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Ser Herói Todos os Dias - Um manual de resiliência, produtividade e positividade

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Há mais de 25 anos que Robin Sharma, uma lenda viva da liderança e pioneiro da mestria pessoal, tem servido de mentor para milionários, titãs, estrelas do desporto e do entretenimento, para além de inspirar dezenas de milhões de leitores em todo o mundo. Neste seu novo livro, partilha o seu método revolucionário de transformação pessoal com qualquer leitor disponível para incorporar na sua vida a positividade sem limites, a produtividade monumental e a liberdade espiritual do compromisso com os outros.

Em Ser Herói Todos os Dias, poderá descobrir como:
- Implementar na sua vida os hábitos secretos de sucesso do desempenho de topo;
- Usar técnicas originais para transformar o medo em motivação, os problemas em poder e os obstáculos em triunfos;
- Criar um plano à prova de bala para se proteger da distração e da procrastinação;
- Fazer tudo com mais simplicidade, beleza e paz.

Um livro que combina memórias inesperadas de uma vida cheia de lições com um manual de instruções para uma vida melhor, Ser Herói Todos os Dias é um livro que vai transformar a sua vida. Para sempre.

384 pages, Paperback

First published September 7, 2021

883 people are currently reading
4363 people want to read

About the author

Robin Sharma

392 books6,858 followers
Robin Sharma is one of the world’s premier thinkers on leadership, personal growth and life management. The bestselling author of
The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari,
Who Will Cry When You Die? and
The Saint, the Surfer, and the CEO and four other books on self-transformation.

Robin Sharma is in constant demand internationally as keynote speaker at the conferences of many of the most powerful companies on the planet including Microsoft, Nortel Networks, General Motors, FedEx and IBM. He is a resident of Ontario, Canada. (Barnes and Noble)

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5 stars
1,335 (43%)
4 stars
1,009 (32%)
3 stars
528 (17%)
2 stars
136 (4%)
1 star
52 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 308 reviews
Profile Image for Brian Sachetta.
Author 2 books66 followers
October 5, 2021
I’ve read almost all of Sharma’s books since “The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari,” and, for the most part, enjoy his style and brand of self-help. With this new release, I was excited to see him get back into form after not totally loving “The 5am club.” Sadly, I’m not so sure that happened here.

While Sharma’s uplifting brand of service to his reader is definitely on display, the way in which that service comes across misses the mark a bit, in my eyes. There are some great, personal stories to start the book, then the manuscript falls into a cadence of really short, surface-level chapters for the rest of its duration.

In all, there are 101 of these short chapters. Some of them even contain some great tales and maxims. The problem with them, in my mind, is that they prevent the book from going deep enough. It feels kind of surface-level throughout, like an entry-level self-help book — not an industry veteran’s 10th+ entry in his catalog.

So, to classify this one overall, I’d say: If you’re new to Sharma’s work or the genre in general, I think you’ll actually find it pretty decent, but, if you’ve read a bunch of Sharma’s books (or books in the overall space), I’m not sure you’ll find a ton here that you haven’t heard already.

I'm still a fan of Sharma's, but I don't see myself rereading this one. Just my two cents.
Profile Image for Clayton Foster.
6 reviews1 follower
November 8, 2021
Staggeringly narcissistic, incredibly vapid. The author appears to be a walking humble brag.
Profile Image for Amina (ⴰⵎⵉⵏⴰ).
1,564 reviews300 followers
December 29, 2021
3.5 rounded to 4
Some readers may find this book superficial, full of quotes, maxims, short chapters and Robin's own stories. Some might even consider the author pretentious. But here's the thing, read the book, take what you need for your journey and leave the rest behind. There will definitely be somthing, even a tiny thing you'll find enlightening in there, so go ahead, give it a shot.
Profile Image for Saadia  B..
194 reviews83 followers
July 29, 2023
Your ecosystem shapes your energy and your surroundings influence your performance dramatically. Everything outside you profoundly affects the way you think, feel, create and execute. The fortification of positivity, inspiration and high hopes at a time of general negativity is mission-central to the campaign of producing sublime work and leading a life that surges with happiness, serenity and spiritual freedom. To be an original, you need to take radical risks. This belief is embedded so deeply in our cultural psyche that we rarely even stop to think about it.

It's when all four [mindset (psychology), heartset (emotionality), soulset (spirituality) and healthset (physicality)] of human dynasties are awakened and then improved that you will reveal your genius, display your highness, lead your field and experience a life of rare-air positivity, vitality, wonder and spiritual freedom. Longevity is a primary ingredient to become legendary and by taking an uncommon amount of weekly, monthly and yearly sabbaticals to be with your family, take great trips, read great books, develop great friendships and simply rest, you'll ensure that you're creative, inspired, skilled and ultra-strong for many, many more decades.

Education truly is an inoculation against disruption and the leader who learns the most wins. The defeat is choosing not to go all in and playing small with the gifts the universe has given to you. Getting bloodied is just part of winning. So wear your wounds as medals of valor. Great creativity demands deep sensitivity and deep sensitivity comes from growing intimacy with your emotionality. Repress uncomfortable emotions and you'll create a vast subconscious world of darkness, anger and guilt that chains you to victimhood - and gets you addicted to escapes such as overwork, drama, digital distraction and rampant consumerism because you're fleeing yourself.

Remember: to have the results that only 5% of the population have, you need to do what 95% of people are unwilling to do. The main reason to keep pushing for better - even when you're at the top - is not more fame, fortune and adulation. It's to experience even greater personal growth, to befriend even more of your unseen talents and to uplift the caliber of your character by pushing yourself to produce even more jewels while dutifully serving the whispers of your most supreme spiritual self. Entropy explains why once-successful people descend into irrelevance and once-revered companies become washed up. To ensure elite performance and maximum impact, you absolutely need to be more monomaniacally vigilant against all your hard-won accomplishments being degraded by the natural forces you face as a creative producer and exceptional leader.

Genuine power can be revealed when a human simply remember how to be fully human because nature does not allow a vacuum. Life's meant to be lived right now. The future's just a sprinkling fantasy.

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Profile Image for Createpei.
122 reviews9 followers
September 20, 2021
Very short chapters that are easy to make your way through - unfortunately not as much of a story as Mr. Sharma's last book, nonetheless, this book was chock full of advice, frameworks and models. I really wanted to like this book more than I did but I still feel that Mr. Sharma's best book was his last one - the 5am club which was absolutely amazing - I highly recommend you read that book!!
Profile Image for Shantanu.
47 reviews
September 20, 2024
His writings are full of humility and self reflection! So inspiring.
Profile Image for Aaron Weinberg.
12 reviews
December 23, 2021
For those who are into reading overtly cliché positive-mentality advice that’s loaded with a bunch of superfluous self-help jargon, Robin Sharma’s new ‘manifesto’ is like crack cocaine. You wouldn’t think it requires nearly 400 pages to convey the same essential points over and over again about success advice, but Sharma’s book really epitomises what majority of the self-help genre has become: repetitive and superficial.

There is range to his advice, including how to succeed, why you don’t succeed, what to do once you’ve succeeded, how to avoid losing your success, why success is so not what you think it is etc. But the book’s massive flaw is not it’s obviously vast breadth of insight, but it’s plain lack of depth. Every point he makes is at max a page and a half, with several of his 100 chapters, which are somewhat long, being compiled of dot-point format paragraphs to convey each sub-insight.

As for the manifesto side of it, the details of his personal stories and experiences feel entirely redundant. Maybe if Sharma was straightforward and said on the front page ‘THIS IS ACTUALLY A SELF-HELP BOOK, I JUST PUT MYSELF IN IT THIS TIME’, it wouldn’t have taken me a couple chapters to start skipping to the end of each dry personal anecdote and find the ‘lesson learnt’ from each one. I would have much preferred if it was only the lesson at the end, but then it would literally turn into an amalgamation of all his previous books - which it is.

Looking at it plain sighted, the wise one-liners are probably the best part of it, however most of the time he’s literally telling you he’s quoting someone else (usually a Roman philosopher, a 19th century psychologist, or wiz-tech tycoon). So by instinct, you would think to simply put this jargon-loaded book down and read the original source - which you should.

For those looking for a book about positivity, productivity, and lifestyle, there’s more nourishing stuff out there. I’ve read his first book (and most successful one) called the Monk who sold his Ferrari, which (a) I loved and (b) could be part of the reason why I struggled with this one.

I think if you haven’t read his previous works, or if it is your first positive-mentality maximise-productivity self-help book, or even if you only read one chapter per day, you may have a better response than I did to it. Regardless, any book that depends on such a narrow criteria for a good reader experience, from my perspective, is not a good book.

P.S. Not to get too personal, but my irritation with this book could be a sign that I’ve out-grown this industry. I hope others who are just starting out with the self-help genre don’t experience an instant turn off because of this book. So for that minor epiphany, I give it an extra star :)
89 reviews7 followers
March 21, 2022
Robin Sharma at his best! Best book ive read all year so inspiring!
Profile Image for Nilo0.
629 reviews140 followers
June 27, 2022
من باشگاه پنج صبحی‌ها رو نخوندم و فن این نویسنده نبودم.
این کتاب موضوع خاصی نداره و از هر دری گفته واسه همین تخصصی نیست و در حد تجربیات و توصیه‌های نویسنده‌ست
Profile Image for imane.
496 reviews418 followers
February 19, 2025


لماذا خلق الله الكلاب والخنازير والافاعي والقردة لكي تتدرب فيهم ههههه لكي تتدرب....الانسان لا يستطيع ان يرتقي ويتطور بدونهم ...خلقوا لكي تتدرب فيهم ...بدونهم لن ترتقي من مرتبة ملاك الى مرتبة انسان ابدا ....لولا ان يوسف دفع للبئر لما اصبح عزيز مصر ولما حققت نبوءة انه الشمس والكواكب تسجد له ...هذا هو تعريف النجاح

الله خلق الكلاب والافاعي والخنازير والقردة لكي يتدرب الانسان بدونهم لن تكتمل انسانيتك ستبقى ملاكااااااا والانسان اعلى مقام من الملاك....لدغة الافعى ضرورية لتطورك الروحي وارتقاءك والرمية التي رمي فيها يوسف في البئر كانت سبب في تحوله لعزيز مصر

Aura الان فهمت....الله يحيط من بدؤوا من الصفر بالهالة تلك الهالة نراااها نحن نرااها للنقاء والاجتهاد هالة ...تلك الهالة هي من تجعلنا نلتف ونعجب بمن بدا من الصفر يبدو شخصا عظيما كبيراااا مختلفاااا...مختلف تماما عن من ورث او عن من رزق ...انها الهالة ....تلك الهالة هي ما رايت في ايمان خليف الهالة وما رايتها فين من بدؤوا من الصفر ولم اراها فيمن ورثوااااا ...

اشعاع الاخلاق والنقاء والاجتهاد اشعاع مختلف عن الرزق تماما...الان فهمت لماذا البشر فقراءهم واغنياءهم يلتفووون 😁😁😁حول من بدا من الصفر لان اشعاعه مختلف تماما مقامه يبدو اعلى بطريقة مختلفة ....هو الوحيد من لديه الحق ان يحكي لنا قصته ...من ورث او وهب الجمال والمال من الله ذلك يبدو عليك نحن نعرف وانت تعرف والله يعرف لا تتعب نفسك وتحكي لنا قصته...

قصة نجاحك اذا لم تشبه قصة يوسف لا تحكها لنا 😁😁😁لان مالك او جمالك الذي اعطاك الله اياه او ورثته لا يهمنا ولا يهم الله حتى ...ما يهم الله وما يهمنا نحن كيف نجوت وانت نقي ماذا فعلت كيف فعلتها ونجوت ...كيف خرجت منها انسان ناجح ماديا وروحيا ...اذا لم تبدا من تحت الصفر ورميت في البئر وخرجت لا تحكي لنا لانه لا يهمنا ولا الله يهمه...

الانسان الناجح الذي البشرية توجه اعينها نحوه هو المكحط لي بدا من تحت الصفر حيت بنا راسو ووواجه الدراكون والافاعي والكلاب والخنازير والفقر ونجا ولم يغرق هو من نصفق له واذا نجا وقلبه نقي لم يتسخ فهو المعجزة التي تلمع 😍😍😍ونعجب به ونلتم حوله ...اما لي وارث ولاباس عليه متعاودش لينا قصص نجاحك خليهم عندك ...كيما ايمان خليف الجزائر ...هاديك نتجمعو عليها لي لاباس عليه ميعاودش قصتو

هناك مواهبك الالهية هناك ظروووووفك وهناك اجتهادك ثلاث عنااااصر...اذا استطعت ان تفهم ما هي نقاط قوتك ما هي ظروووفك وما تستطيع الاجتهاد فيه ستكون قد حققت التوازن...لانك اذا اجتهدت اكثر من اللازم والظروف غير ملائمة او ربما الله لم يعطك القدرات المناسبة ستتعب نفسك وتقع...اذا الله اعطاك القدرات والظروف ولم تجتهد فانت كسول فاشل....لذا نقطة الحكمة والتوازن جد مهمة
Profile Image for Namo.
373 reviews27 followers
September 10, 2025
เล่มนี้คือชอบเลย

เหตุผลที่เราหยิบเล่มนี้มาอ่านก็เพราะว่าตอนแรกเราจะอ่าน The 5 AM Club แต่เล่มนั้นก็คือฮอตฮิตคิวยาวมาก เลยกดดูว่ามีเล่มอื่นไหมที่นักเขียนคนเดียวกันเขียน เลยได้มาเจอเล่มนี้
เราขอยอมรับเลยว่า ตอนแรกที่อ่านชื่อหนังสือเล่มนี้ ไม่เข้าใจนะว่าจะสื่ออะไร แต่รู้สึกแค่ว่ามันมีไวบ์ที่ดีเลยหยิบมาอ่าน เอาจริงตอนนี้ก็ยังไม่รู้ว่าแปลว่าอะไร

หนังสือเล่มนี้เขาก็จะเล่าเรื่องราวเกี่ยวกับแนวทางการพัฒนาตัวเอง ที่เราสามารถเริ่มทำได้ในทุกวัน แล้วสิ่งที่เค้าแนะนำมัน practical ด้วย ตัวอย่างเช่น เขาแนะนำการ planning โดยที่ไม่ต้องแพลนเยอะเวอร์วัง แพลนให้สมจริง ให้เราทำสำเร็จให้ได้ แค่นั้นมันก็เป็น achievement เล็กๆอย่างนึงของเราแล้ว
อีกตัวอย่างคือ เราต้องไม่ทำงานหักโหมมากเกินไป ต้อง balance พักผ่อนบ้าง งานที่ทำออกมามันจะสำเร็จมากกว่า

จริงๆตัวอย่างคือมีอีกมาก อยากแนะนำให้ไปอ่านเอง ภาษาเข้าใจง่าย เป็นศัพท์ทั่วๆไป และนั่นอาจเป็นเหตุผลที่ทำให้ตอนที่อ่านรู้สึกว่าเข้าถึงได้ง่าย
Profile Image for Haniye_Mirkamali.
195 reviews70 followers
April 12, 2024
دلم می‌خواهد وقتی مُردم، کل توانم تمام شده باشد. چون هرچه بیشتر کار کنم، بیشتر زنده می‌مانم. به خاطرِ خود زندگی از آن لذت می‌برم. در نگاه من، زندگی شمعی کوتاه نیست، بلکه مشعلی باشکوه است که فعلا در دست من است. دلم می‌خواهد تا جای ممکن با قدرت بسوزد و بعد آن را به نسل آینده بدهم.

اتمام
۱۴۰۳/۰۱/۲۴
Profile Image for Abhisikta Basu.
152 reviews22 followers
December 11, 2021
3.5 stars!

I have heard a lot of praises for Robin Sharma's book The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari. So, when I heard about his new book, The Everyday Hero Manifesto, I decided to pick it up. This book encourages readers to believe in themselves and tells us to live a heroic life. He says, "Trust not your detractors. Pay no attention to your diminishers. Ignore your discouragers. They do not know the wonders within you."

The Everyday Hero Manifesto by Robin Sharma is a self-help book that consists of 101 chapters. Some chapters in the book are short, and some are a bit long. In this book, the author has shared his personal experiences alongside the advice he got from his mentors. Additionally, he cited words and inspiring stories of popular filmmakers, philosophers, Noble laureates, musicians, and so on. There are a lot of suggestions from the author himself and important life lessons in this book that will surely inspire everyone.

There were some chapters that I loved a lot while some were cumbersome. Some of my favorite chapters in this book are ‘The Chestnut Seller’s Doctrine’, ‘What J.K Rowling Taught Me About Relentlessness’, ‘The People Builder’s Mantra’, ‘The 40 Copies of a Single Book Habit’, ‘Hug the Monster’, ‘The Patient Who Blinked a Book’, ‘The Antifragile Artist in the Shiny Purple Suit,’ and so on. I must say that the title of each chapter in the book is quite interesting that makes you want to keep reading. This book also helped me to strengthen my vocabulary as I came across some news words.

The author’s writing style is such that it felt like he is having a conversation with his readers. Through this book, the author has tried his best to inspire and motivate his readers. So, if you are looking for good self-help books then I would recommend you read this one.
10 reviews
September 26, 2021
If you didn’t read his other book start here. If you have then reread your favorite instead.

If you are familiar with Robin Sharma’s work then you may be a bit disappointed. The book reads as a recap of all his other works. There is usually an “aha” moment that makes you think or more importantly inspires you to act in his books. This one “reminds” you, not as powerful.
Profile Image for Cassie Landt.
105 reviews2 followers
October 13, 2025
Definitely could have been worse! I hope to god he never attempts fiction again, it’s definitely (slightly) more bearable when he’s just saying stuff
Profile Image for Jhon F..
120 reviews
May 25, 2022
AMÉ, AMÉ y AMÉ... 🥺❤️‍🔥🙏🏼
Profile Image for Flor M.  García.
Author 4 books24 followers
January 14, 2022
Manifiesto para los héroes de cada día es una guía de cambio integral para maximizar tu potencial de forma estratégica que proporciona principios y técnicas para lograr la productividad y el desarrollo integral como individuo (cuerpo, mente, emociones, pensamientos, actos).

Un libro que te hará entender que un cambio de perspectiva y el asumir nuestras responsabilidades precede un cambio en los resultados que te llevará a convertirte en la mejor versión de ti y ser un héroe cotidiano.

Tu ecosistema particular mucho tiene que ver con las personas con las que te rodeas, evita personas que solo pongan excusas, rodéate de personas optimistas e influyentes que te hagan descubrir una nueva manera de trabajar y vivir en plenitud.

Otra de las cosas que plantea este libro es que el éxito no se mide por la cantidad de dinero que tengas, eso es solo una medida de este, éxito también es tener salud, amigos, felicidad, rodearte de personas positivas.
Aprende algo nuevo cada día, entre más aprendas más conciencia de las cosas tendrás y así podrás tomar decisiones más inteligentes pues todo problema tiene una recompensa que te ayuda a crecer.

Nos hace hincapié en que todos tenemos traumas acumulados que debemos curar para descongelar nuestros sentimientos reprimidos y procesar el dolor almacenado en las viejas heridas hasta lograr ese crecimiento personal que todos necesitamos.

“La gran tragedia de la vida no es la muerte, sino lo que dejamos morir dentro de nosotros mientras estamos vivos”.

Muchos de nosotros no leemos desarrollo personal porque sentimos que no es necesario, pero libros como éste te ayudan a enrumbar tus ideas, porque cada persona tiene un poder fascinante en su interior que necesita descubrir, un poder que muchas veces se ve opacado por el miedo al fracaso y el no puedo que neutralizan nuestras ideas.

“Para obtener los resultados que muy pocos tienen hay que hacer cosas que muy pocos hacen”. Actuar y mejorar permanentemente.

Conviértete en un héroe cotidiano y transforma tu debilidad en valor.

@miestantedelibros507
Profile Image for Suzanne.
227 reviews7 followers
March 4, 2022
The book has been published last year, 2021. A friend of mine offered to me.
The book contains 101 chapters and has 357 pages.
I took me 10 days to read it. At page 200, I could not read it anymore, 3-line long sentences, and no logic way to write those chapters. Repetitive all along.
This should be a self-helped book by Robin Sharma, but in fact, it is all mixed: his advice of how to live life is completely biased and recommendations are subjective out of his lifestyle he does. Titles of chapters are confused, and no clear logic of what self-help topic the author tends to speak.
Some chapters is only about him. About his health diet. Nothing about socialising, friends, focus on others not only on him and his rich lifestyle.
I read a lot of self-help books this one was one of the most annoying.
At one part, he is against positive thinking, at another part he applies it and speaks about it.
Some parts about the filtering and NLP methods, another about hotel buying a croissant for their client costing 2,000€.
We cannot all live a perfect life as he does: as the author suggests wake up at five, have two massages, two hours walk in nature, three daily hours of reading books, etc.
Above all, this descriptive, confusing way of writing, there is nothing new you will discover or learn. Go on Tony Robbins, Simon Sinek posts, for example.
You have so much better books to buy. Save your money and above all your time to some more straightforward efficient, logic reading patterns!
Profile Image for Vince.
156 reviews2 followers
September 17, 2021
A rich and varied treasure box of self-improvement.

I have read many self-improvement/personal development books in the past two years and, whilst others have gone into more detail on certain areas, nothing is as rich and varied as this.

I have taken more from this book in total than any other I have read of its kind and the lessons within will greatly benefit me throughout the rest of my life.

Sharks offers so much here that it is hard to believe he is giving away this amount and doing so in such a concise manner.

A genuine must read and 10/10 book that will undoubtedly leave a long legacy in its wake.
Profile Image for JAVIER CORREA DIAZ.
2 reviews
November 28, 2021
Como siempre , de los mejores libros de su género. Este es un libro diferente a los demás por que no es novela/fabula … es una conversación que Robin tiene contigo y te cuenta sus experiencias de vida , sus dificultades, sus éxitos, en fin cómo él dice “todos somos humanos y hemos o pasaremos por algo parecido” …. (En referencia a circunstancias de la vida)

Si has leído sus libros anteriores vas a reconocer varios pasajes pero al leerlo como lo cuenta en este libro vas a decir varias veces “Aja” al entender o ver desde otro ángulo sus palabras….:::

Para leer , como todos sus libros varías veces. 📙
Profile Image for Zee Monodee.
Author 45 books346 followers
May 4, 2022
If you enjoy Robin Sharma's brand of encouragement and soul/personal progression, then you'll love this one. Do think it's his best yet. There's all he's learned, and also the hindsight of age, which we tend to discount in life, but truly, living and aging bring their own types of wisdom, which the author is able to impart here.
There's nothing life-changing here, yet at the same time, this book can also upend your entire universe... I do think it's one of those that require contemplation during the reading process (hence the very long time it took me to finish it) - this isn't one of those race-cover-to-cover-and-done books. Imparted in nuggets, some entirely useless and some soul-altering, it's a book to savour, one to let percolate and settle before moving on. Also one, I believe, that would be good to pick up every year, whether at the start to create new goals, or at the end to see how far you've come - so this one will definitely remain on my shelf to be dusted off once every year during periods of reflection
Profile Image for Saloni Khanna.
9 reviews1 follower
January 2, 2024
Great thought process, right attitude, kind and otherwise a positive book. However, I didn’t enjoy reading it as much as I had hoped due to the fact that there’s very little (or none!) ‘system’ or ‘techniques’ that I was looking for in a self-help book that’s meant to make you wonder and reflect. Feels like reading an endless blog in a book format, too many anecdotes squirrelled into this book over the years, and beyond a certain point the references of meeting so and so was a big turn off for me, perhaps label this as a biography... I couldn’t relate to this author, and neither inspired by him, but have still taken away a few good things sprinkled across the whole book.
Profile Image for Artuurs Aabele.
137 reviews2 followers
June 7, 2025
Varbūt neieklaušos visos sajūsmas pārņemtajos fanos, bet man šī grāmata likās viduvēja. Protams, informācija, kas šeit ir aprakstīta ir ļoti noderīga, bet trūkst kaut kas patiešām jauns. Iespējams, šī grāmata ļoti patiks cilvēkiem, kas lasa šo kā Šarmas pirmo grāmatu, tomēr, pēc manām domām, Mūks ir viņa labakā grāmata. Ļoti sarežģīti uzrakstīta, ar pārlieku daiļvārdību, ka citreiz domas esence pazuda vārdu mudžeklī. Grāmata noderēs, ja ir kādas problēmas dzīvē, jo autors visu laiku atkārto cik katrs cilvēks ir nozīmīgs, un ja to daudz saka, lasītājam jāsāk tam arī noticēt. Patika, darba beigās iedotais literatūras saraksts.
Profile Image for Jafry M.
134 reviews
December 13, 2024
Nay sayers are mostly disappointed souls who didn’t do what you are doing.

People in a great place don’t tear others down.

When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will be at peace

You won’t find your heart on a temple of you don’t have a temple in your heart

The measure of your life will not be in what you accumulate but in what you giveaway

Secret of abundance Stop focusing on what you do not have and shift your consciousness on what you are and what you have.
Profile Image for Leah.
747 reviews119 followers
April 26, 2023
Contrary to popular opinion, I actually really enjoyed this book.

There were many key take aways, great points, great practical tips, and key philosophies.

Definitely a re-read, and going to take notes next time.

This is a book you can pick up every now and then and relearn as great reminders.

It's about life, success, productivity, happiness, satisfaction, creativity, relaxing, pretty much everything lol
Profile Image for Gusts.
30 reviews
July 5, 2024
If you have ever read Robin S. Sharma's masterpiece ''The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari'', then ''The Everyday Hero Manifesto'' will feel like a TV show which has been running for 10 seasons straight, but had to be finalized already after the 3rd one..

If you can motivate yourself and believe in your skills and capabilities, grab a different book :)
This book is for people who are living in the world of excuses and still struggle to get out of their safety net and face the world.
Profile Image for Rohit.
223 reviews22 followers
December 26, 2022
I think the best way to think of this is a journal by the author, written during breaks during his coaching/consulting work. The details don't matter. His positivity and optimism is infectious, and that's wonderful.
Profile Image for Harshini Nawarathna.
88 reviews50 followers
January 12, 2022
It is a good book which motivates its readers. I find this has too many frameworks which I cannot remember or doesn't have any meaning. I still find the book very helpful amd uplifting.
Profile Image for Richard F.
141 reviews2 followers
August 22, 2022
Robin Sharma's latest book is an interesting one. I've just finished reading 'Help' (https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/sho...), which is an overview of many of the self help ideas, and I've also been reading some stoicism. It was given to me by my daughter, so I thought what the heck I'll read it,and I might be in a good position to analyse it.

Overall it was an enjoyable read and does contain some useful information, but I did find that it overlaps with other themes and ideas, and also overlaps with stoic principles. It led me to question whether these types of books are useful if they mostly recycle old ideas, as a gateway unto understanding those ideas. I think the answer is yes, as long as there are references to those ideas, and in this case those references are not clear

The book consists of many small easily digestible chapters and a few more meatier ones. I found maybe 1/3 of the small chapters contained something of inspiration, and maybe 1/2 of the bigger ones contained useful insights. So there is useful information in here, and I admit that it spurred me into taking a little more action in my life, mainly to satisfy myself that things I was already considering to try were actually worth beginning. I did also write down a handful of quotes.

The things I didn't like:

So many uses of superlatives e.g. "your world-class weeks will turn into sensational quarters, then spectacular years and finally sublime decades". For me this type of fluff has its place and is effective in moderation.

He gives names to everything, from your 'gargantuan competitive advantage' to your architecture of endurability'. I get that assigning names helps in remembering things, but some of it was too silly for me

He also leans heavily on driving continued success, to always be excellent and never irrelevant. This seems to clash with the title and the opening couple of chapters, and for me runs the risk of being corrupted into simple greed. Sharma does occasionally touch on defining and sticking to your goid morals, but this quickly becomes diluted around a push to be an elite performer or business heavyweight and never backing off.

The thing that probably grated me the most is the repeated message to ignore your critics and assume that "everyone else is always wrong about you" and your ideas. Yes it is true that many suggessful innovators and paradigm-shifters were right to push along and "ignore the haters", but sometimes it is useful to have a critical voice to make sure you are doing the right thing. This was glossed over in my opinion.

So 3 stars. There is indeed wisdom and inspiration buried in these pages, but much of it is recycled from elsewhere and is dressed up with a little too much bombast and bravado.
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