I think Goodread’s description for the 2 star rating puts it best, “it was ok”.
Doesn’t contain much in the way of concrete, actionationable advice or steps. Does contain a bunch of soft exercises for thinking about your future in different ways.
If you’re a person who needs to know why you’re doing each exercise, and whether it’s leading to something, probably stay away from this book as it’s just going to frustrate you. There are a lot of exercises like, “Create a vision map of the Life You Love” that the author never really explains why you should do and aren’t built upon or referenced ever again. I can’t help but feel like the author tries the throw-everything-at-the-wall-in-the-hope-that-something-sticks method: “Create a vision map. Now create a vision letter. Write a poem to express your life design. Now write a haiku to express your life design...” But to be fair, the vision letter (or at least what I turned the vision letter exercise into), was one of the things that stuck on the wall for me. It helped me think through my life plan and reason about the best next steps. There was something about putting pen to paper, or my case finger to keyboard, that helps--perhaps the slower pace required to express your thoughts eloquently in writing compared rapid thought process of thinking through the same idea.
To give you an idea of what you’ll find in this book, here’s a picture from the “Expression” chapter and the accompanying explanation of the picture:
Picture: one + one = unique
Explanation: “The sum of all the steps leads to expression, but a great expression is more than the sum of its parts. Expression of the life you love defines who you are and the life you want to live. It is the pursuit of a life well lived.”
As you can see, though the flowery language (and sometimes seemingly unrelated pictures) may be thought-provoking, the book isn’t always helpful or even always make sense. Who knows, perhaps it might appeal to a more artsy person.
I was hoping this book would be a step-by-step guide to identifying and creating your ideal life where each subsequent step builds upon the former eventually creating an impressive plan. This book is not that. That book I have not found. If you have, please please please let me know in the comments. Even though this book wasn’t what I was hoping it’d be, or even really what it declared itself to be (a guide to creating your ideal life through applying design philosophy) it was probably still helpful for me to have read it. It may be a good place to start your journey of creating the life you want by getting the thought process started.