Life Guide – 10 things you should know about everything that matters
I really wanted to like "The Life Guide: 10 things you should know about all that matters" by Robert Ashton. But although there were some pearls of wisdom and a few real treasures in the text, I was a bit 'irritated at being the number from the lists and the actual content of some of them.
For a slow Ashton, I just read what I did. You should only open the chapter time or ifthe design of your life. But even as some of his records, I could not suffer. They were too easy or that things are not relevant to me. (Or a number of times the information that I do not agree)
There are lists of some seventy ten in this book. These lists in a number of general headings such success, time changes, health and wellness, stress, your world of work, leisure, relationships, children, parents, money, houses and pensions. Under each of these generalSubjects were brief remarks that sometimes contained much practical advice, and then lists.
Some of the records contain advice that is so simple you wonder why it is here. It was almost insulting. The subject of money, there are ten reasons why you never enough. Number seven was "children – if you have children, you know it's expensive to do She always wants to buy their latest toy .. Do not give too easily." Duh!
Yes, Ashton has a numbergood advice in this book. And yes, some of the lists of goods that you think you can do something in your life. If you have a list, you can enjoy this book. But many items that contain simple everyday things that everyone knows, without real substance. For this reason, this book is not what I think will help people change their lives, or really a life as the title suggests.