(21b)
Hattie Cooper, the blogger behind The Anxious Girl’s Guide to Dating, knows anxiety. She has lived with Generalized Anxiety Disorder for years.
Reading this book is like getting advice from a friend who has been there. Hattie shares immediate, easy-to-use strategies for tackling your Social Anxiety Disorder and creating healthy habits. Featuring expert advice from foreword writer and registered psychotherapist Kyle MacDonald, the tools in these pages will help you beat your anxiety and reveal your most confident self.
Anxiety has been around for as long as the human brain has. Like the brain, anxiety and all the other conflictions associated with it have also remained mysterious. As neuroscience has gained more momentum, so too has our knowledge of why anxiety happens in the first place. With the help of neurologists, we have started to learn the truths of what exactly is going on inside the human brain when anxiety starts to take control.
Download This Great Book Today!
Genre: SELF-HELP / Abuse
Recently we ran a promo and were able to make 1500 sales during the promotion period. Though all sales were free downloads but it signifies that the topic has potential and is capable of making money. Paid downloads vary between 40 to 60 per month.
Calculation
Minimum estimate - 30 Paid Downloads * $3.00 * 70% = $63 per month
Maximum but not limited to - 60 Paid Downloads * $3.00 * 70% = $126 per month
Annual Earnings per book - Minimum Estimate - $63 * 12 = $756 per year.
Annual Earnings per book - Max but not limited to Estimate - $126 * 12 = $1512 per year.
Please Note - This is just one book. I have over 1000+ books in my arsenal. If one book can do this much imagine how much even 10 books could do for you. Just stay committed with our business model and I assure you that we all will make money!! Lot of it!!
1. Palpitations
2. Sweating
3. Shaking or trembling
4. Feeling shortness of breath or smothering
5. Sensation of choking
6. Chest pains or tightness
7. Nausea or gastrointestinal problems
8. Dizziness, light-headedness, or feeling faint
9. Feeling hot or cold
10. Numbness or tingling sensations (paraesthesia)
11. Feeling detached from oneself or reality, known as de-personalization and de-realisation
12. Fear of “going crazy” or losing control
13. Fear of dying
Minimalism in a broad way can be described as living with the bare essentials - having as less possessions as possible. If it is not necessary for your life then it cannot be included in a minimalist lifestyle. Many people have a different meaning attached to minimalism but it always has the theme of having only the bare essentials.
Decluttering is actually considered the first step towards minimalism. While decluttering we move away from stuff that we have but don’t derive any value from, towards things that are of value to us. Decluttering concerns things that have value in our lives, minimalism is about need. Clearly decluttering is not minimalism
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Portuguese
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Already translated.
Translated by Cláudio Porto Ribeiro
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Spanish
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Already translated.
Translated by Maria Del Rocío Alcalá Chabolla
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