This was a bit of a different self-help/self-improvement/mental fixer-upper/whatever you want to call it type of book. It compares the mind to that of lines of code, saying the mind is malleable and can easily be manipulated. Hargave states our negative thought loops contribute to our negative decisions, leaking down to our negative actions and our negative outlooks on life, yada yada yada.
Readers are giving mental exercises to do each day, including reciting your own positive thought loop. One example would be if, say, you want to go back to school, you avoid saying to yourself "I will never go to school. I am too old for that. I can't afford school. I'll just be stuck in the same job forever" but instead say something as simple as "I will go back to school". It's that age-old Power of Positive Thinking® wisdom that our more hippie friends would always give us. Bless them.
There is something to be said about creating this positive thought loops. Through sharing his personal experiences curbing his alcoholism, sharing the rise to success of people like Nikola Tesla, Albert Einstein, and Steve Jobs, Hargrave shares stories of hope as well as more mind games for the reader to practice.
The point of this book is to follow its instructions but, surprisingly, I found them to be a bit vague. The exercises themselves were easy to follow and, I felt, were helpful, but people like me need a HARD SCHEDULE to follow, because my mind is always going in a circle, a zig-zag, and across the street to get a coffee, all at once.
I'm going to still look through this periodically, as this was probably one of the more practical and down-to-earth self-improvement/etc. books that I've ever read. It wasn't really as new-agey crunchy granola-y as others I've read, and I appreciate that. *Note: I do like a crunchy granola-y self help book on occasion*.
At the end of the book, there are practice sheets to do write down when you do your exercises, how long they take, what the outcome was, etc. I just wrote down some of the exercises on a separate sheet because I'm SO not about that life where you write in your books. Mentally, I just CANT hack my mind to do that.