Showing posts with label Therefore Choose Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Therefore Choose Life. Show all posts

Monday, December 11, 2023

Zoom chat with Tyler Dunlop on December 14. author of: Therefore Choose Life

Join a Zoom chat with Tyler Dunlop, Tim Den Bok and Alex Schadenberg on Thursday, December 14 at 2 pm (Eastern Time)

Tyler is the author of: Therefore Choose Life - My Journey from Hopelessness to Hope.

Register for the Zoom chat on Thursday December 14 at 2 pm (Registration Link).  

The book, which is on the Amazon best seller list, begins with the chapter, ‘The MAID Who Kills.’ It speaks of Tyler’s decision to seek MAID, discusses how he changed his mind on the subject, and ends with a scathing critique of the Canadian government’s legalization of this practice. In this and other chapters, Tyler attacks this policy as being utterly without moral justification. 

In my forward to the book I wrote:

"The story about Tyler Dunlop published by Orillia Matters in January 2023, moved me greatly. In the article Tyler said that he wanted to die by euthanasia (MAiD) because he had been homeless for much of the previous 8 years and he had lost hope in living. The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition responded by trying to raise some money to help Tyler find a place to live. We did raise a little bit of money but not enough to relieve the situation. Soon after I met with Tyler and once again I was greatly moved by his life experience. At that time Tyler had a good friend who was helping him so I encouraged him with some help.
The good news is that Tyler changed his mind and decided that there was hope and his life is worth living. This book is the outcome of the support of his friend Tim and Tyler wanting to be healthy and once again live his life with passion and hope. For all those who read this book you will gain insight into the truth as to how euthanasia (MAiD) is not about freedom or choice but rather it abandons the person while they are in a personal crisis. For many, life is difficult but with help and hope, they can be renewed in life. It is my hope that this book will help many seek hope and it will help Tyler, and those experiences similar human difficulties, choose life."

Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition 

Register for the Zoom chat on Thursday December 14 at 2 pm (Registration Link).

Therefore Choose Life deals with other “dark” subjects such as alcoholism, homelessness, and mental illness. The book explores such “light” topics as God, grace, and hope.

Therefore Choose Life is available from the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition for $20 for 1 book or $50 for 3 books (+$5 for shipping per book). 

Order the book with this link (Order Link) or call the EPC office at: 1-877-439-3348.

Register for the Zoom chat on Thursday December 14 at 2 pm (Registration Link).

Friday, December 1, 2023

Book: Therefore Choose Life—My Journey from Hopelessness to Hope

This book is an Amazon best seller.

Interview with Tyler on Ontario Morning from CBC Radio (Interview Link).

Earlier this year, Tyler Dunlop gained international attention for all the wrong reasons. He was the ‘Homeless, hopeless Orillia man’ who was seeking euthanasia. Now, he hopes to make a similar impact for all the right reasons. On November 17th, his book Therefore Choose Life—My Journey from Hopelessness to Hope is being published.

Therefore Choose Life is available from the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition for $20 for 1 book or $50 for 3 books (+$5 for shipping per book). 

Order the book with this link (Order Link) or call the EPC office at: 1-877-439-3348.

Joe Roberts, “The Skid Row CEO,” and the author of several books, says of Therefore Choose Life:

“This book has the honesty of Charles Bukowski and the insight of Richard Wagamese. But it’s neither. It’s all Tyler Dunlop, and it’s a masterpiece.” 

Paul Copan, an American human rights scholar who teaches ethics at Palm Beach Atlantic University in Florida, writes of Tyler’s book:

“This is a powerful, well-told, and uplifting story!” Rev. Dr. John Hamilton, a practicing psychologist, says, “Tyler's book is forthright, frank, gripping, and emotionally riveting!”
In his chapter ‘Canada’s Inferno,’ Tyler—like the ancient Roman poet Virgil in Dante’s Inferno, who guides Dante through hell—escorts the reader through a different hell: the drug culture in Main and East Hastings in East Vancouver. It is probably the most powerful piece of writing you will ever read on the subject.

        Here is an excerpt from it:
“When, the next day, I walked down East Hastings Street, the smell of old and new urine hung in the air like the spectre of old pain that showed in the pale, drawn, scabbed faces of the lost souls stumbling by. Garbage, used condoms, needles and cigarette butts were strewn around. The sound of shopping carts, commandeered by scavengers, shook and rattled. They contained anything the many dumpsters in the endless alleys had to offer, such as old printers and cheap paintings. Empty aluminum cans, rattling in bags tied to the sides of the carts, were a kind of chime. The sound of honking horns and obscenities filled the air. Down an alley, I saw open sex acts. Gaunt hooded figures ducked behind dumpsters. Their crack smoke curled up and rose into the sky like mythological dragons before disappearing with the wind. People slept on the sidewalks with needles still stuck in their arms. Graffiti messages—the names and sentiments of people probably long dead—defaced the storefronts. The loud caws of crows on the rooftops and sagging hydro lines added to the nightmarish scene. A small group of men and women looked barely human as, hunched over, they looked for pebbles of crack they had dropped. A buck-naked young man smashed his head against a wall and screamed profanities.”
“One time, the drug frenzy stopped as some guy started flying a toy helicopter remotely. The whole mass just stopped and looked up at the toy. As they did so, a beam of warm sun pierced through the clouds, and for the briefest of moments, amidst the backdrop of obscenities, all our collective pain did not exist.”
Therefore Choose Life deals with other “dark” subjects such as alcoholism, homelessness, and mental illness. The book explores such “light” topics as God, grace, and hope.

The book begins with the chapter, ‘The MAID Who Kills.’ It speaks of Tyler’s decision to seek MAID, discusses how he changed his mind on the subject, and ends with a scathing critique of the Canadian government’s legalization of this practice. In this and other chapters, Tyler attacks this policy as being utterly without moral justification.

Vera Petrovic, a retired psychiatrist, says:

“We live in a ‘culture of death.’ Euthanasia is taking advantage of the physical and mental pain of people too broken to fight and then calling it ‘death with dignity.’ What it is, is society ridding itself of ‘undesirables.’ God did not allow it in the past, and He will not allow it now. He will send those devoted to His service, those He has placed in His war against the ‘culture of death.’ He will send people like Tyler, pulling himself up to choose life despite every insurmountable personal challenge.”
I also believe that God has raised up Tyler to speak against MAID. But don’t take our word for it. Buy the book and decide for yourself.

Article: Homeless man seeks death by euthanasia. He feels hopeless (Link).