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Lifeshocks: And how to love them

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'There are moments in time when our internal perceptions are confronted by external events, when what is assumed, wished or imagined collides with what is...'

Sophie Sabbage, author of The Cancer Whisperer , has written this book to show that we can choose how we respond to these Lifeshocks.

She shows lifeshocks knock on the doors of our pretences and invite us to walk authentically through the world, and that if we recognize this, we can respond to them creatively. Beginning with examples of lifeshocks from her own life and from the lives of people she has mentored, Sophie show shows how bad things shape our lives, starting from an early age, and how we tend to react to them in a way that diminish our lives. But she also shows how we can react to them in a way that helps us find our true purpose in life, explaining the different types of lifeshocks, the gifts those different types bring with them and how to access those gifts quickly.

Lifeshocks is a book that can completely transform your life so that your become full of gratitude for it.

302 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 14, 2018

28 people are currently reading
127 people want to read

About the author

Sophie Sabbage

15 books10 followers

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5 stars
31 (40%)
4 stars
20 (26%)
3 stars
13 (17%)
2 stars
10 (13%)
1 star
2 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
56 reviews
April 25, 2021
Self indulgent twaddle with little substance. Sophie has a tendency to brag about her skills and intelligence, and then say she shrunk herself for many years. I wish she still did as this book is nothing but one big hollow ego trip.

Avoid
Profile Image for Claire Lyons.
110 reviews17 followers
August 22, 2018
What an extraordinary person, and such a powerful book to read. It lifts and slaps you all at once - it reminds us all of the privilege to be alive.
Profile Image for Moana.
3 reviews
July 30, 2018
A mighty, meaty read! A book I am looking forward to re-reading until it is dog-eared and further tear-stained. Thank you for having the courage and the tenacity to complete it. I gave a copy to a dear friend and she sent me this text: "Wow. I started bookmarking thoughts I wanted to revisit... may as well put a bookmark on every page."
Profile Image for CenReads.
240 reviews11 followers
August 23, 2018
A very raw outlook on Sophie’s continued journey through cancer.
It is a reflective book- how life shocks have an effect on your life for the butter.

This book follows her first book ‘The Cancer Whisper’
With this book I found that I would curl up and read felt like I was catching up with an old friend.

Easy read the story flowed easily
Profile Image for Mary Karpel-Jergic.
410 reviews30 followers
September 12, 2018
This is Sophie Sabbage' second book and as I had enjoyed her first I expected to like this as much or more, but I didn't. It is an honest, experiential account of her life and the 'lifeshocks' that have shaped her. Obviously cancer was one of them but there are many more. In charting her life following what is a psychological self-help model of discovery and recovery there are many insights to take away.

I found it overly full of unnecessary metaphors which are fine for personal insights but not so appropriate when applying a particular method of understanding that follows a set of steps. However, I suspect that being an English literature graduate is what fuels this usage.

Perhaps it was trying to be two books in one - one book is how Sophie has used the concepts of lifeshocks to understand her life - one book as to how we could all apply the method to our own experience.
Profile Image for Fondantsurprise.
122 reviews4 followers
January 18, 2019
I picked this up with an open mind; the author and the organisation of which she’s part have received great reviews and done some amazing work, and so I started reading it in that vein but as the book went on I found lots with which I disagreed. I shan’t say much more as I don’t like to leave an unkind review but I will say if you’re any kind of abuse survivor, the chapter on resentment contains some things which personally I think could be out-and-out harmful. I do think there are maybe some important insights in here though, and I don’t want to discount the entire thing. (Perhaps I’m just not ready for enlightenment.)
Profile Image for Sarah Jewell.
9 reviews4 followers
October 24, 2018
Thoroughly self helpy. But a really great read - a mix of stories from the author's life, and practical strategies to identify and work through moments (called "lifeshocks") in life that give us insight into ourselves.
1 review1 follower
April 25, 2019
This book is an astonishingly great read. It is both intelligent and brave. Sophie Sabbage’s depth of knowledge and awareness, coupled with her elegant writing style drew me right into and through the learning tools, reminding me over and over how clear and noble it is to step into the truth.
3 reviews
February 15, 2025
I found this book difficult to read. I feel somehow it didn't resonate with me and that there was more to this book that I could appreciate
Profile Image for Melissa Scheffey.
42 reviews
March 21, 2025
Terrific book to be read over and over as we confront each of life's shocks. Full of helpful advice for turning challenges into gratitude and grief into enlightenment.
Profile Image for Tina.
3 reviews5 followers
August 25, 2019
Reading the book itself was a cascade of lifeshocks ... !
Very powerful testimony on Sophie’s life experiences, the existential questions and realities she faces. There are a lot of theoretical self development books but this one touched me deep due to the personal and intimate way life shocking events have been shared, analyzed and acknowledged.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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