Helping Me Help Myself: One Skeptic, Ten Self-Help Gurus, and a Year on the Brink of the Comfort Zone | 
enlarge | Author: Beth Lisick Publisher: William Morrow Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $10.55 You Save: $14.40 (58%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 69 reviews Sales Rank: 116346
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.5 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.3
ISBN: 0061143960 Dewey Decimal Number: 818.5409 EAN: 9780061143960 ASIN: 0061143960
Publication Date: January 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Excellent condition. First edition. Unread. Pristine condition. No remainder marks. Mailed from Southern California.
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Product Description
Grappling with her lifelong phobia of anything slick, cheesy, or remotely claiming to provide self-empowerment, Beth Lisick wakes up on New Year's Day 2006 with an unprecedented feeling. She is finally able to admit to herself that she's grown tired of embracing the same old set of nagging problems year after year. She has no savings account. Her house feels unorganized and chaotic. She and her husband never hang out together. The last time she exercised regularly was as a member of her high school track team almost twenty years ago. Instead of turning to advice from the abundant pool of local life coaches, therapists, and healers readily available on her home turf of northern California, Beth confronts her fears head-on. She consults the multimillion-dollar-earning pros and national experts, not only reading their bestselling books but also attending their seminars and classes. In Chicago, she gets proactive with The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. In Atlanta, she tries to get a handle on exactly why "women are from Venus," and in a highly comedic bout on the high seas of the Caribbean, she gamely sweats to the oldies on a weeklong Cruise to Lose with Richard Simmons. Throughout this yearlong experiment, Beth tries extremely hard to maintain her wry sense of humor and easygoing nature, even as she starts to fall prey to some of the experts' ideas, ideas she thought she'd spent her whole life rejecting. Beth doesn't think of herself as the typical self-help victim. But is she?
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| Customer Reviews: Read 64 more reviews...
Great Idea to tackle all those self help books in 1 year!! July 6, 2008 Great Book, laughed out loud many times!! I am one of those people that has started about a dozen self help books and never quite finshed them or completely followed through with each concept. So after reading Beth's book I have come up with my own monthly list of self help Guru's to tackle! I have changed a few and mixed up the order based on my current needs. June was "helping me help myself", July 1-2-3 Magic (need to get the kids in line first), August Jack Canfield, September Stephen Covey, October Dr. Oz, November Julie Morganstern, December Suzy Orman, January Depok Chopra and If I am up for it I may just read Silvia Browne for the kicks in February! Wish me luck!
good book June 27, 2008 First of all I'd like to say that anyone with an earnest belief in the self-help movement is probably not going to like this book, which deals with and wittily exposes its shortcomings. With that said, I enjoyed this book. It felt like a conversation with a quite disorganized and slightly loopy but perceptive and funny friend. I already went into the book agreeing with many of the insights Lisick had about the self-help gurus she encountered- I don't even understand how John Gray and his sexist Mars and Venus books became bestsellers, or if anyone really knows how to "synergize" as Stephen Covey recommends, among other things-- so I found myself laughing along as she made observations about the various ideas in these self-help books. I liked how she ended the book, writing "We may be humming along just fine for a while, but we also can't help but compare our tests and goals to those of other people. This is when "experts" come in handy. It seems like, at its best, self-help is probably supposed to remind us that we can be strong and in control, that we can do anything. The problem is that we're human. All we're ever going to do is stumble around. Sometimes we hit the sweet spot, and the rest of the time we spend trying to unravel the formula for how to hit the next one." I recommend this book to anyone with a sense of humor about self-help and about themselves.
helping me help myself May 21, 2008 One of my mom's favorite birthday gifts. She said she laughed out loud while reading. She's an avid reader & said this was really enjoyable. She's sending it to me to read.
Uninspired May 15, 2008 I was hoping I would love this book; the description sounded interesting and an easy-breezy laugh---just what I was looking for. I know a book is a subjective experience, but this book, for me, lacked charm, depth and insight; but what made it a boring read is the fact that the humor was not effortless; it felt forced and self-conscious--like the author was trying too hard. I haven't read any of the author's other work (which is highly praised, I hear), but this work felt empty and little too precious and not funny. By no means disastrous, but not a book I would recommend.
Expected more May 1, 2008 I heard a great radio interview of the author, and was interested in the idea.
Her process to evaluate the different types of self help and their main features seemed pretty haphazard. The only similar theme in each of her quests were far too many details on how much this was costing and how limited her funds were. I'm not sure if she found what she was looking for.
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