Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!
Rate this book!
Write a review?
Read it all the way through and I keep going back to this one. A practical handbook on getting “unstuck” and moving forward. Loved the little exercises throughout the book which were both thought-provoking and useful!
This is not a bad book. If you're really such in a rut I think it might be helpful, but of all the motivational/self help I've read this year this book was my least favorite.
Mel is a no-nonsense self-help counselor. I first heard her on the audio supplement to Success Magazine. The book was full of great ideas to change your life. I haven't done any of them. Did the book fail?
I found this author through her excellent TED talk and am so glad. This book finally cuts the bull and gives concrete, useful advice about how to stop getting in your own way. I get in my own way a lot. In a frank, amusing and accessible way, Robbins readers navigate through their crappy excuses and stulifying coping mechanisms and encourages them to take action and create lasting change. Getting unstuck is hard, and our brains try all sorts of tricks to make us stay there.Robbins explains strat...
I can sum up this book in two sentences: 1. Get off your butt and take action! 2. If you don't know how to do #1, hire someone to tell you how. Other than that, just the usual advice; nothing profound.
A long narrative with many examples about how to make your life suck less. Save yourself some time and read the conclusion first, then if you want further elaboration read the chapter. There are definitely some good tips, I just wish she got to the point faster.
Repetitive and condescending. The tone of the audiobook narrator doesn't help, as she's almost scolding the listener. Essentially the book makes sweeping judgements and generalisations regarding the listener/reader's lifestyle and behaviour and concludes with "you're either being a chicken or a jerk." Yes, seriously! I'm surprised by the high ratings and assume this is the type of approach that resonates with an American audience (a subsection of it anyway -- one that sees the world as dog-eat-d...
I listened to the Audiobook version of this book after watching Mel Robbins' Tedtalk video. And like her Tedtalk, this book did not disappoint. Like others have mentioned, she has this no-nonsense, unapologetic tone. Her basic message? If you're stuck in life, stop saying you're okay. Admit to yourself that you're dissatisfied & do something about it. There are many different life lessons that she sprinkles into the book, but 2 main messages stick out to me. The first is to act quickly. She call...
Nuggets from this book are useful; but really not worth reading/listening through the whole book. The number of times Robbins repeats the same ideas and advice in slightly different wording gets tiring.
Ironically it took me ages to finish this because it spurs you to action and I was going through an intercontinental move and job change at the time I started it, so other priorities took precedence. But it has a lot of really good advice and action items on how to get unstuck and create a habit of being more okay with change. A lot of mental models and resources as well. It’s super useful but you do need to be ready to DO something. I read it with a set of highlighters and sticky notes, as well...
This took my 5 months to listen to. I took a few months break from it because it wasn’t my favorite and the last story was hard to listen to since I didn’t relate to it. I honestly wouldn’t recommend this to someone just because it didn’t fulfill me in the way I wanted it to. She has better books that I’d recommend and that I love. This one just didn’t do it for me.
I read this for a book club - so I'm not really the target audience. I thought the advice was generic and sometimes contradictory.