Ladies' Success Magazine Inner Health, Outer Beauty
Langoh Health & Beauty Zone, health, beauty, skin care,
Langoh Health & Beauty Zone, health, beauty, skin care,
skin care
health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty
Inner Health, Outer Beauty. Look your best! Feel your best! Nutrilite® supplements are supported by scores of scientists, microbiologists, chemists, pharmacists, nutritionists, and other technicians. Nutrilite. The Best of Nature. The Best of Science zone diet health beauty .
health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty health beauty
Product Details
ISBN: 0446577588
ISBN-13: 9780446577588
Format: Hardcover, 240pp
Publisher: FaithWords
Sales Rank: 56,820
From the Publisher
Popular author and speaker Lisa Bevere offers a clear, biblical alternative to the culture's mixed messages on female design and behavior.
Today's twisted pictures of gender roles create confusion over how a woman should define herself. Women and men are encouraged to move closer to center and away from the traits that distinguish male from female. How can women feel good about themselves when society is constantly dictating what they can and should be?
In FIGHT LIKE A GIRL, Lisa Bevere exhorts us to embrace the differences between sexes. Her goal is to encourage women to

celebrate the unique aspects of femininity. Instead of trying to adopt ill-fitting character traits, women should see themselves as designed and valued by God and savor their femininity as their strength, not a flaw.
Author Biography: Lisa Bevere lives in Palmer Lake, Colorado.
From The Critics
Publishers Weekly
Bevere, an evangelical speaker and author known for tackling touchy topics with candor, wit and transparency, lays down the gauntlet again as she calls Christian women to cease trying to emulate men and embrace their feminine, strong nature. Bevere (Kissed the Girls and Made Them Cry) offers women a clear alternative to society's take on the definition of true strength. Rather than relinquishing the power and influence that she believes women innately embody for the sake of mimicking men's overt physical strength, women can choose to wield their impact for good by way of subtler, more feminine speech and conduct. Bevere expounds upon the ways women fight best "as caretakers of others' hearts, by lifting another's spirit by speaking strength to their weaknesses, and wisely offering images of healthier, life-enhancing practices." She asserts that enemies often fall before influence rather than brute strength: "A gentle tongue can break a bone" (Prov. 25:15). Although some women will be put off by the book's gender-essentialist stance (e.g., women are by nature more tender and more spiritual, etc.), others will resonate with that message. All will appreciate Bevere's authenticity as she delves deep to unmask long-held misconceptions regarding women' uniqueness and untapped potential. (May) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.