ACIM-related app
I really like this app. It is quite sweet as well as being very useful and helpful. It has three tools to use to help you sort out your thoughts and feelings. It also links to a lot of comprehensive resources, all free, with more links to other sites with yet more free content, with options on content to pay for if you so choose. There is also a long list of movies that the people behind the app have felt have a spiritual interpretation. This is very interesting to investigate and has brought up quite a few movies that I want to watch. But also some movies that I have seen but never saw the spiritual interpretation at the time. This is a kind of nice way to have your thoughts provoked!! I have only given it four stars because there are a couple of minor technical issues that I think could easily be cleared up. When you bookmark a resource, the bookmark link does not take you back to that resource, it just starts playing audio (if it is an audio or a video resource). So if it is a video resource, it doesn’t actually play the video and therefore you can see the video and/or how long the video is, whether it is a few minutes or an hour, say. I don’t think it would take much reprogramming for the bookmark link to take you back to the resource properly, so you can actually view it and have access to all the video features, like the length of time of the video. Also, you can only search by names of feelings. There is a resource called “Shoulds and ought-tos” that I didn’t think to bookmark and now I can’t find it again because I cannot search by the resource name. As far as I can tell at the moment, I will just have to wait for it to pop up on my feed again, by chance or maybe by a feeling name, but I don’t know which feeling name this particular resource is under. I would like to be able to search by other key words (ie, apart from feeling names) like ‘ego’, ‘should’, ‘process’, ‘questions’ (in order to bring up everything on the app that has ‘question and answer’ in the title), ‘direction’, ‘disconnected’, etc. All the above points might be just me - I am quite ‘database aware’, so these things might just be glaringly obvious to me and not to others. However, despite my slight ‘search feature frustrations’, this is a really good, free app with a very sweet feel, nicely designed and with plenty of resources and I am finding it to be very helpful. As far as I know, this is the only app of its kind - a free, ACIM-related app with comprehensive free cont