Adullam Bookstore
We sell bibles, Christian literatures, inspirational/motivational books, educational &Business Literatures. We also supply office and school stationaries.
06/03/2026
This book: “The Midas Touch” by Kenneth E. Hagin is a game-changer!
I’ve heard so many extremes about prosperity within the Christendom, is either “God wants you broke to be holy” or “name it, claim it, and you’ll be a millionaire tomorrow.”
But, the author here, cuts right through the noise with such wisdom and balance. He started with the story of King of Midas, who got everything he touched turned to gold… only to lose the ability to eat, drink, or hug his own daughter. That exposed me to much thought.
The author said that there are two dangerous ditches on the road of life: the poverty mentality on one side and the unhealthy obsession with money on the other. But thank God, there’s a straight middle road — the biblical one!
This book didn’t just teach me — it corrected me, encouraged me, and gave me fresh faith to line my life up with God’s Word on money, giving, and receiving. I feel freer, more purposeful, and excited about prospering for the right reasons — to bless others and do God’s will.
If you’ve ever felt confused about biblical prosperity, do yourself a favor and read this. It’s short, powerful, and full of Scripture that will set you free. I highly recommend the book!
06/03/2026
Main Street Millionaire is a guide to building real, sustainable wealth by acquiring overlooked small businesses on “Main Street” rather than chasing high-risk, high-burn startups. Codie Sanchez breaks down how everyday people can buy existing businesses using creative financing, then grow them through systems, automation, and solid management. She introduces her R.I.C.H. MethodResearch, Invest, Command, and Harness as a step-by-step framework to find, buy, and scale profitable businesses. The book is grounded, practical, and designed for action.
Seven Impactful Lessons I Learned
Lesson 1: Boring businesses can build extraordinary wealth.
While everyone chases flashy tech startups, small service businesses like laundromats, car washes, and plumbing companies generate stable, predictable cash flow and are often undervalued.
Lesson 2: You don’t have to start from scratch.
Buying an existing business means you’re acquiring customers, systems, employees, and revenue on day one bypassing the riskiest part of entrepreneurship.
Lesson 3: Ownership is the ultimate freedom.
Instead of working a 9-to-5 job or freelancing forever, owning a business gives you equity, leverage, and time if managed correctly.
Lesson 4: You can buy a business with other people’s money.
Through SBA loans, seller financing, and investors, you don’t need to be wealthy to buy a business. You just need to know how to structure deals.
Lesson 5: Systems and people run the business, not you.
Codie emphasizes building systems and hiring the right team so the business doesn’t depend on you. True freedom comes from working on the business, not in it.
Lesson 6: The R.I.C.H. Method is a blueprint for success.
Her four-step framework Research, Invest, Command, Harness outlines everything from how to find a deal to how to grow and exit profitably.
Lesson 7: Wealth doesn’t require invention just action.
You don’t have to invent the next big thing. You just need to take action on proven models. Buying and improving a business is often smarter than trying to innovate from scratch.
Main Street Millionaire is a practical, no-nonsense playbook for people who want to build wealth through entrepreneurship without the risk, burnout, or hype of startups. Codie Sanchez combines tactical advice with mindset shifts that can completely reframe your financial future. It’s not theoretical it’s immediately actionable.
04/03/2026
There Is No Such Thing As A Casual Relationship.
We may like to pretend there is, rename attachment as vibes and call access nothing serious.
We label emotional exchanges casual to avoid responsibility.
But relational intelligence tells us something uncomfortable; every connection costs something internally attention, regulation, hope, identity, memory.
From a psychoanalytic lens, we are never drawn to people randomly.
We are pulled by unconscious needs unfinished childhood patterns, unmet emotional hungers, familiar wounds looking for resolution.
You don’t just “like” people.
You recognize them at a nervous-system level.
That’s why certain people feel magnetic.
This is why some relationships activate anxiety, others numbness, others over-giving.
They are touching old internal templates attachment styles, survival strategies, beliefs you formed long before language.
So when we say “it’s casual,” what we often mean is;
"I don’t want to look too closely at what this is stirring in me".
"I don’t want to be accountable for the emotional impact".
"I want the benefits of connection without the mirror it holds up".
But relationships are mirrors whether we consent or not.
They shape how we see ourselves, reinforce or challenge our self-worth and either heal old patterns or deepen them.
That’s why discernment matters. Not everyone deserves emotional access to you. And not every connection is meant to be sustained.
There is no casual relationship, only conscious or unconscious ones.
And unconscious relationships always collect interest.
Who comes to mind as you read this?
18/02/2026
100 THINGS WE'VE LOST TO THE INTERNET
Imagine stepping into a time machine, not to visit the roaring twenties or ancient Rome, but to a mere two decades ago. A world without Google Maps, Instagram stories, or the constant hum of notifications. Pamela Paul's "100 Things We've Lost to the Internet" invites us on this unexpected journey, not to romanticise the past, but to help us understand our relationship with the present. Here are SEVEN of the many things we've lost that resonated deeply with me:
1. The Thrill of the Unknown:
Remember the anticipation of waiting for a handwritten letter, the delicious uncertainty of who might be on the other end of the landline? The internet, for all its convenience, has replaced that with the predictable scroll, the curated feed. Paul reminds us of the beauty of not knowing, of letting curiosity simmer instead of instantly gratifying it.
2. The Power of Boredom:
In a world of constant stimulation, boredom has become a dirty word. Yet, Paul argues, it's in those quiet moments, unpropped by screens, that imagination takes flight, creativity sparks, and introspection deepens. She calls us to reclaim the lost art of “doing nothing," and to let our minds wander and surprise us.
3. The Grace of Imperfection:
Remember the grainy charm of Polaroid pictures, the handwritten note with its telltale smudges? The internet, with its filters and flawless facades, has bred a culture of perfectionism. Paul reminds us of the beauty in the unpolished, the real, the unfiltered. It's a message of self-acceptance, a balm to the soul in the age of curated online personas.
4. The Power of Aloneness:
Before the internet, being alone was a normal and healthy state of being. It involved solitude, reflection, and self-care. Paul reveals how being alone can benefit our well-being by giving us space, peace, and perspective. She also warns us to protect our time alone, as the internet can invade it and make us feel lonely, anxious, and overwhelmed.
5. The Joy of Serendipity:
Stumbling upon a handwritten recipe in a dusty cookbook, discovering a hidden bookstore tucked away on a cobblestone street – these were the serendipitous joys of the pre-Internet age. Paul laments the loss of chance encounters, of the unexpected treasures waiting to be unearthed if we just put down our phones and explore.
6. The Art of Deep Listening:
Before the internet, tweets, reels, and stories, listening was a respectful and attentive way to engage with someone. It involved hearing, understanding, and responding. Paul illustrates how listening can improve our relationships by showing interest, empathy, and support. She also urges us to practice listening, as the internet can distract, interrupt, and isolate us.
7. How to write a letter:
Before the internet, writing a letter was a meaningful and personal way of communicating with someone. It required time, effort, and care. Paul shows us how writing a letter can express our emotions, thoughts, and personality in a way that email, text, or social media can’t. She also encourages us to revive the art of letter writing, as it can strengthen our bonds, preserve our memories, and delight our recipients.
I found the book to be a masterful exploration of what the digital age has subtly, sometimes fiercely, reshaped in our lives. Reading this book wasn't a trip down memory lane; it was a call to action. It wasn't about abandoning technology, but about finding a healthy balance, a mindful co-existence with the digital world.
To get this book:
Buy 100 things we have lost to Internet (PDF) by Adullam Consult counselling on Selar Imagine stepping into a time machine, not to visit the roaring twenties or ancient Rome, but to a mere two decades ago. A world without Google Maps, Instagram stories, or the constant hum of notifications. Pamela Paul's "100 Things We've Lost to the Internet" invites us on this unexpected journey, n...
11/02/2026
Buy His needs, her Needs (Building Lasting relationships) -PDF Version by Adullam Consult counselling on Selar
Buy His needs, her Needs (Building Lasting relationships) -PDF Version by Adullam Consult counselling on Selar This isn’t just a marriage book. It’s a reminder that strong relationships don’t maintain themselves. They are nurtured daily, sometimes quietly, often imperfectly, but always intentionally.Highly recommended!!!
11/02/2026
A man sits at his desk, staring at a spreadsheet he doesn’t care about, quietly calculating how many years are left until retirement. He isn’t lazy. He isn’t ungrateful. He’s just restless. He wants work that feels alive. That quiet frustration is where The $100 Startup begins. Chris Guillebeau steps into that tension and offers something both hopeful and practical: you don’t need investors, a business degree, or a perfect plan. You need a useful skill, a real problem to solve, and the courage to start small.
What makes this book powerful is its simplicity. Guillebeau doesn’t romanticize entrepreneurship as flashy or complicated. He shows real stories of ordinary people who built profitable businesses with almost no capital. Photographers, consultants, tour guides, designers. They didn’t chase million dollar valuations. They built freedom. The book gently dismantles the myth that starting a business requires huge risk. Instead, it reframes entrepreneurship as a series of small experiments guided by value and clarity.
At its core, The $100 Startup is about autonomy. It challenges the belief that stability only comes from employment and proves that income can come from creativity and service. It speaks directly to anyone who feels stuck but capable, who knows they have something to offer but doesn’t know where to begin. The message is not “quit your job tomorrow.” The message is “start where you are, with what you have.”
5 Life Transforming Lessons to Learn
1. Value Creates Income, Not Ideas
A clever idea means nothing if it doesn’t solve a real problem. The most successful case studies in the book didn’t begin with innovation. They began with usefulness. If you can reduce stress, save time, increase convenience, or improve someone’s results, you have something people will pay for. Instead of asking “What business should I start?” ask “What problem can I solve well?”
2. Start Before You Feel Ready
Waiting for perfect timing is usually disguised fear. The people highlighted in the book didn’t have flawless plans. They tested small offers, adjusted based on feedback, and improved over time. Action creates clarity. Starting small reduces risk and builds confidence. You learn more from launching imperfectly than from planning endlessly.
3. Freedom Is a Better Goal Than Status
Many people chase entrepreneurship for image. The book shifts the focus toward lifestyle design. The real win is control over your time, energy, and direction. A modest but consistent income from something you enjoy can be more fulfilling than a prestigious job that drains you. Define success based on the life you want, not what looks impressive.
4. Sell First, Improve Second
Instead of building a product in isolation and hoping someone buys it, validate demand early. Offer a simple version. Pre sell. Test interest. When someone pays, that’s proof of value. This approach protects you from investing time and money into something that may never gain traction. Revenue is the best feedback.
5. Passion Is Good, But Skill and Demand Matter More
Loving something isn’t enough. The sweet spot lies where passion meets competence and market demand. The book encourages readers to look at what they’re already good at and find ways to package it in a way that serves others. Sustainable income comes from intersection, not just enthusiasm.
In Summary
The $100 Startup is a practical invitation to rethink work. It proves that entrepreneurship does not belong only to the wealthy, the highly connected, or the fearless. It belongs to those willing to serve, test, learn, and adapt. With minimal capital and a focus on value, anyone can begin building an income stream that aligns with their strengths and desired lifestyle. It is less about chasing wealth and more about reclaiming control.
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