Do you realize how much energy we use by not making a decision?What if you had all of that power?The answer is simple–yet not always easy.
In this short-and-powerful book, you’ll
How to stop procrastinating and make the decision–on a regular basis.How to celebrate your decisions–so you don’t go back on them.How to use your mind, heart, and gut to find the best solution–and stick to it.The author of 35 books, Bradley Charbonneau, often gets the
“Which of your Repossible series is the most important?” He Decide.
We’re going to be a little blunt Imagine a fork in the road. One path leads to success, the other to failure. Sure, maybe the road to failure eventually leads to success. But which one do you take? It seems simple, doesn’t it?
Imagine experiencing these emotions on a regular
ClarityCourageConfidenceReliefJoyThen imagine NOT feeling these emotions as
FrustrationOverwhelmFearDoubtRegretThis is a simple book. It’s short. Yet it’s powerful–if you learn how to decide.
Make the decision to buy your copy of “Decide” today! (See what i did there? ;-))
Bradley Charbonneau has blah blah blah written 33 books and held a write-every-single-day streak of 2,808 days in a row. Yeah, whatever. Who cares, right?
Do you know what Bradley's best numbers are?
Zero and One.
Zero is the number of books he had before he started writing even One day in a row.
One is the number of books (and days in a row) he wrote once he finally got over his imposter syndrome, his perfectionism, doubt, fear, anxiety, and last but not least: procrastination.
The problem was that he started out trying to write his Best Book Ever. (PRO TIP: impossible)
It would have made things a whole lot easier, faster, and a ton more fun had he only started with his Worst Book Ever.
Join him twice a year in starting--and finishing--your first (and hopefully worst) book at worst.repossible.com.
I feel as though I don't quite know what to say about this audiobook. Its topic seems clear from its title and subtitle. It is a relatively quick listen. As I was listening to it, though, I couldn't quite understand what the author was trying to get across, what he wanted the reader/listener to learn to help with decision-making, other than the most basic about decisions that most of us, if we're functioning adults, most likely know. When the audiobook ended, my first thought was, “That’s it?” Upon reflection, I couldn't really piece together any true takeaways that would help me make better or more confident decisions. I actually felt as though I must have, perhaps, dozed off, and so I listened to the entire audiobook again. However, that didn't change my utter lack of takeaways. If you are looking for a book to help you make better, more confident decisions and choices, I recommend finding a resource that will actually help you do so!
I received a promo code for this audiobook, but that did not affect my review.