Who in this modern day and age believes in miracles?
Anne Cooper didn’t, until miracles started happening to her. They led her to explore territory previously foreign to her, and the astounding lessons she learned compelled her on a journey to a second, better life.
Praise for Second Life
Second Life is inspiring, life changing. Readers will be examining their own lives as Anne reveals the many dimensions of hers.
Anne’s journey is heart-wrenching and powerful. I cried and cheered, and many times got goosebumps. Anne’s spiritual experiences confirm what many have hoped for – a loving Universe and a purpose for our soul…
Anne gives the reader hope and a sense of reassurance that death is merely a word, it is not the end.
Anne teaches us that no matter what life might bring, there’s hope. Our only task is to stay open to possibility. Cooper is an engaging writer; she shares her story in a way that is interesting, insightful, and inspiring.
Anne has told this story … so well that it rises above the kind of tragedy you don’t want to read to the kind of page-turner you can’t put down.
Second Life offers all who know the pain of loss a new way to understand themselves and their place in the universe.
Anne was an unlikely candidate for miracles. Raised Catholic, Anne abandoned the family faith in her teens, and raised her three boys to simply be good people, despite her husband’s hidden alcoholism. It all worked, until the veneer of her near-perfect life was shattered by tragic and violent death.
Anne thought she would never get past the grief. And then the miracles started to happen. Real miracles, events that seemed to transcend the limitations of time and space and flesh. Our greatest tragedies, she learned, teach us who we truly are.
Energy is neither created nor destroyed. Be open to possibility.
And pay attention.