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The Prosperous Heart: Creating a Life of Enough

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Expected 17 Mar 26
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In The Prosperous Heart, Julia turns her inquisitive and searching gaze toward the questions of our modern day, and guides readers on how to lead lives that are as rewarding and purposeful as their creative practice.

Following a twelve-week programme that offers gentle insight on daily occurrences - such as how we can better use the time, money and physical space we have within our means, and thoughtful ways to seek community in an ever-moving world - Julia places us on track to reflect on whether the work we do for a living is truly meaningful and aligned with our values.

288 pages, Paperback

First published December 22, 2011

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About the author

Julia Cameron

105 books2,319 followers
Julia Cameron has been an active artist for more than thirty years, with fifteen books (including bestsellers The Artist's Way, Walking In This World and The Right to Write) and countless television, film, and theater scripts to her credit. Writing since the age of 18, Cameron has a long list of screenplay and teleplay credits to her name, including an episode of Miami Vice, and Elvis and the Beauty Queen, which starred Don Johnson. She was a writer on such movies as Taxi Driver, New York, New York, and The Last Waltz. She wrote, produced, and directed the award-winning independent feature film, God's Will, which premiered at the Chicago International Film Festival, and was selected by the London Film Festival, the Munich International Film Festival, and Women in Film Festival, among others. In addition to making film, Cameron has taught film at such diverse places as Chicago Filmmakers, Northwestern University, and Columbia College. Her profound teachings on unlocking creativity and living from the creative center have inspired countless artists to unleash their full potential.

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5 stars
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66 (18%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 49 reviews
Profile Image for Deborah Fruchey.
Author 19 books13 followers
May 21, 2014
In many ways this is a wonderful book. It explores the many ways one can have a feeling of abundance, which is what we actually want and need more than the money itself, she contends. I agree. She also has a fluid and non-threatening approach to her spiritual components, which I appreciate, having come from a searingly painful Fundamentalist background which makes me allergic to strident religion and dogma. Her exercises for exploring one's relationship to money are excellent, revealing and helpful.

What makes me give this a less than perfect rating is a practical matter, so to speak. The very first thing Cameron recommends (rather insists on) is that her readers immediately stop charging or otherwise incurring debt. This I found impossible to do, and it marred the whole program for me, as she refers to it again and again. If I could simply STOP, why would I need her help? Spenders and Debtors Anonymous also asks its members to stop incurring debt, but it is a goal rather than an immediate requirement, and it is understood that people will make greater or lesser progress as they approach that goal. This made finishing the entire book an impossibility for a long time.

In the end, I do not feel I got out of it what she intended. She would have been better advised to start by instructing readers on just how they might start a program of no more debt, and helping them along the way. In the end, I felt I had not truly accomplished either what the author had in mind or what I myself had hoped for.
Profile Image for False.
2,440 reviews10 followers
July 17, 2013
I've been reading several of her books, and I'm picking up a lot of repetition. I've said it before, but if you have NO to very little money, her money advice sucks. In this book, for example, she asks you to go buy a large pile of tabloids to read about problems the rich and famous can have (in misusing what they have.) Does she realize what this costs? She is repetitive about her Wednesday night friendship dinners, but just one dinner can cost over $100 if you factor in certain ingredients (or wine.) It would be nice if she wrote a money book that focusing on what you do when there is a true lack of funds and how you survive it emotionally, financially and physically. Telling someone money advice and then asking them to go out and spend on these silly things like a moleskin notebook or a movie. And I just read an article where someday movies may cost $150 and become a genuine rarity. She has yet, in my opinion, nailed sound advice for really serious money ideals.
Profile Image for Dayna Collins.
22 reviews
April 30, 2012
This was a horrible read. As one friend said, "Julia has run out of things to say." Nuggets of good stuff sprinkled here and there (I've long been a Julia Cameron fan), but the rest was annoying and cloying. She filled dozens of pages with space to make lists (rather than just saying, "number from 1-10 and list what you want to be when you grow up"). I would NOT recommended this book and I was relieved that I got through it. I would not have read it or finished it except for the fact that I was doing it with a group of friends on-line; the feelings about the book were mutual. We all had quite a fun time ripping it, after we got over our annoyance.
Profile Image for Tristy.
766 reviews56 followers
September 14, 2021
As so many are, I am a big fan of The Artist's Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity, also by this author. Unfortunately, as many have already said, this seems like a book with good intentions, but that really misses the mark in almost every way. While her basic tenants are lovely: we already have enough; there is so much that is more important than money; and being kind and generous brings the same back to us - there is so much unexamined privilege in this book that it is dizzying. She literally talks about how she's so proud to have "kept her horses," even when she was "very tight on money." And her suggestions of throwing weekly dinner parties for your friends implies time, energy and money that most people don't have. This book is also heavily padded. If you take out her confusing, rambling stories and the very long, repetitive lists at the end of each chapter and this could honestly be a 20 page booklet. That being said, I do think almost all her "basic tools" of morning pages, counting, walking, and time-outs are very helpful and I will continue to use all those tools in my daily life. But the "abstinence tool" again, feels very tone-deaf. We usually debt because we have to, to survive. I do think it's great to really sit down with what we go into debt over and really ask if there are other choices, but she doesn't get that fine-tuned - she just asks us to go right into "abstinence" from debt, which I assume many people who pick up this book aren't ready to do. There have to be better books than this about money and women and creativity. If you know of some, please let me know!
Profile Image for Marie Granieri.
30 reviews
January 31, 2019
A fantastic guide for finding ways to bring gratitude into your life and discovering joy. Chapter by chapter, Julia prompts with wonderful reflections on her own life to make her points feel more real and understandable. I loved the format of the book in that every chapter begins with a wonderful inspiration followed by questions prompting answers to what might be standing in the way of creating a life of "enough." I have read many of Julia's books and enjoyed this one very much. She is so honest about her own life and challenges she faced. I really like that about her. There isn't any dancing around the issues. She is who she is and I admire that she is able to present her life's story that way.
Profile Image for DeAnna Knippling.
Author 176 books284 followers
May 30, 2021
The author of The Artist's Way writes about money.

I both liked and didn't like this book. If you've read any of her previous books, it's repetitive and kind of trite. The chapters are okay but preachy (yet still impressively vulnerable). But as a whole the book was effective. I feel far less intimidated by money, and calmer abour financial challenges, which came thick and fast while I was reading the book. The lessons in here about forgiveness and gratitudes were rough to do, but also helped immensely, even though I was sort of hoping they wouldn't.

Recommended you're feeling messed up about money, although I would start with the actual Artist's Way first if you haven't, as it is the stronger, clearer book.
Profile Image for Demetri Papadimitropoulos.
347 reviews21 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 19, 2026
A Money Book That’s Really About Loneliness, Envy, and Agency: Reading “The Prosperous Heart” in the Age of Doomscrolling and Debt
By Demetris Papadimitropoulos | February 19th, 2026


Watercolor Piece by Demetris Papadimitropoulos

“The Prosperous Heart” is, on its face, a money book. It asks you to Count. To stop “debting.” To take a Time-Out. To walk. To write Morning Pages. To clean a drawer, cancel a subscription, call a creditor, cook a meal, and then begin again tomorrow. But it is not really a money book, not in the clean, spreadsheet sense. It is a book about attention – about where the mind goes when it feels threatened, and how quickly it will volunteer money as the scapegoat for everything else: loneliness, envy, fatigue, fear, longing, the old ache of not being chosen.

Julia Cameron has always been a practitioner of the small hinge that swings a large door. The program here proceeds in weeks, with check-ins, with Prosperity Points, with the steady insistence that what matters most is not our dramatic declarations but our daily, sometimes comically modest actions. In that regard the book feels like a cousin to “Atomic Habits” and a spiritual sibling to “Your Money or Your Life” – less concerned with optimization than with honesty, less with “more” than with “enough.” It is also unmistakably written by the author of “The Artist’s Way”: the cadence of invitation, the brisk compassion, the faith that creativity is not an extracurricular pleasure but a life force. In Cameron’s universe, the ledger and the lyric sheet are not enemies. They are two forms of prayer.

That word – prayer – will be the first hurdle for some readers and the home address for others. Cameron speaks fluently in a Higher Power vernacular: God as source, guidance as a “still, small voice,” abundance as a spiritual fact we can forget but not erase. For believers, this language is oxygen. For skeptics, it can feel like being asked to breathe underwater. Yet even for an atheist reader, much of what she calls God can be translated without losing the method: guidance becomes conscience plus pattern-recognition, prayer becomes intentional attention, abundance becomes the relief that comes when we stop lying to ourselves about numbers and stop using those numbers as a narcotic.

Cameron’s technique is to braid three strands – memoir, testimonial, and prompt – until they feel like one rope you can hold. A chapter may open with a quotation from Edwene Gaines or Ernest Holmes, drift into a vignette (a friend’s farm, a workshop, a reading in Manhattan), pivot to a definition (“Generous is defined as…”), then land, briskly, on an assignment. “Fill in the following sentences.” “List ten people you are jealous of and why.” “Give yourself five minutes to write.” The book’s tone is, in its way, both maternal and pragmatic: you are comforted, but you are also put to work. There is a reason her readers speak of her books the way people speak of recovery meetings – not as entertainment, but as a place you go to stay sane.

That said, the spiritual architecture is specific, and it will not be to everyone’s taste. Cameron’s God is intimate, interventionist, and unabashedly conversational. Guidance comes in clear sentences. Prayers are answered with moves to Santa Fe, with found apartments, with the right house appearing at the right moment. For an atheist reader, the temptation is to treat this as naïveté, or as a kind of narrative convenience. Yet there is another way to read it: as a disciplined practice of interpreting one’s own intuition with respect. In a culture that trains us to second-guess ourselves into paralysis, Cameron’s faith can function as a permission slip. Call it God, call it the wiser self, call it pattern-recognition sharpened by attention – the point is the same. You ask. You listen. You act. And after you act, you are more able to listen.

Week Nine’s “Generosity” makes that argument emotionally, not philosophically. Cameron’s favorite scenes are the ones where abundance looks like a table set for one more person than expected. Elberta – the eighty-five-year-old matriarch with a rhubarb patch and Morgan horses and a gift for greeting a caller as though she is the best caller in history – is drawn with such affection that you can almost smell the green chili stew. These stories flirt with idyll, but they also insist on a truth that modern money talk often forgets: prosperity is social. It is easier to be solvent – and to stay solvent – when you are not isolated. The book is full of people who pray for one another, drive one another’s kids, trade books, swap houses, wash dishes after dinner. In 2026 language we might call this mutual aid, or a personal “support system,” or simply community. Cameron calls it a prosperous heart.

The sections on jealousy and competition are among Cameron’s most modern. In the social-media era, jealousy is not an occasional visitor but a browser tab that never closes. Cameron’s composer Steve, fixated on his roommate’s film-score success, is a recognizable type: the person who turns bitterness into an aesthetic, who confuses critique with courage, who mistakes the performance of being wronged for the work of making something. Her diagnosis – jealousy as a mask for procrastination – lands with uncomfortable clarity. It is not a new insight, but it is newly relevant when algorithms specialize in serving us the highlights of people we once knew, or the accolades of people we’ve never met, right when we are trying to begin a page.

Even so, the practical tools have an elegance that deserves respect. The “Prosperity Plan” chart is not revolutionary, but it is humane. It asks for specificity without moralizing, for planning without fantasy, for saving without austerity. It acknowledges that money must be spent – and that “paying ourselves” through savings is a kind of spending aligned with freedom. In a time when financial advice often arrives packaged as shame (or as swagger), Cameron’s insistence on gentleness – “go gently with yourself here” – feels like an intervention.

The book’s most persuasive gift is the way it narrativizes a practice that could easily become punitive. Counting, in lesser hands, turns into moral arithmetic. Here it becomes an act of listening. Cameron’s best sentences are not the ones that preach but the ones that notice. She watches the mind reach for the credit card the way it reaches for the phone: a quick little click toward dissociation. She watches jealousy masquerade as aesthetic judgment. She watches how we do favors until we resent the people we love – and then she performs her favorite maneuver: she turns the shame into a tool.

Week Ten, “Staying on Course,” is where the book tightens its grip. Cameron’s example of Rickey, the high school teacher building a music program on part-time pay, arrives at the perfect moment: after you have learned to count your money, you are asked to count your energy. The question isn’t only “What do you spend?” but “What are you paid for?” In an era of “side hustles,” freelance precarity, and the steady rebranding of exploitation as passion, the section lands with a quiet sting. It is hard to read about Sam – the actor who realizes he has been giving away his skills for $8 an hour because he cannot bear to value his own talent – without thinking of the wider culture’s allergy to paying for art, or of the modern workplace’s fondness for “opportunities” that arrive without compensation but with a smiley face emoji.

Cameron is canny about these dynamics even when she doesn’t name them as political economy. She prefers the intimate story to the systemic analysis. She writes in the register of spiritual recovery: one person, one habit, one phone call, one day. That choice gives the book its warmth, and it also supplies its main limitation. The structures that grind people down – rents that inflate faster than wages, healthcare costs that ambush the budget, the student-debt undertow, the way a layoff can erase years of prudence in a quarter – hover at the edge of the page. Cameron acknowledges lean times, humiliation, the grit of ramen noodles and a borrowed guesthouse. But she returns, reliably, to the individual lever: Count again. Ask. Pray. Take the next right action.

This focus is not wrong; it is simply partial. “The Prosperous Heart” is more interested in how we meet reality than in why reality is built the way it is. In exchange, it offers something rare: a non-cynical argument that agency is still available. Not total agency, not fantasy agency, but the agency of the next small choice. It is a philosophy well suited to the current decade, when many of us live with chronic ambient dread – climate weather, political whiplash, economic volatility, the always-on glow of alerts – and when the temptation is to turn our lives into a scrolling panel of other people’s triumphs. Cameron’s “Devices Off” week, updated from her earlier “reading deprivation,” reads like a prophecy that decided to become homework. Her portrait of Sharon, the compulsive phone-checker who discovers that distraction is a form of withdrawal from the people in front of her, is not subtle – but it is accurate. The miracle is not that Sharon writes four songs. The miracle is that she can hear herself think.

At its finest, the book treats prosperity as a form of presence. Cameron’s scenes of friendship are not filler; they are the thesis in narrative form. A prosperous heart is communicative. It reaches out instead of stewing. It stops rehearsing grievance and makes dinner. It allows itself the dignity of being helped. The generosity chapters insist, persuasively, that giving is not only monetary. Hospitality, attention, encouragement, volunteering, driving the kids to rehearsal, sending workers to rescue horses from a wildfire – these are the currencies that make a life feel livable. In a time when loneliness is discussed like an epidemic and community feels increasingly outsourced to platforms, Cameron’s insistence on the basic blessedness of friendship feels almost radical in its simplicity.

Still, the book is not free from the genre’s familiar soft spots. The affirmations can blur into a kind of satin wallpaper – comforting, repetitive, occasionally evasive. The case studies sometimes resolve with a neatness that real life does not always grant. One can speak up calmly and still be refused. One can be “guided” and still end up in a cul-de-sac. Cameron knows this – she writes, late in the book, about slipping and starting over – but the narrative tide often moves toward reward. For readers who come to the book with trauma around money, or with a long history of being punished for needing help, the insistence on benevolent outcomes may feel, at times, like being told to smile harder.

Yet there is a sternness under the sweetness. Cameron does not romanticize compulsions. She calls overspending what it is: a way to numb feelings and then use the resulting worry as a distraction from those feelings. She offers “Cleaning House” not as lifestyle décor but as spiritual triage. She treats counting as a sobriety practice, and she threads the language of recovery throughout: a day at a time, give it away to keep it, start over each morning. This is where “The Soul of Money” and “The Art of Money” feel like close companions – books that understand money as story, as emotion, as a proxy battle for worth.

Week Eleven, “Prosperity and Our Dreams,” is the book’s most tender stretch. Cameron’s idea that “our money is a map” is less financial metaphor than creative anthropology. Where do you spend without thinking? Where do you deny yourself with elaborate reasoning? The waiter Calvin who buys expensive socks but refuses the movies becomes a portrait of grief disguised as thrift: the dream he buried is the one he cannot bear to watch on a screen. Cameron’s remedy is not reckless spending but permission – permission to “dip a toe back in the water,” permission to go to the movies once a week “just for me,” permission to admit that the barrier is not always the price tag. In the background is Cameron’s lifelong argument: that creativity is our native language, and that the refusal of it creates symptoms.

By the time we reach Week Twelve’s Prosperity Plan, the book has braided its themes tightly: counting as clarity, generosity as circulation, guidance as humility, dreams as daily practice. The plan is concrete – categories, numbers, tradeoffs – and it is offered without the shaming tone of many financial boot camps. Cameron is not interested in punishment. She is interested in alignment. Her definition of prosperity is not luxury but stability plus joy: the feeling of having enough, and of allowing ourselves small pleasures without spiraling into denial or debt.

The Epilogue’s folktale about the man seeking God and refusing the wolf, the woman, the tree – refusing the gifts because they don’t look like the gifts he expects – is Cameron in miniature. The book keeps returning to this: help rarely arrives in the costume we ordered. The treasure is often disguised as a nuisance, a request, a humble chore, a phone call we have been avoiding. The hummingbird at the feeder whispering “I am prosperity” is a scene some readers will find too dear. Others will recognize it as a hard-won moment of quiet – the kind of quiet that money, alone, cannot purchase.

How to weigh a book like this? As literature, it is more serviceable than surprising. Its best passages have a luminous plainness, but its structure is programmatic, its repetitions intentional, its metaphysics asserted rather than interrogated. As a tool, it is generous, usable, and strangely bracing. The book does not ask you to become someone else. It asks you to become present to who you already are – and to stop spending against your own life.

In the end, “The Prosperous Heart” succeeds not because it solves money, but because it refuses to let money pretend it is the only plot. It treats prosperity as a practice of attention, friendship, and honest numbers – and it offers that practice with a steady hand. I would place it at 79 out of 100: a book that occasionally smooths its edges with certainty, but that more often earns its serenity by insisting on the next right thing, done today, in the life you actually have. Truly.
Profile Image for Ciara.
Author 3 books418 followers
July 15, 2012
man. this was a really difficult read. i walked away from this book thinking, "it's really nice that twelve-step programs have helped so many people, but the problem is that people in recovery start to think that ANYTHING can be turned into a twelve-step program." this book is essentially a handbook on how to create your own personalized twelve-step program for getting out of debt & getting okay with your finances. there are numerous exercises at the end of each chapter in which you are instructed to list the things you are grateful for, or make a list of the various occupations you wanted when you were a child, or list what you would do if you suddenly had all the money you feel you need. of course julia cameron gets us started on each exercise by filling in her own answers, & i found her responses to be the most insufferable part of an utterly insufferable book. it was almost as if she (or her assistant? she referenced her assistant so many times that i started to think they were either lovers or that she merely dictated concepts to her assistant, which the assistant then transformed into bestselling books) wrote the book as a therapy exercise. i do not want to read someone else's therapy exercises. i wouldn't even want to read my own.

& so much of the book involved julia recounting her most recent dinner party, & all the famous & semi-famous people that had been there. or telling us in excruciating detail about a correspondence course she taped for some online university & how her make-up artist made her look so youthful for the cameras. i don't know exactly what i expected to get out of this book, but i definitely could have lived without the lapses into narcissism.

i am one of the few people i know who has never actually read the artist's way, the book that really catapulted julia into being a big deal. having read the prosperous heart, i don't think i'm in a big rush to give it a try.
Profile Image for Wendy.
56 reviews5 followers
November 6, 2018
Useful exercises, some profound. I was very distracted by the somewhat schizophrenic way she views animals. On the one hand she talks about feeding the birds in her yard and how they have a prosperous heart, on the other hand she constantly writes about taking their lives by eating them.
All in all I would recommend the book.
Profile Image for Melissa.
101 reviews5 followers
October 25, 2017
Beautiful book on seeing positivity, gratitude, and blessings in unexpected places. There is some financial advice in this book, but not much. Just like her other books, this program focuses on our inner battles and how to overcome and work through them to live a more prosperous life.
204 reviews3 followers
November 24, 2019
I am agnostic so chose to interpret references to "God" in my own way, which I have to say, the author encourages you to do from the outset. This was a good read to remind you to focus on what you do have and live within your means, two mottos that I always aim to live by even when times are tough.
Profile Image for Ruth.
177 reviews1 follower
May 7, 2021
Some good ideas about how to feel like you have enough, good practices both to write and create more, and just think more in your daily life. Some parts just seemed too meandering, focusing on her life.
Profile Image for Cindy.
1,787 reviews38 followers
February 3, 2026
This book is a 12-week workshop to help people gain control over their spending and finances. As with the author’s other recent books, the foundation is writing “morning pages,” three handwritten notebook pages of top-of-mind thoughts. For this version, other activities include counting money in and out, abstaining from non-essential spending, and walking.
Each of the chapters is populated with relevant stories of Ms. Cameron’s life and anecdotes from former students. It builds well, and seems like it could be quite effective for people who feel they don’t have the wherewithal to pursue their dreams.
One note: There is a spiritual aspect to Cameron’s work, akin to a 12-step program. “Let go and let God,” and suggestions to pray are peppered throughout, but the program does not rely on faith to work. If your spending is out of control or you are living paycheck-to-paycheck, give this a try. 3.75 rounded up.
My thanks to the author, publisher, @MacmillanAudio, and #NetGalley for early access to the audiobook of #TheProsperousHeart for review purposes. Publication date: 17 March 2026.
130 reviews1 follower
May 25, 2020
This was a wonderful little book. I listened to the audio version read by Julia Cameron. It teaches about living a basic life. Looking at how you spend your time and your money. She incorporates her morning page philosophy but does not go into the detail of The Artist's Way. She gives different terminology to budgeting and overspending ( calling it "counting" and "abstinence" ) which may be a less threatening way to understand money. "Time outs" is her term for meditation, again many people may respond better to this wording. Don't you think it would feel nice as an adult to give yourself a "timeout" from thinking or doing. She encourages walking as a way to get out in nature and allow insights to come naturally ( another way to look at physical activity ). Throughout the book she demonstrates the importance of community by hosting dinners for friends where they discuss different viewpoints. This book may not be for everyone but I really enjoyed it.
367 reviews
October 11, 2025
I love reading!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Connie.
33 reviews5 followers
October 7, 2021
This is a twelve week program, and I've finished the book but am still doing the exercises. I love the writing prompts and the daily practices to keep myself on track. I also just love Julia's stories that illustrate the concepts she's suggesting.
15 reviews
November 5, 2025
The Prosperous Heart follows Julia Cameron's simple, heart-centered approach to prosperity and abundance. I find her writing style very refreshing and I always leave with new insights. The tools she presents in this book are simple, easy to integrate and very useful.
Profile Image for Raejean.
155 reviews16 followers
August 6, 2017
I love how this book addresses prosperity as more than having money. As a money book, it was pretty basic. But there are plenty of helpful perspectives for the financially savvy.
Profile Image for Jessy Masse.
24 reviews2 followers
October 8, 2018
Not my favorite from this fabulous author but still interesting
420 reviews23 followers
January 12, 2020
Whatever this book’s faults, it helped me a *lot*.
I think I might also be finally ready to start “The Artist’s Way”, which my friend has been wanting me to do for a long time.
Profile Image for Walkeo.
225 reviews
February 17, 2020
A lovely thought project for recalibrating the way to think about contentment.
49 reviews
May 15, 2021
I am reading Money Drunk Money Sober. It covers the same ground. I didn’t want to spend the time to read this book too.
Profile Image for Wenona Gardner.
2 reviews1 follower
April 5, 2013
I totally loved Julia Cameron's The Prosperous Heart. Going through the book I saw the value of my BA in Business and Management degree from Alverno and was inspired to begin work on my business plan. I found a friend from my Artist's Way Circle who lives in Ohio who was willing to go through the Right Brain Business Plan by Jennifer Lee with me week by week through Google+ Hangouts. So far we have spent 9 weeks working through our business plan. I love my friend and together we explored our our value and laid down our individual prosperity plans. Thanks to the Prosperous Heart I also saw the value of my leadership skills so I signed up for more leadership roles. Thanks to the Prosperous Heart, I am now the Organizer of The Artist's Way Circle Meetup in Waukesha, the Life Story Circle Meetup in Waukesha, and Waukesha Gaming Group Meetup in Waukesha. I realized Prosperous Heart empowered me to take on these new leadership positions. Prosperous Heart helped me to value my time and the benefit of volunteering to serve others. Through the Counting Tool I recognized I spent way too much money on eating out and so I cut back on that so I could put money towards a trip. Through the encouragement of Prosperous Heart, I also dared to apply for new opportunities and won a chance to go to Washington D.C.to search for my tribe's Munsee language in the Library of Congress and Smithsonian archives. I loved hearing Julia Cameron explain each chapter. I draw strength from Julia Cameron's words. I love many of Julia Cameron's work including The Artist's Way, Walking in This World, Finding Water, The Artist's Way at Work, The Writing Diet, and now Prosperous Heart.
Profile Image for MLeigh.
5 reviews
February 25, 2012
I like it but then I don't. The encouragement, the guidance, the steps to financial clarity -- I can use this and I plan to implement the Counting and Morning Pages. I like the way Cameron leans on God's understanding, how she encourages her readers to listen to our inner voice of reasoning, to trust our instincts and to allow ourselves to have faith and to be guided. But I dislike the supposed stories of her students, they all seemed so very contrived. The "trust fund baby" who felt guilt of not earning an income, the wife married to a millionaire who learned money wasn't happiness, the iPhone addicted student who finally turned off her phone (because of Cameron) and was able to tap into her creativity and churn out song lyrics, the guy who realized he can't buy love with his millions ... these examples seem made up entirely for the purpose of giving Cameron's book substance and meaning. Gloss over these examples and glean out the words of financial wisdom. If you can do this, you have found the substance of "the prosperous heart".
Profile Image for Louise Silk.
Author 6 books14 followers
February 8, 2012
Julia Cameron created The Artist's Way, a twelve step program to unleash one's creativity. I loved that program and the book that supported it. This is very similar but instead of focusing on creativity, Cameron focuses on money offering a 12-week recovery program for those suffering from an unhealthy relationship with money. It uses the same tools as The Artist Way- morning pages, a daily walk, and lots of activities.

Like any 12 step program, the focus is not actually on money but rather how to incorporate faith and spirituality into one's relationship with money. The reader comes to understand that prosperity is not a financial concept, but rather a spiritual one and with that uncovers the underlying issues causes an unhealthy relationship with money.

The Prosperous Heart is as much about creativity as it is about financial recovery and so in the end if you haven't read The Artist's Way- start there, you'll find out much more about yourself in all kinds of areas.
Profile Image for Ash Ryan.
238 reviews11 followers
August 19, 2015
The Prosperous Heart, like The Artist's Way, is a twelve week program designed in this case not to recover creativity but rather your financial well-being and, more deeply, your ability to appreciate what you already have.[return][return]As Cameron ages, she seems to be retreating ever more deeply into the more mystical aspects of her personal philosophy, which didn't get in the way too much before but unfortunately now mar her work as simplistic faith in a personal God has become a more central focus. Still, many of the principles and practices she espouses are sound enough, from actually keeping track of your expenditures to not going into debt, and the book's fundamental lesson of learning to appreciate the abundance that already surrounds you is one from which many people could greatly benefit.[return][return]http://www.amazon.com/review/R2GH0E4P...
Profile Image for Sue.
Author 22 books56 followers
February 20, 2012
There's nothing wrong with this book. It's beautifully packaged and well-written. It's just that it assumes the reader is a financial disaster in need of a 12-step program and a close relationship with a higher power. I'm not a compulsive spender; I only wanted to figure out how to stretch my money closer to the end of the month. But for someone whose finances are a muddle, and more important, for someone who wants more out of life than just money, this is a good guide. Each chapter tells some stories and offers steps, combined with writing exercises and questions to get the reader moving toward a more prosperous mindset and a more prosperous life.
Profile Image for Jill Kemerer.
Author 121 books626 followers
November 13, 2012
I loved the overall message of finding contentment in the present--with what we have and where we're at. The twelve weeks (or 12 "steps") program would be good for anyone who struggles with overspending.

I've always been frugal, so I enjoyed the reminders that life is more than our possessions. We need to be in touch with what we want, and sometimes that changes.

The aspects of the book that didn't work as well for me were the non-stop asides about her friends. Some of the stories inspired me, but after a while, they only distracted from the overall message.

Overall, a terrific book about keeping our financial lives in perspective.
304 reviews7 followers
March 29, 2012
A good book - a gentle book - a gently effective book. I have done the Artist's Way, I have Walked in this World, and I have explored the Vein of Gold, so it would be difficult for Julia Cameron to completely surprise me. Herein is a reinforcement of her message, and the message is subtly directed and usefully applied to developing a sense of prosperity, whatever your circumstances. Added to the tools already developed in previous texts, is 'counting', and I have found it very useful - and magical! I am more prosperous at the end of my reading than when I started!
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