Okay, so this book took me about 50 days to read, and let me tell you how tedious it was. In the beginning, it was all right. I didn't find myself very wanting to pick this book up, Winn spoke through his novel like I was already a horrible person and that I absolutely need to work on being more nice, it sometimes felt a bit more condescending. Throughout this novel, it was very repetitive. Granted it's a 'motivational' book about being nice, it's a circular theme. Everything comes back to you being polite and considerate and kind. Some of these chapters were so long winded, and sometimes the point of each paragraph was so spaced between I had to go back again to understand what I was trying to read, that I had to stop in the middle to absorb everything I had read before it gave me a pounding headache because he kept screaming to be nice Be Nice BE NICE! I personally believe some chapters and anecdotes were a tad bit unnecessary as he kept covering the same things over and over again. It was sometimes tiresome to endure and I wouldn't pick it up for days at a time. This is a decent book, but if you don't work in an office setting you really don't seriously need to study some (or most) of these chapters. I understand that the devil inside of you may come out while you're driving and if you grab a nasty case of road rage, but one thing Winn didn't really cover is when it's okay to be negative. You can't go through your whole entire life not being sad or angry, we need to be allowed to feel these emotions too. We are entitled to ourselves and our feelings. He said it's fantastic to have a buddy system where you can vent and they listen, but what if just talking about it isn't enough for you? What if it doesn't justify how much you are feeling? I'm not saying to go right ahead and beat up someone or to throw a vase against a wall if you're feeling heated, but what other therapeutic options may we get? What about rough sports or other things that drain our vigorous feelings that we may feel with our whole body? Where are our options? He only suggested one, and one size does not fit all.
Another thing that bothers me is how he suggested that violence is awful and bad and how we should excommunicate all violent and negative things out of our lives. I understand violence is not fantastic and I am not condoning acts of violence, however; in our, in this age, it is almost physically impossible because there is always violence, there is violence everywhere. In the news, in movies, television shows, books, magazines, posters, advertisements. We can't get rid of all of these things? I'm not going to stop watching the news or stop reading books and watching their subsequent movies just because they contain violence. We can't take all of this out of our lives. Violence, false violence, is thrilling and dangerous. Watching a movie and cringing and 'ooooooo'-ing at it may help someone unwind from a day of stress. Watching The Walking Dead or The 100 or the Hunger Games is nice, it's fun to do. We may be growing immunity to violence, but is it really so terrible when it's false? We aren't applying that to our daily lives or to the people we love and care about. We're relaxing with an interesting tv show or movie after a long week of work and couch cuddling and snacking with our loved ones. I don't see why we should be getting rid of it just because it's violent. I'm not going to become one of the false people in the movie and recreate a hunger games. That's absurd and illegal and ridiculous. I don't carry it around with me wherever I go. We may becoming more immune to violence because we see it everywhere and every day, but that doesn't mean we're going to be turning it into our lives as saying it's okay to beat this cashier up because they were snappy and crude with us when we were checking out our bag of chips and water bottle. We know what humane decency is, and though there are rude people out and about, we can still choose to ignore it and be polite.