What do you think?
Rate this book


272 pages, Hardcover
Published October 14, 2025
"It takes an open mind to manage the uncertainties and negatives we encounter in life" and "I sit in nature, listen to my body, connect with others, know what I value, and try not to fight with life."Most touching for me are the many generations of family stories, shared in short and powerful snippets throughout the book. In her own life and that of her parents and grandparents, and even further back, there's no dodging difficulties or claiming easy victories. Rather, difficulties are taken for what they are, and treated as sources of learning and resilience. This resonates with me. Her stories are also funny and direct:
As a child, if I sat around feeling sorry for myself, my mother would gently rap her knuckles on the top of my head and admonish me. “So selfish,” she would say. “Go clean toilet.”People who have become caught up with geopolitical conflicts could benefit by taking on both the benefits and drawbacks of both eastern and western culture:
Western culture does sometimes feed the “monkey mind,” where the inner voice worries and churns, but Western culture also encourages positive cultural aspirations like personal freedom and individual expression. In turn, Eastern thought promotes important aspects of living, such as harmony with others and detachment from desires that may make us miserable. I am taking the best of the two worlds that have shaped who I am, and I am sharing that here. In doing so, I’m hoping to address why we suffer from constant negativity and how to find ways out of that mindset. Hopefully, we can all be a little “less miserable” as a result.