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Prisoner of Love by Beverly Jenkins
Prisoner of Love by Beverly Jenkins








Prisoner of Love by Beverly Jenkins

These lists aren’t pretty (sorry), but they do help with archiving and search.Ģ022: ★★★★★ Emergent Strategy, adrienne maree brownLetter From a Region in My Mind, James Baldwin | Matrix, Lauren Groff | Sea of Tranquility, Emily St. I enjoy the slow process and the chance to reflect. Yes, I know this step is inefficient, and I don’t mind. Long story short, my book journal helps me understand my reading preferences, remember older titles, and be more intentional about what and whom I’m reading over time. Because I want to be intentional about reading more diverse voices, I also note which titles were authored by BIPOC, global, and LGBTQ+ writers. In addition, I use basic symbols to mark which books I own, which books I finish, and any re-categorizations along the way.

Prisoner of Love by Beverly Jenkins

When I fill a sheet, I add a second page for that category on the next available sheet. There’s a table of contents on page 1, and each page is dedicated to a category like fiction, science, or spirituality. My system is simple: I track the books I read each year, along with the titles on my want-to-read list. Goodreads offers some of this functionality, and they updated shelving features recently, but so far I prefer the flexibility of analog. This is where I dig in to organize my list by categories. (2) Every few months, I copy those titles into my book journal. “There is a tenderness and a kind of noticing that chaplains do that can make a world of difference.” Seems fitting for a book about chaplaincy, now that I think of it. All in all, I feel stronger for the discernment ahead of me. Most of all, it helped me remember that not-knowing and inhabiting "the spaces between" are core to the chaplain's endeavor. While this book didn't answer my specific questions, it did reinforce my connection to the profession as a whole. entrepreneurial possibilities (and limitations), ethics, financial models, and the tension between presence and outcomes. That being said, Cadge named and provided context for major thematic issues I'm encountering, and which the profession must navigate: invisible labor, liminal spaces, code switching, improvisation, institutional vs. I'm trying to make my way in that particular space post-CPE, and I feel quite alone. I found it helpful, but I wish workplace/office chaplains had been included. This book is a survey of various chaplaincy roles and the throughlines between them in one city (Boston).










Prisoner of Love by Beverly Jenkins