Living with the other side

We all have untapped potentials and psychic abilities. With a deep exploration of our minds, it is possible to unlock these potentials. 

In understanding our egos, our ‘I, Me and My’ levels of consciousness, time can expand and the world of opposites becomes less daunting.

Noel Harding may have started life as a regular working-class boy, but has spent years studying, exploring his own unconscious mind and his part in the universe. He has also applied what he has experienced in owning and operating many retail businesses with his wife, in addition to his studies in Social Welfare work and Professional Writing.

In Living with the Other Side, Noel shares some of his own personal experiences, as well as guiding the reader to think constructively about their own life, in order to demonstrate how to access one’s most inner self in relation to the world around us and possibly beyond.

Also included are some exercises that can be done to provide questioning and exploration of one’s self.

When we begin to calm the turbulence of the mind, our real self shines through.

Through our lives we care, we aspire, we love, we pain, we accept and we grow. The true and real we seek; the best is always within and known. 

Living with the Other Side is for anyone interested in understanding and unlocking the power of their own mind.

Everyday Conversations with God

When Judith was asked to write the reflections for the front page of the weekly church newsletter, she wrote about the ordinary, everyday moments of her week and the conversations she had with God during these times. In the process of writing these reflections for others to read, she realised she was in fact exploring her own relationship with God. When the words and ideas would flow like a creek after rain she was open to conversation. On the days when it felt like trudging through creek bed mud after a long hot summer Judith was having a one-sided conversation with God. The only voice she heard was her own.

Judith’s reflections resonated with members of the congregation, not because of Judith’s words or her ordinariness but the breath between the words. The gentle reminder God’s voice is not confined to a special place. It is often clearest in places we do not expect to hear it, in the most ordinary moments of our everyday lives.

Whittlesea’s Dark Past

Come along on a journey through Whittlesea’s history and discover true tales of murder, hatred, obsession, and insanity. Meet convict ‘Blue Tom’, enraged labourer William Oats and others.

Is there a paranormal side to Whittlesea? Follow people’s experiences of the afterlife, unexplained phenomena and occurrences that may be linked to the past. Encounter Henry the ghost, haunted buildings, a paranormal investigator and other unexplained occurrences.

A dark past indeed!

My Story

In December 1955, Don Carrazza was one of two million post-war immigrants who arrived in Australia to establish a new life in an unknown land. 

From a small mountain village in southern Italy to a regional town in northwestern Victoria, My Story: A Life in Opportunity charts Don’s journey to Australia at the age of 15, the natural disaster that forced his family to start again after their arrival, and the indefatigable entrepreneurial spirit that brought successes and disappointments in equal measure. 

Buoyed by the support of his wife, Anna, and their extended family, Don Carrazza makes his mark in Mildura with a legacy of achievements borne of hard work, determination and resilience.

Letters to Clare

To celebrate a life of teaching, enclosed are letters, statements, and photos from individuals and families who have been part of the journey of

Clare Carmichael

Blood Soaked Soil

Confessions of an Estate Agent

Insulted, vilified, pursued by livestock,
electrocuted and propositioned, estate agents are as popular as wasps at a barbecue. But do they really deserve their public image? No, they don’t, says Rosalind Russell, who for eight years edited
The Diary of an Estate Agent column for the London Evening Standard’s                         Homes & Property section.
She mined a rich seam of funny, entirely true stories, some of which were so bizarre, she was sometimes suspected of making them up. She didn’t.

Insulted, vilified, pursued by livestock,
electrocuted and propositioned, estate agents are as popular as wasps at a barbecue. But do they really deserve their public image? No, they don’t, says Rosalind Russell, who for eight years edited
The Diary of an Estate Agent column for the London Evening Standard’s                         Homes & Property section.
She mined a rich seam of funny, entirely true stories, some of which were so bizarre, she was sometimes suspected of making them up. She didn’t.

A Caravan Holiday