Mr. Everit's Secret
What I Learned from the World's Richest Man
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
"Sure you learn from pain, but you also learn from ease and fun. It’s like learning to ride a bicycle--you learn from falling off, but you learn the most when you stay balanced and enjoy the ride. Pain is highly overrated as a teaching device. If you pay attention to internal signals and external feedback, life won’t need a 2x4 to get your attention." -Bert Everit
In the tradition of Who Moved My Cheese?, Mr. Everit’s Secret is a modern-day parable that examines many of our preconceived notions about money and our ability to create the good life. You can have everything you want in life--success, relationships, career, money, happiness--and it doesn’t have to be a struggle. Most of us were taught that to reach our goals, we have to work hard and fight every step of the way. But it’s simply not true. Syndicated columnist and esteemed corporate keynote speaker Alan H. Cohen shows us that our goals are already within reach but we are often too comfortable in our lives--even if our lives stink--to step forward into change.
Mr. Everit’s Secret imparts important lessons about changing from a fear mentality to a wealth mentality, overcoming small and self-defeating modes of thinking, and taking care of people while letting life take care of you.
Best-selling author Alan Cohen (Why Your Life Sucks, I Had It All the Time, and The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore) shows us not only how to create financial success, but also that happiness and joy that must go along with it to make it all worthwhile.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The title character of this soothingly crass self-help parable is an avuncular wheelbarrow-factory CEO who casually addresses God as"Hank." Bert Everit's secret, a business-inflected mixture of positive thinking and fatalism, is that mindset determines reality. On the macroeconomic level, recessions are purely psychological, the fallout of irrational crises in consumer confidence that inhibit the exuberant circulation of money. On the microeconomic level, personal failure is the result of self-limiting"pygmy thoughts" and the lack of a"wealth mentality," while even the lousiest jobs--as demonstrated by a joyously singing toll-booth clerk--can be made heavenly by a determinedly blissful attitude. Fortunately, if we have faith that"when you lighten up and follow your intuition you will be guided to where you need to be," the universe will shower its abundance--better jobs, houses, fabulous bequests from long-lost relatives--virtually in our laps. Cohen, a motivational guru and author (The Dragon Doesn't Live Here Anymore), demands little of readers, telling them that"ease is a more effective success attitude than struggle" and that"there is always a next level of relaxation you can go to in any situation." But when it comes to the ethics of monetary circulation--don't give money to beggars, who will just blow it on lottery tickets and booze, but do put that $250 sweater on your maxed-out credit card since"people who love and believe in themselves give themselves what makes them happy"--Mr. Everit's credo of guiltless self-indulgence shades into selfishness.