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Flux: 8 superpoderes para fluir y triunfar ante el cambio constante

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FLUX 8 superpoderes para fluir y triunfar ante el cambio constante Poder adaptarse y ser flexible, siempre han sido cualidades de un liderazgo efectivo y de una vida enriquecedora, pero en este mundo de cambio constante y cada vez más vertiginoso la flexibilidad y la resiliencia pueden no ser suficientes. El objetivo es cómo encontrar calma y sentido en medio del caos. Un mundo en constante flujo requiere de una nueva mentalidad ante las amenazas de la nueva realidad. Este libro ayudará al lector a abrir su mente a 8 superpoderes que modifican las ideas tradicionales de productividad, liderazgo y de relacionarse laboralmente. Esto son: 1. Corre más lento 2. Mira lo invisible 3. Piérdete 4. Comienza con la confianza 5. Conoce tu límite 6. Crea opciones de carrera 7. Sé más humano (y sirve a otros humanos) 8. Despreocúpate del futuro April Rinne es una "navegadora del cambio" que ha dado conferencias y asesoramiento en más de cien países. Es una de las principales futurólogas del mundo. Es abogada por Harvard 

288 pages, Paperback

First published August 24, 2021

98 people are currently reading
1745 people want to read

About the author

April Rinne

3 books29 followers
April Rinne is a “change navigator,” speaker, investor, and adventurer whose work and travels in more than 100 countries have given her a front-row seat to a world in flux. She is one of the 50 leading female futurists in the world, a Harvard Law School graduate, a Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum, and a Fulbright Scholar. April is a trusted advisor to well-known startups, companies, financial institutions, nonprofits, think tanks, and governments worldwide. Earlier in life she was a global development executive, an international microfinance lawyer, and a hiking guide. She spent nearly four years traveling solo (with a backpack and a shoestring budget) to better understand how different cultures view change. When she was 20, both of her parents died in a car accident, which catapulted her into a universe of uncertainty and began her journey to Flux. As a certified yoga teacher, she can often be found upside-down, doing handstands around the world. More about her story -- and Flux! -- at https://fluxmindset.com

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 48 reviews
Profile Image for Elan Morgan.
1 review14 followers
August 30, 2021
I am loving Flux. It’s got me reassessing my relationship to ongoing change and who and how I want be as I move through life. Constant change has never been optional, but these days I feel much more deeply called upon to find my strength in flow. Flux is becoming both a practical and spiritual guide.
Profile Image for Aaron Mikulsky.
Author 2 books26 followers
October 25, 2021
Flux: 8 Superpowers for Thriving in Constant Change, by April Rinne, begins with a question: Who Moved My Future? I enjoyed this book and many of its memorable sayings. The Theory of Flux reveals the relationships between your old and new scripts, specifically how to transform an old script into a new script that’s fit for today’s world of constant change. This theory can be summarized in three steps:

Step 1: Open a Flux Mindset.
Step 2: Use your Flux Mindset to unlock the eight Flux Superpowers: run slower, see what’s invisible, get lost, start with trust, know your “enough,” create your portfolio career, be all the more human (and serve other humans), and let go of the future.
Step 3: Apply your Flux Superpowers to write your New Script.

The book encourages us to run slower - instead of productivity, optimize for presence (i.e., stillness practice, patience practice, technology shabbat).

See what’s invisible - the broader your vision, the more potential solutions you have at hand. The more holistic your worldview, the greater your capacity to help, to serve, to innovate and to thrive. Oftentimes, whether you see or don’t see something depends on your intention as you look. For example, whether we see people—and treat people—as consumers or citizens boils down to intention: If you want people to buy your products or click on your ads, that’s seeing them as consumers. If you want to help, create, be of service, and help others reach their potential, that’s seeing them as citizens and collaborators.

Get lost - Adapt the mindset of a traveler. Actively seek out the unfamiliar and stretch beyond your comfort zone. Getting lost doesn’t mean lacking direction or being foolish—that’s just the old script at work. Rather, it means being completely comfortable with what you don’t (and may never) know. In the landscape of change, getting lost is how you find your way.

Start with trust - When trust seems broken, assume good intent. When the world flips upside down, trust is how you anchor and right yourself. Trusted relationships help you ride the rapids of change with confidence. Mistrust surrounds you with fear and cuts you off from others. Starting with trust doesn’t mean being naive (again, this is the old script at work). Nor does it mean there aren’t bad apples in society. Treat untrustworthiness as the exception rather than the norm.

I loved the section Know Your ‘Enough.’ In today’s consumer-driven world, we are plagued by a stubborn script that proclaims “More is better” and taunts you for never doing, earning, or achieving enough. This script is old and crusty, but it remains very much alive. Among its more popular manifestations is that you will never have enough: power to make a difference; prestige to feel important; money to be rich; choice to be satisfied; new toys to outshine your peers or neighbors; success, period. As we race to acquire more stuff, we leave essential priorities on the table such as:

• What is enough equality?
• What is enough integrity?
• What is enough well-being?

With your Flux Mindset opened, you can begin to reset your metrics and write a new script. This shift—from an interminable quest for more to a clear understanding of your enough—is simple yet profound. Knowing your enough does not mean being miserly, uncharitable, or living in scarcity. Knowing your enough brings clarity about what really matters. When you know your enough, you have less anxiety and your ability to thrive expands a lot.

Consider your legacy. What do you want to be remembered for? Why do you do what you do? When you’re gone, people won’t remember whether you had “more.” They will remember how you treated them. This is about lifetime leadership and evergreen legacies, with humanity at the core. Relationships endure and sustain; deals are done and put on a shelf. Which do you want to be remembered for? Your worth comes from within.

A Flux Mindset knows that the career of the future looks more like a portfolio: a diversified professional identity, with resilient roots and customized to you. For success and satisfaction in a world in flux, treat your career as a portfolio to curate rather than a path to pursue.

Be(come) the only. Go back to Jerry Garcia. Don’t be the best; be the only. What is your only? The key to one’s “only” is that it’s not about one skill. It’s about your unique combination of skills, capabilities, interests, and dreams. This is your unique new script.

Be All the More Human (And Serve Other Humans) - boost your Digital Intelligence (DQ)

With a Flux Mindset, you turn fear and frustration about tomorrow into fuel for your purpose, potential, and inner peace today.

The New Script: 3 Shifts to Flux
Letting go of the future means reframing your relationship to the future and whatever change may come. There are three main ways this new script can be written:

1. A mindset shift: from predict to prepare. This shift recognizes that it’s impossible to predict the future, nor is any one future guaranteed to play out. Rather, a whole bunch of different futures are possible, and your best approach is to be as prepared as possible for the prospects coming your way. Resist the urge to predict what “will” happen, and invest your energy in crafting initial responses to what “could” happen instead.

2. An expectations shift: from “things will go to plan” to “plans will change.” Flipping your mental switch to treat change as the general rule, rather than the exception, improves everything: your ability to pivot, your foresight, and your compassion towards others as we all navigate today’s landscape of uncertainty.

3. A shift in focus: from known to unknown. All too often, when solving problems or navigating change, people look to be better prepared should the same thing happen again. This isn’t a bad strategy per se, but it’s incomplete. What about things that haven’t happened yet? The future is only a concept; we can never truly know what it will be. When you shift to being in awe of life’s mysteries, rather than expecting the past to repeat itself, your horizon literally and figuratively expands. Absolutely everything that you do affects how you navigate change. You get better at whatever you practice. If you practice fear, you get better at being fearful. If you practice flexibility, you become more flexible. If you practice hope, you invigorate your capacity for hope.
3 reviews
August 12, 2021
Love love love this book! This has - no joke - become my favorite book of 2021, and perhaps the book I’ve been waiting to read since I was a child. Rinne does a remarkable job of weaving her own incredible story with actionable insights and wisdom from around the world. Change is a constant, and this book helps us honor that while showing how this experience connects us all. I've read the book multiple times and it's a must-read for anyone who wants to navigate the changes in their lives and the world with more humanity and grace. Rinne delivers a generous helping of both!
Profile Image for Chris Boutté.
Author 8 books283 followers
September 1, 2021
Prior to reading this book, I just thought it was going to be another corny self-help book, but that’s definitely not the case. April Rinne nails it with this book, and I can’t think of a single person who wouldn’t benefit from it. Part of the human experience is that we struggle with accepting change because we’re control freaks. But what if we learned how to not only accept change but to embrace it? April shares her personal experience of losing both of her parents in a car accident and how she’s developed what she calls a “flux mindset”. In this book, she provides the reader with 8 practical tools for learning how to stay flexible and work with change in your life.

If you struggle with your relationship with change, you need this book. The unexpected happens to all of us, and the worst thing we can do is not know how to adapt. April has not only adopted this mindset to her own life, but she’s helped many others as well. April has traveled around the world and seen how different people and cultures deal with change, and she pulls from all of these experiences to help the reader live a better life regardless of the unexpected challenges they face.
Profile Image for Bruno Sánchez-Andrade.
Author 1 book20 followers
August 10, 2021
Amazing book. So timeless and timely at once. April uses her long broad and deep experience scouting the world, people, cultures and places, to distill the essence of what we need to navigate our fluid, uncertain, sometimes scary and sometimes exciting world that we live in. It's structured on themes, or superpowers, but also around stories and real examples. It also comes with questions to reflect at the end of each chapter. Bonus, the audiobook is narrated by her 😀. Read this book, cherish this book, cherish the long hard work and full heart April has poured on it. And know it's only the begging of a great flux journey.
Profile Image for Colin Mcclusick.
379 reviews1 follower
November 21, 2021
Work Book Club Book...
Interesting book about how changing your mindset can allow you to be more adaptable. Making a choice to live in a flux is better than feeling like it was forced on you.

6/10 not bad for a self help book but not the best would recommend to anyone that's going through a transition in their life, or anyone that feels like they dont have any control.
Profile Image for Tim Hughes.
Author 2 books77 followers
April 19, 2022
Hustle culture! Really?

If life starts at 04:00 AM where you go off the gym, so you can get to the office at 06:00 AM and then work through till 09:00 PM in the evening. Or do you remember the character played by, Michael Douglas in the film “Wall Street”, Gordon Gekko? In which he said “breakfast is for wimps!”

Then you are probably going to burn out and you need to read the book “Flux – 8 superpowers for thriving in constant change”.

Flux is the opposite of hustle culture.

April Rinne’s book “Flux – 8 super powers for thriving in constant change” provides you a framework to slow down and get more done. To work smarter and to get to a point where you don’t burn out. To quote, Lao tzu “when I let go of what I am, I become what I might be”.
Profile Image for Ivan Hartanto.
1 review
May 20, 2021
This book is a shining light of how future thinkers, tomorrow leaders and global citizens can rewrite the "old script" passed down to us from the previous generations and a great complement (or evolution) to the growth mindset. April's Flux has undoubtedly encouraged me, a young professional and entrepreneur myself, to continue blazing my own path and writing my own script - all while respecting the old script, constantly rethinking various future scenarios and being kind to our surroundings. Easily the best book I've read this year and the book that I would recommend to my family, closest friends and colleagues, especially those younger ones. Read one yourself, add this new mindset to your lexicon and don't miss out the newly-forming flux generation.
Profile Image for Daria Pavliukova.
12 reviews
January 20, 2022
The author mentions very relatable concerns and acknowledges some of the irritating stereotypes that do not get discussed a lot, but they do exist and poison our lives.

I especially loved the chapter about Creating your portfolio career, because that's where it hit home for me. The way the society expects young adults to study for one profession and stick to it our entire lives, sit at a desk for decades and hope to get promoted.

The second favourite for me was the Run Slower chapter, and the third - Know your enough, because we do have a trouble with priorities as a society. We want to get as much as fast as possible and we run towards some achievements or goals all our lives that we do not even care about. Therefore we end up running past everything that actually means something.

I found this book great and I agreed with all the points the author made. The only downside for me was that the advice and overall points made were very abstract and even though they did make sense, it is really hard to imagine how to apply them in real life. I was lacking some specificity.
Profile Image for Erika RS.
873 reviews270 followers
March 30, 2025
I went into Flux expecting a systems thinking book. What I got instead was a self-help book written by a systems thinker. I found myself growing increasingly frustrated until I realized that. Once I did, I also realized this probably wasn’t a book for me—self-help isn't generally my thing. I finished it but was overall underwhelmed. But if what you're looking for is a self-help book for a world in flux (from a fairly progressive viewpoint), then it could be just right for you.

The book’s central premise is that we live in a world of constant, accelerating change. The way we’re taught to navigate life—what the author calls the “old script”—is no longer sufficient. In its place, she offers a “flux mindset,” grounded in eight “superpowers” that help individuals orient themselves amid uncertainty.

The eight “Flux Superpowers” are:

Run slower – Resist urgency as a default. Slowing down creates space to think, reflect, and make more intentional decisions. It isn’t laziness—it’s clarity.

See what’s invisible – We can challenge our default scripts and develop peripheral vision. This includes seeing the unseen labor, recognizing privilege, and honoring different ways of knowing.

Get lost – Rather than fearing disorientation, embrace it. Getting lost, literally or metaphorically, is a practice in curiosity, creativity, and resilience.

Start with trust – Trust is both foundational and fragile. Leading with trust isn’t naive—it’s a deliberate, relational strategy for thriving in a volatile world.

Know your “enough” – A critique of consumer capitalism’s obsession with “more,” this superpower reframes success around sufficiency, sustainability, and meaning.

Create your portfolio career – In a fluid world, careers should be fluid too. Rinne champions the idea of a curated portfolio of roles, skills, and passions over the traditional linear path. You don't need to be the best if you are "the only"—the only one with your unique combination of skills, experience, and perspective.

Be all the more human (and serve other humans) – Our distinctiveness lies in our humanity. The chapter explores digital boundaries, emotional intelligence, and what it means to stay present.

Let go of the future – Letting go is not giving up. It is a practice of agency, rooted in adaptability and grounded values.

In places the book strains under the weight of its own metaphors. The language of “scripts” is useful to a point, but it sometimes painted with too broad a brush. Not everyone shares the same “old script,” and not all elements of traditional structures are uniformly harmful or outdated. Similarly, there were moments where romanticization of the past flattened complexity in service of optimism.

Still, compared to most self-help books, it realizes that in a world of constant change, much of our received wisdom is outdated. There are structural forces and cultural dynamics that change how we, as individuals, can be relate in the world. And while I might quibble with some of the framing, the underlying call—to live with more presence, more humility, and more humanity—is hard to argue with.
Profile Image for Christi Winkelman.
120 reviews
January 5, 2022
Are you aware of the rules and scripts that govern your life? Do you see the worst in everything or do you focus on what is possible? Can you show up fully human or do you have to invest in maintaining a facade?

This book is about shifting your perspective - about what motivates you, about your value in your current uncertain circumstance, to help you shift to a healthy outlook about change and a role that is more creative and in alignment with who actually are. A diversely talented and inspired individual who creates value and opens doors as you embrace change and evolve.

In summary I think Flux can be summarized by the Awakening your own Agency chapter: "Letting go of the idea anyone has the ability to control the future, frees everyone to focus on what they can control and how they respond to change."

This book is great for making people aware of the choices they have and becoming more comfortable with learning how to thrive with uncertainty or change. The title and introduction mentions 8 superpowers but I have to admit that at the conclusion I can't be certain what those 8 powers are because they feel more like good advice then a superpower. What I came away with is your awareness and your beliefs influence your ability to embrace change as a force for good, which enables you to adapt and then goes into 8 perspectives for you to explore.

The biggest distraction is the idea of priviledge because it is not fully explored in its relationship to Flux. The way it is interjected here derails the message of Flux and reinforces priviledge. Sure it exists and everyone has priviledge - that's great. The book acknowledges it but it doesn't scratch the surface about the many scripts and beliefs about priviledge. For example there are certain things people have acquired through trauma or by persisting through obstacles, which gives them the ability to appear as if they are sailing through change or obstacles you are now currently observing. And while the book does mention this ever so lightly as occasional one liners, it misses the opportunity to bring it into alignment with the rest of the book's message, and that is it does not serve you or benefit you to assume someone's priviledge.

It would have been more productive and more in alignment with the perspective presented by reinforcing that in a world of Flux, your superpower or ability to adapt in the face of uncertainity is more important than any perceived priviledge. In keeping with Flux we should ask ourselves if our script or belief about priviledge keeps us from adapting and evolving into the connected, creative, and inspired person we are meant to be.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
343 reviews13 followers
December 30, 2021
Like many "self-help" or growth books, it contains good information and asks good questions. I saw how the Flux Superpowers can help us in the world, especially since our world is so drastically changing day by day right now.

Like many of these books, there is a lot of information and even though I took time reading the book, writing notes and answering the questions, I don't know that it is something that will eventually be implemented in my life. Unfortunately, since I have finished the book, despite putting work into the concept, I have a feeling that the ideas will quickly slip from my mind, and I won't see them playing out in my life in a greater way than they already are. So, if you are like me and tend to read this type of book, set it aside and forget the concepts, I wouldn't say buy it. IF you are ready to dig in and really change the way that you deal with change, it has wonderful concepts and would most likely be very helpful.
Profile Image for Laura Skladzinski.
1,250 reviews42 followers
March 31, 2022
The world is in a constant state of flux, now more so than ever - so futurist April Rinne proposes that we need a mindset that treats change and uncertainty as a positive thing rather than something to adjust to and dread. She describes eight flux superpowers (run slower; see what's invisible; get lost; start with trust; know your enough; create your portfolio career; be all the more human and serve others; and let go of the future), and uses research to back up her points on why these superpowers are important to cultivate. I found some chapters more engaging than others, but enjoyed a few so much that I recommended them to friends. My favorites were "run slower", "get lost", "know your enough", and "create your portfolio career". I appreciated that there were thought-provoking questions in each chapter to provide a bit of a workbook approach, but it was still written in a style where you could read through the whole thing.
Profile Image for David.
787 reviews15 followers
March 16, 2023
In a world where change is accelerating faster than we can imagine, how do we thrive?

This very practical book provides some really great answers. Filled with mindsets and strategies, this paradigm-shifting work will give you a leg-up in dealing with flux (continuous change).

The 8 superpowers are:
1. Run Slower - when you slow down, you have more time to deal with flux
2. See What’s Invisible - when we look past the visible, we discover unseen opportunities
3. Get Lost - getting off the beaten path opens up new encounters
4. Start with Trust - trust is the glue in the midst of uncertainty
5. Know Your “Enough” - limits bring clarity to live in abundance
6. Create Your Portfolio Career - instead of a job path, curate a diversified vocation
7. Be All the More Human (and Serve Other Humans) - place relationships above technology
8. Let Go of the Future - relinquishing control opens possibilities

I like how each chapter ends with coaching questions to go deeper.
Profile Image for Sabrina Apczynski.
98 reviews1 follower
September 23, 2024
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Rinne offer's up 8 stellar Superpowers to cultivate in a world full of constant change.
As someone who identifies as a multi-passionate individual who enjoys new pursuits and passions (often each one building upon skills from previous adventures/work), this book offered solid guidance on ways to better understand and embrace my tendency towards being a learn-it-all!

Favorite Superpower: Letting go of the future.

Worthwhile Quotes from said Superpower:

"When you learn to let go of the future - you find it looks brighter than ever"

"When I let go of what I am, I become what I might be."

"Instead of quantifying all the worst things that could transpire, ask yourself: What's the best thing that could happen?"


82 reviews
October 6, 2021
This book can be useful for some but not for me, advices are too obvious or already in my nature. The message is basically open your mind to changes and navigate a never ending evolving world. Live the present and be prepared for the worst. I know where the author cames from, but the author fail to clearly articulate how she ended up with these advices that she calls superpowers. I don’t tag these qualities as superpowers, and alone superpowers don’t activate, you need a team with superpowers. Some people feels good living in a changing environment, but most of people I know dislike, or prefer to live in their comfort zone. I think this book will fail to change the mind of such people, and there is also cultural aspects that are forgiven in the book.
Profile Image for Terry Pittman.
2 reviews1 follower
November 21, 2021
Love this book! It's a must read for working people who aspire to move up in their career or navigate the confusing work marketplace in the midst of constant flux in technology, business strategy, trends and evolving tastes. If I had a kid in college or navigating the job market I would point them to Chapter 6: "Your Portfolio Career" which will be relevant to them and (you too) for as long as either of you work. It's a quick read that you can make your way through sequentially or by the chapters that get your attention immediately and seem most relevant to your current situation. Unlike some stodgy business books, this one goes easy on the terminology and high-minded concepts so you'll breeze through every chapter and take away important ideas you can use.
1 review
December 1, 2021
I saw April speak at a webinar about a year back and it was the first time I heard about the concept of ‘Flux’ and I was hooked on immediately. I think it was also because I had just quit my job and started a business with a close friend and was pretty much in the thick of ‘flux’. As a person who is constantly trying to control everything and wanting to know when and how things will happen, letting go of a steady corporate job with a steady pay was tough, although it was the RIGHT decision to make. Therefore, no need to say how much April’s book was timely for me and helped put so many things into perspective. In particular, the entire chapter on learning to let go of the future could not have been more apt! April… Thank you for sharing your journey and story of Flux!
Profile Image for Jay Best.
298 reviews4 followers
December 17, 2021
It's a great premise that life is too fast and hectic and changes too quickly to be able to brute force your way through work tasks and need to change pace, work more focussed.

A lot of the advice is simular to Eastern approach of going slower and manage life balance. Also prioritises ethics, and humanity.

I think many of the concepts I agree with, but I can't quite put my finger on shy it doesn't quite vibe for me. Maybe more about values it didn't feel as practical, efficient nor as effective as I would like. Can't put my finger on what is missing, but it is, for me.

* Listened at 2x speed on Blinkest.
Profile Image for Holly Wood.
14 reviews1 follower
October 29, 2022
Transitioning into a “new normal” after 2+ years of a pandemic has been anything but easy. My boss recommended I read this book if I was looking to find inspiration in this period of change. I wouldn’t say this is the most inspiring book I’ve ever read (that is reserved for Atomic Habits - highly recommend), but I would say this certainly helped me feel like I could face the challenges ahead. April is a lovely writer and incredibly relatable. She humanizes change in a way that myself and I’m sure many others can relate to. I highly recommend this book if you’re feeling stuck in a rut or feel like you just need a little pick me up.
1 review
August 24, 2021
This book is a Godsend for me in this world full of flux post 2020. April has done an amazing job narrating eight superpowers that build on top of each other, and shed light on a refreshingly human way to approach our relationship with change, and our career and life. This book is one of the silver linings in this world full of flux and uncertainly that I hope reaches many people. April narrated this audiobook in her voice and I LOVED listening to *Flux* in her soothing and meditative voice. Highly recommend!
93 reviews
November 3, 2021
April Rinne's masterpiece on how to embrace rather than fear the future has been instrumental to me as I personally transition from a linear to portfolio career trajectory. Her advice on discarding our old script and designing our new script to address change really hit the mark, especially in today's ever-evolving landscape. As an independent board director and a CEO, I highly recommend reading Flux and recognizing your own Superpowers. I read the book for ME, then I bought and gifted many more copies for friends and colleagues. It's a game changer. (Written by Dina Tantra)
1 review
August 19, 2021
April Rinne’s book Flux is fantastic and could not have come a better time in all of our lives. Change and uncertainty are around every corner these days. Flux demystifies your relationship with change and the journey through the 8 superpowers will help you reshape how you deal with and respond to change. I will read this book again. I will have my kids read this book. I will have my friends read this book. This world needs to read Flux.
2 reviews
August 24, 2021
The Flux Mindset finally puts a framework around all the things I've most valued in both my personal and professional lives! April Rinne gives names and structure to the superpowers I've developed from raising children of color, from building a portfolio career, from dealing with both my parents deaths during COVID and so much more. I feel seen knowing there is a tribe on this journey of "Flux as a practice." And I'm pretty sure coddiwomple is my all-time favorite word!
1 review
September 22, 2021
"If I were to die tomorrow, what would the world need me to do today?"
"What would make you, you if you were stripped of all of your priviledge...or your possessions?"

This airplane-ride-quick read includes a fantastic set of core questions surrounded by enough personal juice and guidance to provide self-introspection. I especially like the combination of business ideas, career goals, Personal well- being, meditation, and yoga combined into one book of many perspectives.
1 review1 follower
November 4, 2021
I loved this book. It was timely and a lot of what April talked about was very relatable. A highlight from the book is to Run slower – to thrive in a fast-paced world, slow your own pace. The faster we run and the more we run without resting or reflection or even paying attention, the worse our results will be over time. I loved the comment "In a world with more robots, your key to thrive is to be all the more human – and to use your humanity to help others".
Profile Image for Angeles .
29 reviews
December 18, 2021
It may have started like a book that speaking of the obvious, but it's more about deeper perceptions, mastering the art for being free in mind. Well sometimes liberations isn't about what to have rather what one doesn't have, having a peaceful life isn't about grasping peace, is simply because one person doesn't have trouble. This book provide such an insight and very much wisdoms for general response.
Profile Image for Dave Conroy.
34 reviews1 follower
December 30, 2021
This book was a sprinkling of cultural ideas from around the globe with little substance in the end. At times frustrating to read, it often repeated itself and left me with a feeling of confusion about the actual meaning of phrases and overarching ideas. I was hoping for a book on strategies to approach uncertain and changing times and was left with a Brene Brown like book that is heavy on metaphor and light on application.
1 review
August 29, 2022
Sometimes we choose our challenges and sometimes they choose us, but they are always there. In her outstanding book called Flux, April Rinne has managed to capture the essence of how to deal with the inevitable uncertainty that we all face, and her 8 'superpowers' are a must-have collection of tools to help us turn challenges into opportunities. A brilliant read for anyone seeking to perform at their best, despite the worst.
Mark Pollock – Explorer, Speaker & Founder
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