Manage Yourself, Manage Your Life
Table of Contents
Part One: The Secrets of NLP
Chapter 1: A new sense of control
Chapter 2: Putting yourself in the driving seat
Chapter 3: What do you want?
Chapter 4: Manage yourself, manage your life
Part Two: The Life Course
Chapter 5: Beginnings
Chapter 6: Transitions
Chapter 7: Endings
Part Three: To Manage is to Live
Chapter 8: Your Health
Chapter 9: Wealth
Chapter 10: Relationships
Chapter 11: Work
Chapter 12: Joie de Vivre
Resources - where to next?
Index
About the Authors
Why manage?
Because you can do more, live more, be more. Because it\'s more fun. Because you owe it to yourself to be the author of your own life story. Because work and business are a waste of time if they don\'t give you what you need. Because you could be happier. And healthier. And richer.
How many reasons do you need?
Because it is better to be a doer than the done. Because life's more interesting than drifting. Because other people will always tell you what you're supposed to be doing, but only you know what you must do. Because families don't always work in your favour. Because bad luck happens. Because you deserve the chance to show what you can do. Because you don't want to be blaming other people.
Manage Yourself, Manage Your Life is your essential guide for living in the twenty-first century. Based on powerful NLP (neuro-linguistic programming) techniques, this practical handbook will help you to create the life that you deserve. You will discover how to:
- Identify what you really want in your personal and professional life
- Set clear, achievable goals
- Create more love and happiness in your life
- Handle change effectively
- Use simple communication skills to improve your relationships
- Make others want to give you their help
- Get back in control of your life
NeuroLinguistic Programming techniques are as complicated as they sound, but Ian McDermott and Ian Shircore have put the theories into a mincer and come up with a recipe...that ordinary people can understand.
Guardian Book of the Week
This is good, real-life stuff - I was pleasantly surprised.
Online Review



