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The world needs another self-help book like it needs another
Reality TV show. At least, that's what I would have said a year
ago, right up until I found myself in need of something-"anything
"-to pull me through the worst breakup of my life. What do you do
when you want to be gracious, graceful, pragmatic, and filled with
equanimity, but you're so hurt and angry you feel as if you could
go around town ramming your car into random stationary objects
without batting an eyelash? What do you do when your friends and
family run out of platitudes and old, tired slogans like, ""Time
heals all wounds,"" and ""It's better to have loved and lost..."?"
(Slogans which, incidentally, make you want to scoop out your
frontal lobe with a melon baller.) What do you do when the entirety
of your social life consists of nightly trips to the grocery store
for Haagen-Dazs(r) and Tylenol(r) PM, making the bulk of your human
contact the now almost intimate act of handing the checkout person
your Shopper's card?
This is the stuff that drives us to the very edge of annihilation.
At least, it "feels" that way. It feels like a very real
obliteration of the self. Let me tell you, it feels that way
because "it is."
This breakdown can be the worst thing that's ever happened to you,
or it can be the best thing for precisely this moment in your life.
"Buddha Breaking Up" is a modern-day spiritual guide for how to
embrace dramatic, life-altering change and use it as a means of
rediscovering the Self. It answers the age-old question, "What's
next?" (We'll start with changing out of your bathrobe and combing
your hair.)
Combining humor, pop culture, and Zen principles, Part I of
"Buddha Breaking Up" explores the science of falling in love,
provides useful tools for riding out the heartbreak-including how
to handle social networking and other technology apparently
designed for liberal applications of self-torment-and offers unique
and practical techniques for moving through the lowest depths of
the shattering. Part II, "The Bodhicitta of Breaking Up,"
illuminates methods for battling the wounded ego, dealing with
anger, creating better relationships, and finally, loving and
valuing yourself so you can reach a place of acceptance and grace
in your new l
THE PATH TO NETWORKING SUCCESS The Networking Diary contains 7
networking principles that will change your life. Inspired by
questions about networking while getting an MBA and launching a
startup, the book features stories from real-life networking with
business professionals. This is not a "how to network book."
Rather, it presents amazing insights from networking gurus you
would otherwise not get to meet. People like Ali Brown
(AliBrown.com), Mary Cantando (WomansAdvantage.biz), Fabienne
Frederickson (ClientAttraction.com), Ivan Misner (IvanMisner.com),
and Joel Whalen (JoelWhalen.com). If you want to master networking
success, learn and apply the simple networking secrets they reveal
in The Networking Diary. These people know what it takes to succeed
and they want to share it with you. Learn their secrets to get an
edge when networking.
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