How to Get Unstuck and Live Your Best Life 2 books in 1: Ikigai, How to Choose your Career Path and Discover Your Strengths + Your Unlimited Opportunities & the Art of Personal Transformation
Become your own life coach without spending hundreds on one-on-one calls.
You hear it all the “Your potential is limitless!” But what does it actually mean?
If you’re like most of us, then life certainly appears to have a great number of limitations. Maybe sometimes you even feel stuck, as if there is no way out.
Do you feel like your peers are consistently outperforming you and are somehow gaining an upper-hand on your every move?
Does your boss repeatedly compliment your coworkers yet never seem to simply notice you?
Do you constantly feel drained, as if the tasks before you are just too much for someone to undertake?Life can get overwhelming at times, that’s for sure, but it doesn’t have to be this way. You can move forward and into a new reality--one where everything goes your way and success lies around every corner in an evidently effortless fashion.
With the right tools and techniques at your disposal, you can train yourself to become truly limitless, retaining large amounts of information, maintaining concentration with ease, and even becoming more creative and effectively accomplishing brand new tasks.
In Your Unlimited Opportunities & the Art of Personal Transformation, you’ll
Why your limiting belief system is the #1 obstacle in the way of your success and how you can overcome it today
How you can turn your emotions into a superpower, and why this will impress the heck out of your boss
Brand-new scientific insight into the art of being present, as well as how this will bring you the peace of mind you’re in need of
A 6-step method to memorizing anything, quickly and easily, even if you’re notorious for being ‘the forgetful one’
The hidden aspects of procrastination and failure, and how you can turn them around for creating a more successful future
Never-before-seen meditations that will help you become exceptional at anything you do
In Ikigai, How to Choose your Career Path and Discover Your Strengths you will
A simple exercise that will help you know yourself more and understand what you find meaningful in a job
Inspirational stories of career shifts that show you anything’s possible, even if you’re in your 40s and in a totally unrelated industry
Why you can be a stronger candidate than people with more experience, and how you can build up your knowledge and skills without getting another degree
… and so much more.
Becoming a healthier, more motivated, and increasingly more successful individual is not a complex task that only a few people can accomplish in life. It doesn't have to be something you keep putting off until later.
2 Books in 1; Not About Topics in this Book's Title!
This book actually has two books written by the author within it, (1) Ikigai and (2) Your Unlimited Opportunities & the Art of Personal Transformation. Honestly, I’m not sure how he takes these two books and combines them under two topics that don’t seem to be related to them. Sigh. I hate it when nonfiction books are unclear. Here are my reviews for each of them separately.
Ikigai Review: Not Really Ikigai This book is more of a straight-up book about getting a job—exploring possibilities, resume and networking tips—than about ikigai. Ikigai is a broad lifestyle concept that comes to us from Japanese culture. Here’s one definition I like: “the union point of four fundamental components of life: passion, vocation, profession, and mission.” This book didn’t address that all-encompassing idea at all!
Personal Transformation Book Review: Too Many Topics, Too Little Time I'm not quite sure how the author managed to cram nearly every self-help buzzword into one book that is only 74 pages long, but he briefly touches on self-learning, meditation, mindfulness (which he calls “being present”), gratitude, productivity, procrastination, and mastering your emotions. Given the book’s length, he does not spend much time on any one topic. He also doesn't seem to connect them well either, which I think is important when you're going to put so many distinct topics in one book. In the subtitle of this book, he also states that this is a step-by-step guide to teach yourself anything, but only two chapters at the end are about learning and are not laid out in a step-by-step fashion. If you're looking for a quick survey of hot topics in self-help, the book would be good for that. But it certainly is not good for much else.