Cindi mcmenamin biography template
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When Women Walk Alone: Finding Strength and Hope Through the Seasons of Life
In the beginning of the book Ms. McMenamin clearly states her objective in writing this book. “We will not be learning how to avoid these seasons of loneliness, but rather, we will learn how to strengthen ourselves in beställning to be ready when that path unfolds before us…I want to help you walk from the desert of aloneness to the oasis of abundance bygd seeing your alone times not as obstacles to your growth, but as opportunities to draw closer t
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Meet Cindi McMenamin
Cindi McMenamin is a national speaker and award-winning writer who helps women find strength for the soul. She has more than 30 years experience ministering to women as a pastor’s wife and Bible teacher. She has authored 16 books with Harvest House Publishers including When Women Walk Alone (more than 125,000 copies sold) and her newest, 12 Ways to Experience More with Your Husband. She and her husband, Hugh, have been married 30 years and live in Southern California with their grown daughter.
Tell us about your newest book.
12 Ways to Experience More with Your Husband is for the wife who wants to recapture her husband’s heart and experience the joy she once knew before complacency or emotional baggage set in. No matter how long you’ve been married, you can “be together, but feel miles apart.” This book helps a wife reignite the joy and passion she and her husband once shared by looking at small changes she can man to touch her husband’s heart in a b
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It happened. This week I snapped about COVID-19 and the resulting cruddy condition of this world.
I’d been staying positive for months. I’d been writing articles, on assignment for various sites, to encourage others despite the situation. Then it took its toll on me, too. And I learned something from it.
I’d finally been selected to be on the 2020 faculty for the Mount Hermon Christian Writers Conference – the premier Christian writing conference on the West Coast. After it was cancelled this year, I was praising God that I would still be able to serve on its faculty when it rescheduled the same program for 2021. “God is sovereign,” I told myself and others. “He knew, even when I was contracted for this, that it wouldn’t happen this year, but next.”
Then I got an email the other night, informing me that the financial impact to Mount Hermon this past spring, and its loss of revenue this summer from having to cancel its camps, prevented it from being able to host the 51-ye