Navigating Life: 8 Different Strategies to Guide Your Way by Rachel S. Heslin

Do you feel pulled in so many directions that you don't know which way to go? Learn how to create the life you WANT to live!

Navigating life: 8 different strategies to guide your way

Are you tired of feeling pulled in so many directions that you don’t know which way to go? Stop spinning your wheels and start living!

 

This book is for you if you are:

If this sounds like you, Navigating Life will show you how to:


… and much more.

Genre: SELF-HELP / Personal Growth / Success

Secondary Genre: PSYCHOLOGY / Applied Psychology

Language: English

Keywords: personal development, positive psychology, success, happiness, fulfillment

Word Count: 21,000

Sales info:

Not a whole lot at this point, but I'm going to be becoming far more strategic and systematic about my marketing going forward.


Sample text:

Since it’s hard to follow your heart when you’re trying to do what everyone else wants you to do, the first strategy we’re going to look at is how to identify and separate yourself from these OPGs. It’s not just about being sucked into working on other people’s projects or having difficulty saying “No.” There’s nothing wrong with helping other people. The real problem is when you are so inundated with what everyone else expects from you that you stop being you. You end up spending all your time and energy pursuing things that don’t support who you are and what you are here to contribute to the world.

When I was in high school, I felt like I should use my intelligence for the Benefit Of All Mankind by becoming a scientist and working on the space shuttle or something like that.

The problem was that what I really loved was the theater. I loved exploring and experiencing the full range of human emotion. It made me feel alive.

Unfortunately, I had a story in my head that believed that Life Needs to Be a Struggle. Since I loved theater so much, I dismissed it as being “too easy” to take seriously. After all, if it felt natural, obviously I wasn’t working hard enough, which leads to feeling guilty, like that I should do something “more productive” in order to make a difference. Have you ever had a picture in your head of what you think “making a difference” is supposed to look like? Has it ever felt like an obligation instead of a gift?

 


Book translation status:

The book is available for translation into any language except those listed below:

LanguageStatus
French
Translation in progress. Translated by Ando Rakotomanana
German
Already translated. Translated by Beate Binnig
Italian
Already translated. Translated by Ciro Cibelli
Portuguese
Already translated. Translated by Alessandra Guetti and Marcia Renata Martins Lemes
Author review:
Very professional. Obviously was well-versed in the amount of time required to provide quality work, both given and maintaining good deadlines. A native speaker friend of mine pronounced the translation "a fluid text, and the Brazilian reader will be charmed."
Spanish
Already translated. Translated by Laura Velazquez Carapia

Would you like to translate this book? Make an offer to the Rights Holder!



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