Create your own experience of time with the guidance of a premier researcher in the field.
Time is something none of us can escape and yet few of us actually comprehend. While some feel time can't pass quickly enough, others feel there aren't enough minutes in the day. But what if you could not just understand but actively shape your perception of time? What if you actually had all the time you needed--and more?
In All the Time in the World, researcher Lisa Broderick reveals, "Time is one part physical and one part perception. By changing the part of the time equation you control, you can actually time travel through your perceptions."
All the Time in the World presents the first definitive account of how time works and, more importantly, how you can affect it. Here Broderick offers exercises based on the latest research into the physics, metaphysics, and psychology of the human construct of time. Through these step-by-step practices, you'll gradually build an awareness of time that transcends clockfaces and completely discharges the dreaded feeling that the seconds are slipping through your fingers.
Far more than just a book on workflow or efficiency, All the Time in the World offers a kind of liberation from the collective illusion that time is your enemy. Join Lisa Broderick to discover that when you embrace time as an ally, you become a confident creator of your own reality.
I have absolutely no idea what I just listened to. Was that a book about time, quantum physics, law of attraction, out of body experiences, or social justice??? Because in a short (and pointless) book, the author discusses all of them. And of course, ensuring her rich friends can get their kids to sailing practice and buy multi million dollar homes. There was nothing even remotely actionable in this book other than different ways to meditate. The only reason I didn’t give it the one star it deserves is because I felt bad being the first person to review it. Maybe it just wasn’t my cup of tea and someone else will be able to figure out what the heck it was about. I just wish I really could transcend time and get those 5 hours back.
The author, Lisa Broderick, emphasizes the importance of mindfulness, self-awareness, and prioritization in managing time and achieving one's goals. Overall, "All the Time in the World" is a good resource for anyone looking to gain a better understanding of their relationship with time and learn how to make the most of it. Thank you Netgalley and apologies for the delayed review
An interesting book on time and how it can be manipulated. This is not a book about how to be more efficient, rather it is about our perception of time and how, through meditation we can experience it differently. I really enjoyed the first part of the book which dealt with the science of time. This section was stimulating and very though provoking. The second part of the book dealt with practices for altering how we relate to time. These started off extremely well. I found the ideas quite enlightening and they offered great potential for change. However as the chapters progressed, the suggestions moved away from the credible and did become more bizarre. I don't think I am ready to accept that I can meditate myself into an out of body experience just yet! Nevertheless, there's a lot to think about in the book and, excluding the last few chapters, I would say that it is reasonably helpful. I received a free review copy of the book from the publisher in exchange for my honest and unedited review.
I liked the first part with a nice synopsis of Einstein theories and uncertainty principle etc. I thought that part was well written. Beyond that I got skeptical. Basketball example is obvious to magicians anyway, that our brains run on a low energy system and we focus on what is adaptively necessary; when we are engaged or doing a task, we use our limited data collection/processing resources and spend them focused on the task of the moment. Instruments etc can bridge that issue, look at video tape. From then on, my synopsis is that our perception is our reality given our evolutionary strengths and weaknesses. Instruments can collect what we can't perceive. You can try and change the way you perceive time by spending a lifetime trying to think differently? Actually I didn't finish it, my perception is that I have better things to focus my limited resources on.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A wonderful book that combines quantum physics, the science and perception of time, and how to apply this knowledge and embed and embody it within our daily lives! For those who claim they are always too busy and never have enough time, do take the time to read "All the Time in the World" to focus your perception and slow down and transcend time, time & time again. There are some interesting and practical thoughts and meditation tips to counteract the stance, feeling, and attitude that time is slipping away.
The book also contains various personal anecdotes that I found most interesting as it takes on a variety of themes and topics. My only caveat is that it could have gone into more details but it is all things considered a quick, enjoyable, and insightful read for anyone interested in quantum physics, metaphysics, and other existential questions and matters!
Lisa Broderick’s "All the Time in the World" challenges our traditional understanding of time and offers a revolutionary approach to managing it. This book isn't just about time management in the conventional sense; it's about rethinking our entire relationship with time through the lens of modern science, particularly quantum physics, and psychological theory. Whether you're looking to improve your time management, heal from past experiences, or manifest a better future, this book provides the tools and insights to help you achieve those goals.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
One of the best self help books I've read to date!
All the Time in the World is in essence about how time works, learn how to "control" time, learn to affect time for you, everything in life is about what you perceive to be the truth.
I highly recommend All the Time in the World to anyone. I want to thank Netgalley, the publishers and author's for allowing me to read and review your work before it's released to the public. This is my own, honest review.
I liked this overall, but I suspect some readers will be challenged by some of the ideas here -- that might be a good thing. I recommend it those that are curious about our perception of time and those with an open mind or willing to be stretched at little toward the end.
Science, physics, quantum, gravity, imagination and the mastery of time. So much great stuff in here and all backed by science. My motto -- follow the science, when it is proven incorrect and replaced by more science, continue to follow the science...and yes, I did spontaneously time travel a year ago...
I cannot believe I wasted my time on this, or that my aunt wasted $24 on it to buy it for me for Christmas. This is just another garbled treatise on manifestation and magical thinking cloaked in a veneer or pseudo-science. Don't bother.
This book was interesting and entertaining at the start, but quickly devolved into a loose compilation of tips n' tricks. I think if I tried the exercises, I'd have seen experienced something new, but my patience wore thin and I wanted to move on to other readings.
Definitely not a first book for the uninitiated. Easy to digest because of a few books I read first. Topics ranging from Quantum Mechanics to Neuroplasticity. This was the missing peace I needed. It presents some examples and at the point it becomes, and should be, a personal experience.
Not the best but bumped from 3 to 4 stars for the quality meditation and mindfulness exercises regarding our relationship with time. Some crazy stuff in here about unscientifically proven ideas regarding time and physics though.