User:JacquezFavors628

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We strive to complete other areas of life, to realize many ambitions... Some of us are successful, plus some of us are not. There might be many reasons why someone succeeded where others failed, only one irrefutable reason would be that the winner was always aware of his goals.

Which awareness came into being mainly from the good understanding of their self. (I wouldn't say a complete understanding of the self, as the self isn't a given quantity. It is quite dynamic, and keeps constantly evolving depending on the circumstance it finds itself in.) But, yes, winners in life will often have a great knowledge of themselves.

I am unable to stress enough the importance of self-knowledge to be successful in everyday life. A significant part from the self-improvement book Free Mind Free Body, is dedicated to help people see and understand themselves. Just think about this: you might have lived all your life without the complete knowledge of who you are, what your real aspirations are, the reason why you think how you think and behave how you do. Unsurprisingly, such half-baked knowledge can lead to a lot of dissatisfaction and failures in life.

The author of the book D. R Boisse emphasizes knowing oneself very well and discovering our true aims and aspirations. In ways you know perfectly what you want, which may be true, too. However it wouldn't hurt, wouldn't it, when we paused as it were to take stock of something that's integral to all of us: our 'self'.


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Are we completely certain what we should happen to be yearning for or aiming for is not a borrowed goal? Not something that we chose as our goal simply because everybody else was going after it? Or that we have been trained to consider that goal as an ideal goal we ought to have.

So, how do we start on our journey of self-discovery? There aren't any easy answers, of course, however, you could always start with Boisse's book. I did, for just one, so when reading the book I paused many times to think about what the author was coaxing me to complete: ask yourself some difficult questions.

Boisse guides us like a true friend on the difficult path of self-discovery. It is not easy because there may be things about ourselves you want to deny or hide. We may have lived an entire life in a condition of denial and then not know why we're miserable.

There is no point ignoring what we are. We cannot deny yesteryear, but we can certainly work on the long run and see it's not the same as and compared to past. It is exactly what this excellent motivational book is all about. I owe it a great deal and hope that you simply shall benefit from it too.