This completely revised and updated edition of Reinventing Yourself, the motivational classic by inspirational author Steve Chandler, features several new chapters, including: What to Do about Your Money Fears
Your Career Played as a Game vs. Your Career as a Grind for Survival
How Much Ego Do You Need to Succeed?
The Hidden Downside of Winning Friends and Influencing People
Do You Need a Life Coach or Should You Just Wing It?
Does Success Make You Happy or Does Happiness Make You Successful? You'll learn numerous techniques for breaking down negative barriers and letting go of the pessimistic thoughts that prevent you from fulfilling, or even allowing yourself to conceive of, your goals and dreams. Chandler's new edition also tunes, polishes, and strengthens the many popular and inspiring chapters from previous editions of this book, making them even more useful and relevant in today's rapidly changing, globalized world. The old psychological models that focused on past hurts and traumatic memories have given way to exciting new breakthroughs, like Dr. Martin Seligman's work on post-traumatic strength and Dr. George Pransky's work on human beings' innate resilience and well-being. No more fixating on psychic wounds that occurred in childhood. Chandler's new revision looks at the work of both of those pioneers and makes optimism available to people who never believed they could reinvent their old ways of being.
(Arabic: ستيف تشاندلر) Steve Chandler, bestselling author of 100 Ways to Motivate Yourself, Time Warrior and 30 other books, is known as America's notoriously unorthodox personal growth guru. He has helped thousands of people transform their lives and businesses.
Steve invites you to join his inner circle, the Wealth Warrior Movement, whose sole focus is supporting you in creating greater prosperity for yourself. Join by visiting and you will receive prosperity-building messages from Steve three times a week, each and every week, as well as monthly webinars by Steve, books by Steve and the members-only CREATING WEALTH Audio Series.
And... Steve's NEWEST book Wealth Warrior will go out to all members of the Wealth Warrior Movement when it's published in September 2012.
This is one of the BEST books I have read; hands-down. You can tell the Author knows what he's talking about, no fluff, just facts and key points. I enjoyed this book and I definitely will read it again. It felt great reading each page, I almost didn't want it to end.
I listened to the audio version of this book and its very good, not all books translate very well onto audio books but this one works very well. Using audio books is really good because you can do other things while listening.
Steve reads this book himself and at first it sounds like he might be boring but after listening to him a bit you realise that he is not, he has a very calm and fatherly voice and hes words seem to come from lot of experience and caring.
The books not really about reinvention its more about being the best you can be and its hard to summarise this book because there is so much good in this book so just get it its worth getting it will strengthen your spirit for a bit but you do have to do the things he suggests or there is no point.
This is the first book on personal development I've read at age 20. I think that Steve Chandler knows what he is talking about because he personally went through an immense personal shift from a "victim" to an "owner". This shift to ownership is the main topic of the book. In the very first pages the reader gets to know Chandlers definition of an owner who creates its own circumstances. In "Time Warrior", Chandler says that it's best to absorb one particular aspect of a book and implement it in ones life. For me personally, it it by asking myself on every action I take about whether it is motivated by victimized or ownership thoughts and beliefs. Great book. Nothing esoterical.
A short, to-the-point, and funny read on becoming the person you’ve always wanted to be.
“Most of us live in a cocoon of personality—the made-up story of who we are.
It seems dark and dusty inside this little cocoon, and we think we can’t get out. We tell ourselves stories about our personality, but these stories aren’t reality. Deep down, we know we’re more than this personality.
We could tear open the cocoon if we wanted to. We could push out and see the light of the world. We could learn to fly.
But most of us will live trapped inside our personalities for our entire lives, never knowing that we can leave. We are victims of our own invented limits. We wake up each morning to a world that is dim and unclear. There are so many problems wrapped around us; there is almost no light. Pushing against the inner wall of the cocoon seems futile. Why bother? I am the way I am.
So why are there people who learn to push through? How exactly do they learn to create themselves all over again? It is reported that these people feel like they’re learning to fly.
In effect, they are reinventing who they are. And, in the process, they become owners of the human spirit. They are victims no more.”
~ Steve Chandler from Reinventing Yourself, Revised Edition
I got this book years ago when I first started working with Steve Chandler. At the time, I read and listened to a ton of his stuff.
Steve and I worked together one-on-one for a couple years. I wish I kept my notes from our chats like I’ve done for my sessions with Phil Stutz. My stack of notes from my nearly-two years of work with Phil is inches thick. My stack with Steve would have been just as thick as he is a MACHINE with practical, empowering distinctions.
It was super fun to reread this book and dive back into Steve’s down-to-earth and empowering wisdom. I love his short, to-the-point, funny style. (Get a copy of the book here.)
Some of my favorite big ideas from this book include:
1. Victim vs. Owner - Make the decision. 2. Styrofoam vs. Real Weight - Which are you lifting? 3. Yes - Lives in the land of No. 4. Ownish vs. Victimese - Learning a new language. 5. 10 Things - Courage and action. 6. Campfires - Are a lot like the human spirit.
I’ve also added Reinventing Yourself by Steve Chandler to my collection of Philosopher’s Notes--distilling the Big Ideas into 6-page PDF and 20-minute MP3s on 600+ of the BEST self-development books ever. You can get access to all of those plus a TON more over at https://heroic.us.
A great book that helps you discover the power within yourself to create change in yourself. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is trying to create positive changes to their lives. So greatful it was recommended to me.
This is easily in my top three favorites from the Steve Chandler library; the other two being Wealth Warrior and Time Warrior.
I think this book is invaluable in its ability to clearly and quickly identify the ways in which we hold ourselves back from progressing, from achieving and from creating the very things in our lives we want, yet all the while blaming circumstances, other people or even, at times, ourselves.
Steve goes into great detail to illustrate the owner/victim mentality between which we have all vacillated. Sometimes his examples are extreme, but I love that because the ridiculous nature of my own inner victim laughs at me.
"Owners focus on what they want. Victims focus on what they fear. And both positions are pure internal invention" (59).
Grab a copy and a highlighter and open Steve's blueprint for reinventing you.
In a lot of ways this is a typical self help book. A lot of platitudes - often strung one after the other until you’re not sure what the authors point is. But throughout the book there are some nuggets of wisdom and perspective that ring true. I listened to the audiobook while I worked, exercised or did chores. This book was a great peptalk and we all need that sometimes.
A fantastic self-help title. Not the sort of dreck most are, and you'll find no rah-rah you are wonderful in here. The title is just what it is. I read Time Warrior first, and I recommend reading both back-to-back as I think they enhace each other.
I like that Steve Chandler says that personality isn't fixed; we can change, we can grow, we can reinvent ourselves through the thoughts and actions we take. We can practice being other ways and doing other things than we've always done since junior high.
In this book, Chandler shows, "There's always something you can do," about a problem. The following is a problem-solving method he suggests that I want to try:
"Write this sentence: 'Five Small Things I Could Do About This Today.' Then number 1 through 5 on a page with space beneath each one for your ideas. Don't get up until you've written the five things. Force yourself to write something. "Once you've written the five ideas, take the paper with you throughout the day and don't go to bed until all five things are done. Remember: These are little things you can do. "By the time you're finished, you will be surprised at how you have altered the nature of your problem. In many cases, you will have solved it completely. In other cases, you will see in your mind that it is no longer a problem, but, instead, a new project. A work in progress."
I also like this quote and concept about accepting others rather than focusing on trying to forgive them. The author learned this from a friend, Devers Branden:
She suggested, "That we drop the whole idea of 'forgiving.' The very word, 'forgiving,' she pointed out, suggests that a sin has been committed." Instead she, "Suggested that we look for something stronger and more permanent than forgiveness, something like complete acceptance." "I realized that I was not an intended victim. I was not a target. And that 'forgiveness' would just deepen the idea that a mighty wrong had taken place."
This idea is very helpful to me, especially when considering perceived wrongs from my childhood. Instead of confronting family and associates, even in my own mind, with the need to forgive them, I can recognize that most people in my life haven't intended to hurt me. Many times it was my thoughts about what they did or said that caused the problem. If I can totally accept them with all their imperfections and faulty efforts, there is nothing to forgive. I am free from blame and any negative feelings about them. I am no longer a victim. I am an owner of my own emotions, experiences, and thoughts. This may or may not work for every person or situation, but it's an interesting, potentially helpful idea.
I also like Chandler's suggestion that every day we have some laughter, singing, and dancing in our lives. I wrote that as I'm singing to a Classic Rock song and dancing in my computer chair. All these self-help books I've been reading, along with Brooke Castillo's old podcasts on Youtube, and the actions I've been taking, have transformed my life for the better!
Who wrote this and who approved this and how did this end up in my “to-read” list.
DNF at 50% because it just got so repetitive and was giving the same basic advice we’ve all heard before. It boils down to two points the author keeps on repackaging -your spirit is within you and so are the answers to your problems -you just need to work harder and take bigger risks
There chapters are really short so there’s no real development of any of the authors tips. A lot (a LOT) of name dropping and “I was once with this famous person who did/said some small thing and now I’m going to extrapolate an entire lifestyle philosophy from this small situation and I will not go into a lot of detail because it will then expose all the gaps in my logic”
Then the way this guy talks about the multiple personality disorder one of his family member developed after years of sexual abuse is mind boggling. He himself describes “The history of her abuse, when it was finally revealed, was almost too much for me to hear. Then I saw pictures and I saw that it was even worse than I'd heard.” Yet also “An immediate member of my family suffered from multiple personality disorder. Although to say that she "suffered from" it is like saying Georgia O'Keefe "suffered from" her paintings, or that Michelangelo "suffered from" the Sistine Chapel”. Sir… are you good?
Anyway. A lot more bs example (he claims the reason for his father drinking himself to death is because his father stopped being a workaholic and got too used to a relaxing lifestyle), faux philosophy, and named dropping.
Lots of real gold and wisdom, some great ideas on language, reframing perspectives, and taking ownership and responsibility for our thinking and habits; but also lots of wishful, magical thinking and toxic positivity, not grounded in science or anything approaching quality authenticity, mindfulness, or an awareness of the realities of modern society (ie capitalism vs democracy). That said, I'd recommend this book for a lot of people, just not as a first-ever book on personal dev because of the toxicity of "you can just reason away your trauma or depression." A lot of it really amounts to apathetic, detached privilege, ála: "improve your mood by not watching the news! disengage from the suffering in the world and your own happiness is either enough or will magically heal the world!"
I think if new readers bear that in mind, it can free you up to enjoy and appreciate the clever and insightful things that do exist in the book, of which there are actually many. I myself want to return to review it with that lens. A new book that simply validated the good parts and refuted the fluff, both psychologically and societally, expanding in a direction of more civic engagement, could make for a truly transformational work.
I know I really want to built myself from the ground in 2024 and that’s why I squize these sort of books on the blog and in my Kindle right now. I wanna start the year fresh, with a new mentality and a new vibe to the blog, 2024 brings lifestyle and thriller review posts. I wanna end the self help reviews for the moment and this will be the book that will put them to rest in 2023.
This is such a good book that truly makes you aware of your victim mentality, I highly recommend it to anyone who truly wants change and to take a hold of their life.
I picked up this book during a very low point in my life, when I was searching for ways to lift myself up. This book is filled with incredible insights on how to pick oneself up and embark on a journey of reinvention. I appreciate its advice about doing the very things you are afraid of—not just asking "How do I feel?" but also "What are the thoughts that cause me to feel this way?" I like how the book encourages everyone to become an Owner, taking responsibility for their own life. It teaches how to embrace life's challenges and problems, and how to avoid falling into a Victim mentality.
Found this little gem stashed away during an attic clean-out. Very useful, quick and engaging to read. Parallels brilliantly with many of my other favorite works on personal development. An additional fascinator for me was the relevance that Chandler's characterization of "victims" has for the large-scale social changes we have witnessed in the years since this book's publication. Highly recommended read!!!
Every morning when we wake up, another day of play begins, and the only thing we have control over is how we play. There are more complicated moments and easier moments to deal with, as in all games, but every moment is made of information acquisition and growth in awareness. The sum of decisions we make defines who we are as human beings and units of consciousness in this spacetime. Great book!
This is an outstanding book to read on how to make changes to yourself and your life. I found it stripped away some of my self-defeating ideas I had about my own personal change. It took away some of my long held excuses. And replaced them with practical and philosophical ideas on how we tick and why we take the actions we do. I would really recommend this book to those people wanting to change their lives and also to life coaches.
Such a great book. I kept putting it down cause every time I picked it up, I felt renewed. Refreshed. This is the type of book you keep coming back to. If you're miserable in your current circumstances and feel like a victim of the circumstances, I'd suggest grabbing a copy cause it will make you realise that you have all the power. Not the outside world, not your job, not people, you.
This is such an important book. Are you a victim or an owner? I would say this book is beneficial to most people. It has helped me to see things in my life differently, and to start to move forward to being the person that I want to be, and stop letting my limiting thoughts hold me back. I read the 20th anniversary edition that added some useful chapters. Highly recommend.
This book felt like something that was written on napkins in spare moments and then typed up. Each chapter is ultra short, and I never felt like anything had a point. I could barely make it 1/3 in before I gave up.
Read this one as part of our book club at work. Overall there are some good 'nugget's throughout the book but I find his writing difficult to follow. I feel like if you approach the book as a daily reflection type book reading a chapter a day it would be more beneficial to the reader.
My mindset before reading the book was like I need to complete this book. The book helped me to recognize the necessity and imperative need to adapt to an owner's mindset - I want to read this book. The message is quite clear. Each chapter begins with candid and realistic examples which makes us implore our understanding of the thought process. This book helps the reader to elevate in intellect and emotion from lower rungs to upper rungs of ladder of selves citing the existing theories and information. The thinking is matured with the proper understanding of fundamentals which are already inherent in any individual - Loving and forgiving oneself, Self-pity being a limitation of self, handling offence, personality and comfort zone, faith and courage being rewards not requirement for action, which gives awareness in a broader way about the victim & owner mindsets. Misinterpreted concepts have been clearly explained - 'Staying happy is not selfish'; 'Power is within us' to name a few. The book is worth reading and re-reading yet it took me forever to complete.
This book reinforced that it is all about mindset. The author talks about either being an owner or a victim. This book is a reminder that if you are in a rut, it is on you to dig yourself out. I enjoyed it and would recommend it for anyone working on their positive mindset.
Not as useful or applicable as Chandler's other texts on motivation. The teachings in this one were surprisingly more religious, almost as if it was proselytizing a certain frame of mind. Less about action, more about thought. Too abstract for my tastes.
I really enjoyed this book. Very short chapters, mostly tackling topics related to taking ownership of your actions. There's a constant discussion between the dichotomy of the victim mentality and being an owner of your life. It's pretty amazing how well this book has aged in the past 20+ years.