For the very first time, this book made me wish my blog had a huge following. I think everyone should read E-Squared. Although it’s not specifically written for teens, any young adult would love it. In 157 short pages, your mind will be set spinning in a new direction. It will bring you to a place you had never noticed existed. Most importantly, it will open up a whole world of new possibilities.
Yes, your thoughts create your reality-blah, blah, blah. You’ve heard it over and over without it making a dent in your consciousness. You say you believe it but do you really believe it until you see it? E-Squared brings that phrase to life, with nine fun, easy experiments that prove it. Pam Grout has a breezy, friendly way of writing that reminds you of talking to your next door neighbor. Although the content is monumental, the book is never serious (aka boring).
In one experiment, the reader is supposed to declare the intent to look for green cars in the following 24 hours, to prove that what you think, you create, or, believing is seeing. Pam Grout does warn at some point in the book that God, The Universe, The Source, or whatever you might call it, has a sense of humor. So over the next 24 hours, I looked for green cars, drove all over, went to the mall with a parking lot full of cars, and did not see a single one. I thought that maybe people don’t drive green cars anymore. Maybe I should have picked silver–there’s plenty of those. Just as my 24 hours was nearly up, I stopped at a light. There was a green car in front of me, one behind me, one waiting in oncoming traffic. There were several in the parking lot of the strip mall to my right. Green cars were passing through the intersection. I started laughing. The light turned green and I turned. In the next half mile to my house, I saw green pickup trucks, more green cars, a green lawn care truck. There must have been thirty, all in the space of a half mile! Some sense of humor!
The next day, in the same experiment, the reader is supposed to look for yellow butterflies. I said, life is too short to waste on this–I went right for the big stuff. Instead, I looked for what is great about my son and sure enough, I saw it in him. Do you see the possibilities? You can look for anything and see it!
This experiment is not a fluke. All the others work and are equally entertaining/open a world of possibilities. I do have to say, I especially liked the Jenny Craig experiment, where you lose weight without changing how you eat or doing ANYTHING!
I now keep a list of the nine experiments on my desk and regularly use about five of them to create my reality and reassure myself that I’m not alone, that there is some force in the universe that connects us all.
I’m not going to do my usual what I liked and did not like about the book because there’s nothing I didn’t like about it. And, I loved E-Squared and think that if it were mandatory reading in school, the world would transform.