How to Stop Complaining & Start Being Productive! (Positive Thinking Book): Self Esteem, How to Be Happy, Goal Setting, Motivate Yourself, Be Productive Have you ever experienced such periods of life when you feel that you’re drowning, and trying desperately to keep afloat. You’ve just lifted your head over the water for a moment to take a sip of air, and the next moment you have plunged to depth again? Different situations and emotions make you feel a victim of a cruel world – and you think that this happens only to you?
It’s seldom that everything in life goes according to our plans. However, hardships on our way serve as valuable lessons for our personal growth. The problems we face allow us to evaluate the victorious moments better and to look with the perspective at the beauty of these hard challenges. It’s practically impossible to avoid challenges with all the complexities of today’s life.
As a rule, we usually consider all forms of discomfort as something that should be avoided. However, this attitude only feeds our suffering. With our endless cycle of thoughts, we feed the situation emotionally, that is we create an unconscious cycle which doesn’t only paralyze us physically, but also provides zero support in solving the existing problem.
Here Is A Preview Of What You'll Learn…
Change of Perception
Cleaning the Past
How Not to Repeat
The Errors of Your Past?
Is Life Without Suffering Possible?
How do We Destroy Our Life?
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database. For more information please see Tom Brown.
From the author's amazon author page:
An English psychologist, psychoanalyst, sociologist, one of the representatives of the neo-Freudianism, was born in Frankfurt am Main. There, he got an excellent primary education, then graduated from the University of Heidelberg, where the major disciplines were psychology, sociology and philosophy. Upon graduation, he received a doctoral degree in philosophy and sociology, and the degree of family psychologist. Inspired by Freud’s ideas, he showed the great interest to the study of psychoanalysis, which he combined with practical medicine. Upon completion of the required obligatory psychoanalytic education and practice, he organized private practice. And it became a powerful resource to monitor people and study social and biological components of human mentality.