The Open Shelf Good Protocols
Reading settings

Belovedness and the secure base

Being held, so a child can go out and come back.

Language American Sign Language is a language here, not an accommodation.
Format
Public domain

On Children On Children (from The Prophet)

Gibran's short passage on what it means to raise a child you do not own — that they come through you but not from you, and that your task is to be a steady bow, not to aim the arrow.

Why it belongs It is the whole posture of this library in a page. The Prophet entered the public domain in the United States in 1923, so On Children can sit here whole, in English and in fresh translations we make ourselves.

  • Belovedness and the secure base
  • The thread of years

In English, Arabic audiobook plain language

Cover: A worn cloth-bound book with gilt lettering, held open to a single short poem.

Ours, freely

Still Building, Already Enough

A short letter to a parent who feels behind: that a child is being formed and is already whole at the same time, and that both are true in the same afternoon.

Why it belongs Our own work, offered in full and freely, in every language the pipeline can carry it into with a community reviewer's sign-off, and in every format we can produce — audio, large print, plain language, and sign.

  • Belovedness and the secure base
  • Making and repair

In English, Spanish, Vietnamese, Somali, Amharic audiobook plain language

Cover: A hand-lettered title on warm paper, with a small pencil drawing of an unfinished house.

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