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The Power of Losing Control

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“When we learn to stop wasting our precious energy on what we can’t control, we can begin to discover the power of losing control.”

At the age of eighteen, Joe Caruso was diagnosed with testicular cancer. Certain that he was living on borrowed time, he embarked on a quest to understand the meaning of life, which led to the discovery of timeless truths about our spiritual and emotional lives. In The Power of Losing Control, he shares the insights that helped him not only to survive, but also to become an internationally acclaimed speaker whose seminars have literally transformed people’s lives.

Caruso takes readers step-by-step through amazing techniques and strategies that show us how to stop wasting valuable time and energy, trust in something greater than ourselves, and embrace simple truths including:
- The five stages of wisdom
- Choosing faith over fear
- How to find power in any situation, even if you don’t have control over it
- Being undeniable: How to create your own destiny
- Personal driving myths: We are the stories we tell ourselves

Filled with anecdotes and poignant real-life stories, The Power of Losing Control tells you how to reclaim personal power and gain worldly success—from one of the premier corporate teachers of our generation.

256 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

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About the author

Joe Caruso

2 books1 follower
After being diagnosed with an incurable cancer while he was still in college, Joe decided to commit whatever time he had left to spending five hours per day, five days per week, studying life. He wanted to identify what he now refers to as Simple, Common, Timeless Human Truths about life. In his quest, Joe felt compelled to answer a simple, yet difficult question, before he was overcome by the cancer:
What is the essence of a fulfilling, successful and happy life?

What Joe couldn’t know when he made this promise was that with incredible advances in chemotherapy, he would become one of the first people ever cured of metastasized, testicular cancer. With this gift, he decided he would continue his study, and began to systematically collect and analyze his findings about the essence of a fulfilling, successful and happy life. His efforts culminated in a best-selling book and PBS special, both called The Power of Losing Control, as well as a highly successful career as a compelling and engaging keynote speaker.


As the world began to learn more about Joe, and vice versa, businesses and organizations wanted him to apply his findings to their needs. With that, Joe set about applying his tried and true approach of studying life to studying the Simple, Common, Timeless, Truths about Business and organizational success, which he now applies with leadership teams and organizations worldwide.

Joe is acclaimed as one of the most respected business and organizational advisors in the world. He is the only non-multinational CEO to be invited to address the Admirals and Generals at the National Defense University. Joe has also been invited to teach and share his findings at the Keenan Flagler Business School, and the Naval Post-Graduate Academy, and was named one of the 50 Most Influential Minds in Personal Development by Nightingale-Conant.

Joe lives one third of the year on an island between Michigan and Canada with his wife, Carol. The rest of the year they travel for business and pleasure.

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Cara.
Author 21 books101 followers
June 25, 2022
In a series of mundane but unusual events, this book jumped out at me at the library. I thought I got it to better understand someone else, who expressed a profound discomfort with letting go of control. But it turns out I got it to help me understand myself.

I had a big-deal therapy session in which I thought I was working on identifying false beliefs. I picked out the five overarching themes from my losses throughout my life and what I had concluded from them. Then I presented them to my therapist, expecting her to shoot holes in them and prove to me that they were false beliefs, then help me reprogram them.

Instead, she said they were true. Everyone really does leave, whether they move away, you have a fight, you drift apart, or one of you dies. Life is generally full of blindsiding surprises and is fundamentally uncontrollable.

Her take was even more depressing and hopeless-seeming than mine, and I started to despair. Life really is fundamentally uncontrollable? We really can’t control anything??? :(((((((

And then I walked past this book on the top of my stack of library books, and it popped up with what to do about all this and how to turn it into a gift.



I had such a different experience with the first half of this book vs. the second. For the first half, it was like every word was a gift, custom written just for me. Then I got a little bogged down in the faith chapter, and it felt like it dragged from then on. I don’t know if it was the book that changed or me. But I remain grateful for the first half pulling me out of my despair and offering me such hope and perfectly-fitted answers.

Notes
P. 6 Author diagnosed with testicular cancer, spread to both lungs, abdomen, and lymph nodes—incurable and 0% survival rate at the time (1978). He tried to control they only thing he could: planning his funeral. Nurse talked to him. 3% predicted survival rate for the experimental chemotherapy treatment (chemo was just being developed at the time). If he was in that 3%, what was his chance of survival? 100%. And if somebody was going to be the first to be cured, couldn’t it be him?

She didn’t say it would be him, or that he’d survive, or any of that. Just pointed out that if he assumed he was doing to die, he definitely wouldn’t be among the success stories. So he decided to make the most of whatever life he had left. No time to develop wisdom himself (didn’t expect to live that long), so he decided to read and learn from the wise ones as much as he could.

P. 11
The author’s personal mission statement is “to devote my life to learning all I could about life and to developing myself to the best of my abilities to help other people, in and beyond my lifetime—and I added three years later) to enjoy it.”

P. 36
Don’t have to find all your old myths/limiting beliefs and work to reprogram them. Just ask yourself if a particular thought, emotion, or behavior is serving you now. If no, look for a context that would allow you to replace it. As you think and behave differently, your myths will change themselves.

P. 39
Author’s father and a German kid rode to work at an auto factory together every morning with a grumpy driver. Kid loved his job and co-workers because he saw himself as making cars. Driver convinced him he didn’t make cars, he just moved one piece of metal from here to there, then did the same thing again and again and again all day. Kid was basically never happy again. The grumpy driver changed his context for the worse. Don’t do that to people.

P. 46 We’re all fundamentally alone in our experience of life (nobody else can experience it exactly as we do). We deny this by:
- I don’t need you (can’t accept help or support, etc.)
- I need to experience me through you (needy, clingy)
- I need you to validate me by having you experience me (know-it-all, do it my way)

P. 56 Ben Zander, director of the Boston Philharmonic and World Youth Orchestra—when he starts working with a new group, everyone is paralyzed by fear of making a mistake. He challenges them to play with passion, and if they make a mistake, just throw up their hands and yell “Isn’t that interesting!”

P.57 “In order to change the way we thing, act, or feel, we first have to give ourselves permission to think, act or feel in a way that doesn’t serve us.” Then recognize it, acknowledge it, and choose what we want instead.

P. 58
“We are always expressing either love or fear. Fear is really a call for help… a request for love. Fear and love can never be experienced at the same time. By choosing love instead of fear, we can change the nature and quality of our relationships.” —Gerald G. Jampolsky, Love is Letting Go of Fear

The author seems to be saying we can’t experience both at the same time because the sympathetic nervous system does fear and the parasympathetic does love. He doesn’t come right out and say that, though.

Example: mother separated from her 5-year-old daughter at Disney World. So panicked, she spent several minutes frantically yelling at a Disney employee about her missing daughter, before he was able to get her to see that her daughter had been sitting next to him the whole time.

P. 60
If you’re upset or in a bad mood, look for what you’re afraid of.

P. 72
Uncomfortable in a conversation? figure out what your gig is. What does the other person want from you? How do they want to feel? Usually, they want you to listen and validate them. Maybe empathy, maybe to feel important. Rarely solutions.

P. 73
Biggest factor in people doing what we want is how much they like themselves when they’re with us. (As opposed to how much they like us)

P. 75
How to be likable and valued by others:
“The Four Rules of Engagement
1. Everyone is always right.
2. Everyone’s greatest desire is to be right.
3. You can’t change another person’s mind.
4. You can help people shift their perspectives.” (Emphasis the author’s)

P. 99
Is it in your control? Does it serve you?
If the answer to either question is no, let it go.

P. 106
Successful weight loss people who kept it off asked themselves: what do I need to let go of to lose X pounds?” (Ex. French fries, chocolate, eating after 7)

P. 141-142
Quote from Good to Great by Jim Collins: Admiral Jim Stockdale was the highest-ranking American soldier captured during the Vietnam war. “I never doubted not only that I would get out, but also that I would prevail in the end and turn the experience into the defining event of my life, which in retrospect I would not trade.” Some guys were optimists, expecting to get out by Christmas, then by Easter. They died of a broken heart. “You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end—which you can never afford to lose—with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.”

P. 152
Transferable faith: the author’s dad had total faith he’d get through the cancer. The author had faith in his dad, so he had faith in his dad’s faith. That became the foundation for his own faith that he’d get through it. Just like when Jonathan believed in me, when Rick believed in me, etc. We can intentionally carry the faith torch for other people and let them fuel their faith from ours.
Profile Image for Nabil Duarte.
17 reviews1 follower
November 26, 2019
A wonderful read and guide to being a better human being. Has a lot of personal stories which always lead into a point the author is trying to convey.
28 reviews2 followers
November 10, 2017
Caruso's book is interesting and he definitely makes some great points. I felt that, though he tried not to be, he was a little patronizing at times. He makes some great points and is dead on when it comes to our lack of any real control in our lives. The book can be applied to any area of our lives, work, relationships, etc... I found myself reflecting on how I relate with my children as it becomes increasingly obvious how little control I have on their actions and desires. Surely his focus on learning how to influence makes sense. A good interesting book and I gave it three stars as I'm not much on "self-help" type books.
Profile Image for Cassandra.
109 reviews
September 6, 2021
I wanted to like this book as it was recommended by a mentor but after multiple attempts I couldn’t even bring myself to finish the book. I found the author’s tone to be patronizing and just could never connect to his stories. There was nothing new in his techniques and how he repackaged it was apparently not for me. Gave off very Dave Ramsey vibes if you know what I mean.
157 reviews2 followers
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August 9, 2011
Joe Caruso is a cancer survivor, and it was this life-changing event that also became his core, defining moment, as well as the central point of this book.

Bad things happen, circumstances occur beyond our control...and in fact, pretty much everything that happens to us is outside our direct control.

This is not the worst thing to realize, though; if anything, it's liberating. It allows us to focus on what matters, what we can control--our focus, plan of action, and ultimately our attitude.

Caruso makes points made elsewhere, but brings to the table his unique circumstances, lending tremendous moral weight to the Truths he puts forth.

Only when we accept that we are in an out of control world can we then stare down reality in the face and DEAL with reality fully aware and cognizant of how little we really OUGHT to cling to, emotionally, particularly if it neither SERVES or IMPROVES us.

Great read, good for me to read it at this time in my life.
3 reviews1 follower
October 13, 2008
I loved this book. I am going to read it again!
Profile Image for Claudia.
12 reviews5 followers
August 18, 2009
So far so good :) I want to get to the chapter - "Your legacy is none of your business" because I am always kinda obsessed with leaving a legacy.
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