpower<br />Orthomolecular Medicine for Everyone: Megavitamin Therapeutics for Families and Physiciansby Abram Hoffer<br />Prescription for Nutritional Healing: A Practical A-to-Z Reference to Drug-Free Remedies by Phyllis A. Balch CNC<br /><br />4 Resiliency<br />The world can be crushing enough. Perhaps resiliency and tenacity can be emphasized instead of measuring people against society’s false idea of success. Failure is inevitable, after all, so people should be shown how to get back up again when they do fall.<br /><br />Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl <br />Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth<br />The Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph by Ryan Holiday<br />Way of the Peaceful Warrior: A Book that Changes Lives by Dan Milman<br />A Tree Grows in Brooklyn fiction book by Betty Smith<br />Resilient: How to Grow an Unshakable Core of Calm, Strength, and Happiness by Rick Hanson<br />No Mud, No Lotus: The Art of Transforming Suffering by Thich Nhat Hanh<br /><br />5 The Art of Conversation<br />The ability to carry on a conversation is truly an art form. Too many people have cast their abilities here to the wayside as the ever-present screen (whether that be from the phone, computer, tablet, or TV) has occupied their brain. For those seeking to learn how to avoid the awkward silence, may I recommend the following:<br /><br />Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age by Sherry Turkle<br />The Art of Conversation and How to Apply its Technique, by Milton Wright – if you can find it<br />How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie<br /><br />6 Logic, Reasoning, and Public Discourse<br />Did you know that schools have been rapidly dropping Logic classes? It’s time to stop the Idiocracy from spreading and revive Logic!<br /><br />Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You by Deborah J. Bennett<br />Being Logical: A Guide to Good Thinking by D.Q. McInerny<br />A Rulebook for Arguments by Anthony Weston<br />Thank You for Arguing, Third Edition by Jay Heinrichs<br /><br />7 Character<br />Character is who you are when nobody else is watching. For those whose introspection has caused to realize there is room for improvement, I suggest the following:<br /><br />The Road to Character by David Brooks<br />Character Disturbance: The Phenomenon of Our Age by George K. Simon PhD<br /><br />8 Negotiation<br />Everybody needs to know how to negotiate. It doesn’t matter if you think you aren’t a businessman – you are. This is a necessary skill that too many have neglected to train themselves in.<br /><br />Verbal Judo, Second Edition: The Gentle Art of Persuasion by George Thompson PhD<br />Articles by Liz Ryan on Forbes and LinkedIn<br /><br />9 Cooking from Scratch<br />Too many of today’s youth are clueless when it comes to cooking anything which isn’t pre-packaged.<br /><br />The Lost Art of Scratch Cooking<br />The First Timer’s Cookbook by Shaun Bucher<br />The Flat Broke Cookbook by Daisy Luther<br />Make sure to check out our FREE Quickstart Guide to Canning as well.<br /><br />10 Survival<br />Out of all the basic life skills covered in this list, this is the one that has truly been forgotten. Only in modern history has mankind decided he doesn’t need to know what it takes to survive the elements. We’ve become dependent on modern technology, always assuming it will be there. It won’t. For those who are seeking to improve their survivability post-disaster, may I recommend the following:<br /><br />98.6 Degrees: The Art of Keeping Your Ass Alive by Cody Lundin<br />When Technology Fails: A Manual for Self-Reliance, Sustainability, and Surviving the Long Emergency by Matthew Stein<br />When Disaster Strikes: A Comprehensive Guide for Emergency Prepping and Crisis Survival by Matthew Stein<br />For kids and adults:<br /><br />The Dangerous Book for Boys,<br />The American Boys Handy Book,<br />The Field and Forest Handy Book: New Ideas for Out of Doors<br /><br />11 Speed Reading (But with Deep Comprehension)<br />The faster you can read, the faster you can learn. We live within the Information Age. One has to be able to process large amounts of information as quickly as possible, and speed reading is one of the keys to doing that.<br /><br />“Want to Read Faster? Stop Saying The Words in Your Head As You Read”<br />Find your reading speed with this test offered by Staples.<br />Spritz app<br />How to read 300% faster in 20 minutes<br /><br />12 First Aid<br />You have to know some basic first aid as an adult. This will not only save you money, but can easily save your life as well.<br /><br />The Ultimate Survival Medicine Guide by Joseph Alton<br />The Prepper’s Medical Handbook by Willaim Forgey<br /><br />13 Crash Course on How Government Works<br />Citizens need to have a basic understanding of how their government works or they’re going to be caught blindsided by policies, laws, and regulations that they would have otherwise been clueless about.<br /><br />The Everything American Government Book: From the Constitution to Present-Day Elections, All You Need to Understand Our Democratic System (Everything®)<br /><br />14 Creativity<br />There are so many aspects of life where creativity allows one to prosper. As such, the well-rounded American would benefit from reading up on what it takes to be creative.<br /><br />Drawing from the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards<br />Journal Sparks: Fire Up Your Creativity with Spontaneous Art, Wild Writing, and Inventive Thinking by Emily K. Neuburger<br /><br />15 Household & Basic Car Mechanic Repairs<br />Things break. It happens. When this does occur, you can either pay $100 just for somebody to show up, or you can save yourself $300 by fixing it yourself. These books will help you with the latter option:<br /><br />Dare to Repair: A Do-it-Herself Guide to Fixing (Almost) Anything in the Home by Julie Sussman and Stephanie Glakas-Tenet<br />New Fix-It-Yourself Manual: How to Repair, Clean, and Maintain Anything and Everything In and Around Your Home by Reader’s Digest<br />Flylady.net keep your house clean even if you have ADHD.<br /><br />16 Time Management, Focus, and Productivity<br />If one cannot manage their time, they will have a next to impossible time with being successful. For those who seek to improve their ability to manage their most valuable asset, here are some sources which will prove beneficial:<br /><br />Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity by David Allen and James Fallows<br />Never Be Late Again by Diana Delonzor<br /><br />17 How to Read Literature With Deeper Understanding<br />Being well-read in the classics allows one to better understand their own culture. Oftentimes, these books can be difficult to comprehend. They’re verbose, written in archaic language, and often seem boring. Here are some books to help one understand those books:<br /><br />The Well-Educated Mind by Susan Wise Bauer<br />How to Read Literature Like a Professor: A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines by Thomas Foster<br /><br />18 Entrepreneurship, Career, & Starting a Business in a Gig Economy<br />We’re all salesmen. We all have something to sell, and we all need to know the basics of running a business. Here are my recommendations in this realm:<br /><br />Four-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferris<br />Articles by Liz Ryan on Forbes and LinkedIn<br /><br />19 Etiquette<br />People are rude. Don’t be one of them. Far too many people are this way not because they desire to come across as abrasive and offensive, but because they’ve never been taught what proper etiquette looks like. This was once one of the basic life skills all people within society were taught. Now, this is a region woefully neglected.<br /><br />These books can help to bring some grace to your daily interactions with others:<br /><br />As a Lady Would Say Revised and Expanded: Responses to Life’s Important (and Sometimes Awkward) Situations by Sheryl Shade<br />As a Gentleman Would Say Revised and Expanded: Responses to Life’s Important (and Sometimes Awkward) Situations by John Bridges<br /><br />20 Social Skills<br />Social skills are different than etiquette and manners. It involves picking up on cues and tone, and knowing how to appropriately respond in different situations. There is dating etiquette and there is also dating social skills. These are just as important as having social awareness on the job.<br /><br />Improve Your Social Skills by Daniel Wendler<br />How to Get a Date Worth Keeping by Henry Cloud<br /><br />21 Study & Deep Research<br />Do you know how to truly delve into a topic, gleaning the good and forsaking the bad? This is an important skill for many facets of life, and these books will help you in that journey of discovery:<br /><br />How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren<br />The Science of Self-learning by Peter Hollins<br /><br />22 How to Selectively Make Real Friends<br />One of the more important basic life skills is the ability to choose good people to surround yourself with. You are the average of your friends. How do you make sure you are the best “average” possible? By choosing the best friends possible. This popular book will help you do so:<br /><br />How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie<br /><br />23 Effective Communication & Writing<br />Communication is key, goes the old adage, and for good reason. Proper communication is absolutely vital to marriage, relationships, business, and more. This is one of those basic life skills you never think you need to study up on until it’s too late: some form of miscommunication has led to disaster. These books will help you to become better at communicating, and limit your risk of problems caused by poor skills in this area:<br /><br />Strunk & White<br />On Writing Well<br />Word Power Made Easy by Normal Lewis<br /><br />24 Resume & Cover Letters<br />Do you know how to get the job you want? A large part of that is by knowing how to write a good resume and cover letter. Here is my advice on the matter:<br /><br />Use templates from Word and Google docs for formatting, then learn how to write an attention-grabbing human-voiced resume that gets that foot in the door.<br /><br />25 Bonuses: Geography & Relationships<br />Geography: online.seterra.com and this fun quiz website<br />Relationships: The 5 Love Languages by Gary Chapman<br /><br /><a href=\"https://www.naturalblaze.com/2022/01/25-subjects-for-basic-life-skills.html\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.naturalblaze.com/2022/01/25-subjects-for-basic-life-skills.html</a>",
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"content": "25 Subjects For Basic Life Skills\n\nBy Meadow Clark\n\nA couple years ago, I compiled a list of 25 basic life skills that should be taught in school (but aren’t).\n\nThe readers all chimed in with some great additions to the list. Some of you had thoughtful objections. Interestingly, a lot of you called for a curriculum for each class.\n\nI had no idea there would be a great interest in more class material for these hypothetical classes for life skills.\n\nAs I said before, it’s not the government’s job to bring up children, nor should it be. But for all the time spent in school, wouldn’t it be ideal if young people left with skills that would truly enrich their lives?\n\nI’m not the only one saying we need to train our children better in basic life skills.\nA lot of young people get tossed into the world and must learn the hard way how to navigate important life skills like personal finance and career searches. They sometimes discover these painful lessons by crawling back out of debt and spending hours poring over books. Since 2018 – when I wrote that past article – there have been calls to teach finance in high school.\n\nJust look at these headlines that came out not long ago:\n\nMagaziner pushes for mandated financial literacy courses\nNew bill would require all SC high school students to take ‘personal finance’ course\nGeneral Treasurer pushes for personal finance classes \nThis is not to say that the financial literacy courses won’t be provided by special interests. They very well may be. But it does show people recognize there is a disconnect in education, and that families are perhaps too overworked or fractured in some cases to provide important wisdom.\n\nE-Course: Complete Guide to Wildcrafting and Foraging (Ad)\nIt turns out that there’s a great interest in mastering these skills at any age! Myself included. I know I’d love to take these classes any time. Note: these suggestions are geared toward adults, so discretion is advised.\n\nHere, by popular demand, is a selection of educational materials for each of the original 25 life skills: a curriculum for adults.\nWe can put these skills to use and pass them on to the next generations.\n\nEditor’s Note: I know lots of you are homeschool parents. But please accept before reading this article that many kids are sent to public schools for a wide variety of reasons. Please do not turn this into an argument about homeschooling vs. public schooling or an insult festival toward parents who send their kids to school. That’s not productive. Let’s talk about what is taught vs. what is missing. And also, keep in mind that school is the only chance that some children have to learn new ideas because their parents are either disinterested or close-minded. While most of us try to teach our children these excellent skills at home, many young people are not raised in households like ours. ~ Daisy\n\n1 Individual Thought\nCutting Through the Matrix website\nThe Untethered Soul by Michael Singer\nOrder of Chaos, a fictional movie\nThe Road Back to You: An Enneagram Journey to Self-Discovery by Ian Morgan Cron\n\n2 Personal Finance, Saving, & Budgets\nThe Index Card by Helaine Olen\nTotal Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey\nArticles and podcast by Ellen Brown\nThe Complete Tightwad Gazette by Amy Dacyczyn\nThe frugality section of this blog, The Organic Prepper\n\n3 Health & Nutrition\nGreen Smoothies for Life by JJ Smith\nEat for Health (extremely vegetable based but extremely effective for the most stubborn weight, health issues) by Joel Fuhrman\nDDPYoga.com – not your mama’s yoga! Comes with a reasonable, easy diet plan.\nAllen Carr’s Easy Way to Stop Smoking \nAllen Carr’s Quit Drinking Without Willpower\nOrthomolecular Medicine for Everyone: Megavitamin Therapeutics for Families and Physiciansby Abram Hoffer\nPrescription for Nutritional Healing: A Practical A-to-Z Reference to Drug-Free Remedies by Phyllis A. Balch CNC\n\n4 Resiliency\nThe world can be crushing enough. Perhaps resiliency and tenacity can be emphasized instead of measuring people against society’s false idea of success. Failure is inevitable, after all, so people should be shown how to get back up again when they do fall.\n\nMan’s Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl \nGrit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth\nThe Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph by Ryan Holiday\nWay of the Peaceful Warrior: A Book that Changes Lives by Dan Milman\nA Tree Grows in Brooklyn fiction book by Betty Smith\nResilient: How to Grow an Unshakable Core of Calm, Strength, and Happiness by Rick Hanson\nNo Mud, No Lotus: The Art of Transforming Suffering by Thich Nhat Hanh\n\n5 The Art of Conversation\nThe ability to carry on a conversation is truly an art form. Too many people have cast their abilities here to the wayside as the ever-present screen (whether that be from the phone, computer, tablet, or TV) has occupied their brain. For those seeking to learn how to avoid the awkward silence, may I recommend the following:\n\nReclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age by Sherry Turkle\nThe Art of Conversation and How to Apply its Technique, by Milton Wright – if you can find it\nHow to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie\n\n6 Logic, Reasoning, and Public Discourse\nDid you know that schools have been rapidly dropping Logic classes? It’s time to stop the Idiocracy from spreading and revive Logic!\n\nLogic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You by Deborah J. Bennett\nBeing Logical: A Guide to Good Thinking by D.Q. McInerny\nA Rulebook for Arguments by Anthony Weston\nThank You for Arguing, Third Edition by Jay Heinrichs\n\n7 Character\nCharacter is who you are when nobody else is watching. For those whose introspection has caused to realize there is room for improvement, I suggest the following:\n\nThe Road to Character by David Brooks\nCharacter Disturbance: The Phenomenon of Our Age by George K. Simon PhD\n\n8 Negotiation\nEverybody needs to know how to negotiate. It doesn’t matter if you think you aren’t a businessman – you are. This is a necessary skill that too many have neglected to train themselves in.\n\nVerbal Judo, Second Edition: The Gentle Art of Persuasion by George Thompson PhD\nArticles by Liz Ryan on Forbes and LinkedIn\n\n9 Cooking from Scratch\nToo many of today’s youth are clueless when it comes to cooking anything which isn’t pre-packaged.\n\nThe Lost Art of Scratch Cooking\nThe First Timer’s Cookbook by Shaun Bucher\nThe Flat Broke Cookbook by Daisy Luther\nMake sure to check out our FREE Quickstart Guide to Canning as well.\n\n10 Survival\nOut of all the basic life skills covered in this list, this is the one that has truly been forgotten. Only in modern history has mankind decided he doesn’t need to know what it takes to survive the elements. We’ve become dependent on modern technology, always assuming it will be there. It won’t. For those who are seeking to improve their survivability post-disaster, may I recommend the following:\n\n98.6 Degrees: The Art of Keeping Your Ass Alive by Cody Lundin\nWhen Technology Fails: A Manual for Self-Reliance, Sustainability, and Surviving the Long Emergency by Matthew Stein\nWhen Disaster Strikes: A Comprehensive Guide for Emergency Prepping and Crisis Survival by Matthew Stein\nFor kids and adults:\n\nThe Dangerous Book for Boys,\nThe American Boys Handy Book,\nThe Field and Forest Handy Book: New Ideas for Out of Doors\n\n11 Speed Reading (But with Deep Comprehension)\nThe faster you can read, the faster you can learn. We live within the Information Age. One has to be able to process large amounts of information as quickly as possible, and speed reading is one of the keys to doing that.\n\n“Want to Read Faster? Stop Saying The Words in Your Head As You Read”\nFind your reading speed with this test offered by Staples.\nSpritz app\nHow to read 300% faster in 20 minutes\n\n12 First Aid\nYou have to know some basic first aid as an adult. This will not only save you money, but can easily save your life as well.\n\nThe Ultimate Survival Medicine Guide by Joseph Alton\nThe Prepper’s Medical Handbook by Willaim Forgey\n\n13 Crash Course on How Government Works\nCitizens need to have a basic understanding of how their government works or they’re going to be caught blindsided by policies, laws, and regulations that they would have otherwise been clueless about.\n\nThe Everything American Government Book: From the Constitution to Present-Day Elections, All You Need to Understand Our Democratic System (Everything®)\n\n14 Creativity\nThere are so many aspects of life where creativity allows one to prosper. As such, the well-rounded American would benefit from reading up on what it takes to be creative.\n\nDrawing from the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards\nJournal Sparks: Fire Up Your Creativity with Spontaneous Art, Wild Writing, and Inventive Thinking by Emily K. Neuburger\n\n15 Household & Basic Car Mechanic Repairs\nThings break. It happens. When this does occur, you can either pay $100 just for somebody to show up, or you can save yourself $300 by fixing it yourself. These books will help you with the latter option:\n\nDare to Repair: A Do-it-Herself Guide to Fixing (Almost) Anything in the Home by Julie Sussman and Stephanie Glakas-Tenet\nNew Fix-It-Yourself Manual: How to Repair, Clean, and Maintain Anything and Everything In and Around Your Home by Reader’s Digest\nFlylady.net keep your house clean even if you have ADHD.\n\n16 Time Management, Focus, and Productivity\nIf one cannot manage their time, they will have a next to impossible time with being successful. For those who seek to improve their ability to manage their most valuable asset, here are some sources which will prove beneficial:\n\nGetting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity by David Allen and James Fallows\nNever Be Late Again by Diana Delonzor\n\n17 How to Read Literature With Deeper Understanding\nBeing well-read in the classics allows one to better understand their own culture. Oftentimes, these books can be difficult to comprehend. They’re verbose, written in archaic language, and often seem boring. Here are some books to help one understand those books:\n\nThe Well-Educated Mind by Susan Wise Bauer\nHow to Read Literature Like a Professor: A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines by Thomas Foster\n\n18 Entrepreneurship, Career, & Starting a Business in a Gig Economy\nWe’re all salesmen. We all have something to sell, and we all need to know the basics of running a business. Here are my recommendations in this realm:\n\nFour-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferris\nArticles by Liz Ryan on Forbes and LinkedIn\n\n19 Etiquette\nPeople are rude. Don’t be one of them. Far too many people are this way not because they desire to come across as abrasive and offensive, but because they’ve never been taught what proper etiquette looks like. This was once one of the basic life skills all people within society were taught. Now, this is a region woefully neglected.\n\nThese books can help to bring some grace to your daily interactions with others:\n\nAs a Lady Would Say Revised and Expanded: Responses to Life’s Important (and Sometimes Awkward) Situations by Sheryl Shade\nAs a Gentleman Would Say Revised and Expanded: Responses to Life’s Important (and Sometimes Awkward) Situations by John Bridges\n\n20 Social Skills\nSocial skills are different than etiquette and manners. It involves picking up on cues and tone, and knowing how to appropriately respond in different situations. There is dating etiquette and there is also dating social skills. These are just as important as having social awareness on the job.\n\nImprove Your Social Skills by Daniel Wendler\nHow to Get a Date Worth Keeping by Henry Cloud\n\n21 Study & Deep Research\nDo you know how to truly delve into a topic, gleaning the good and forsaking the bad? This is an important skill for many facets of life, and these books will help you in that journey of discovery:\n\nHow to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren\nThe Science of Self-learning by Peter Hollins\n\n22 How to Selectively Make Real Friends\nOne of the more important basic life skills is the ability to choose good people to surround yourself with. You are the average of your friends. How do you make sure you are the best “average” possible? By choosing the best friends possible. This popular book will help you do so:\n\nHow to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie\n\n23 Effective Communication & Writing\nCommunication is key, goes the old adage, and for good reason. Proper communication is absolutely vital to marriage, relationships, business, and more. This is one of those basic life skills you never think you need to study up on until it’s too late: some form of miscommunication has led to disaster. These books will help you to become better at communicating, and limit your risk of problems caused by poor skills in this area:\n\nStrunk & White\nOn Writing Well\nWord Power Made Easy by Normal Lewis\n\n24 Resume & Cover Letters\nDo you know how to get the job you want? A large part of that is by knowing how to write a good resume and cover letter. Here is my advice on the matter:\n\nUse templates from Word and Google docs for formatting, then learn how to write an attention-grabbing human-voiced resume that gets that foot in the door.\n\n25 Bonuses: Geography & Relationships\nGeography: online.seterra.com and this fun quiz website\nRelationships: The 5 Love Languages by Gary Chapman\n\nhttps://www.naturalblaze.com/2022/01/25-subjects-for-basic-life-skills.html",
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