Nothing could have prepared me for how much eye-rolling I did during this read, so much so, that I believe I could count it as cardio.
Admittedly, I should have done a Google search on the author before buying the audiobook, as I was searching for resources on burnout, but I purchased it based on the reviews. Overall, this book was a superficial solution by an out-of-touch author with unlimited resources for travel, shopping, child care, and spa days.
It was a short listen at just under three hours, and yet the number of mispronunciations and grammatical errors made me conclude that either there was not a good publisher or producer on this audiobook or that the author just did not listen to them.
I would reverse the audio to hear her words again to ensure I was hearing her correctly. I was. From inserting an additional syllable in "palpatations" to become her version of "palapatations," to speaking "stubble" instead of the intended "subtle," to saying "a hour" instead of "an hour," to pronouncing "perseverance" as "preserverance." One or two mispeaks are easily overlooked, but there were numerous. Not to mention the lack of a sound engineer to mask all the lip smacks, swallows, and tongue clicks that made listening irritating.
Still, the shallow "advice" of selling clothes to pay for a girl's weekend away or opening an Etsy shop to pay for spa treatments proves how out of touch the author is with real people in the real world who have real problems. Her periodic nervous laugh made me think even she didn't believe this fluff.
This is a Christian-based book, of which I have no problem. However, in my experience, if someone has to tell me how Christian they are, they probably aren't. A Google search after I finished this book showed that about a year after publication, that last sentence was proven correct.