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Xulon Press
Mid Life Celebration
Mid Life Celebration
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$4.99 USD
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$4.99 USD
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Our biggest midlife challenge isn’t desire. It’s time. Finding time to pause. Time to simply breathe in and maybe, actually, to take back. Take back a little time to do something for ourselves that is long overdue. To... well... quite literally...
rethink • reprioritize • recommit
These three simple steps guide us in taking more personal responsibility in life’s five big choices: mind, body, spirit, money, and hq.
Sooner or later it becomes crystal clear. Life is not a dress rehearsal. This book will remind you why today is not a good day to put your dreams on hold.
Midlife crisis is spending our life chasing our dreams and finally getting there, more or less. But in looking around we think, “This isn’t what I wanted!”
Mid Life Celebration is using our gut-wrenching discovery, also known as a wake up call, to change things.
But in another minute we will be on our way to some other important, shiny thing. Because, well, that is how we have learned to medicate ourselves. We unknowingly default to life’s constant distractions.
Why? Perhaps because we do not feel worthy of success and because, deep down, maybe we do not feel we deserve an extraordinary second half.
And even if we did, where the heck do we start?
rethink • reprioritize • recommit
These three simple steps guide us in taking more personal responsibility in life’s five big choices: mind, body, spirit, money, and hq.
Sooner or later it becomes crystal clear. Life is not a dress rehearsal. This book will remind you why today is not a good day to put your dreams on hold.
Midlife crisis is spending our life chasing our dreams and finally getting there, more or less. But in looking around we think, “This isn’t what I wanted!”
Mid Life Celebration is using our gut-wrenching discovery, also known as a wake up call, to change things.
But in another minute we will be on our way to some other important, shiny thing. Because, well, that is how we have learned to medicate ourselves. We unknowingly default to life’s constant distractions.
Why? Perhaps because we do not feel worthy of success and because, deep down, maybe we do not feel we deserve an extraordinary second half.
And even if we did, where the heck do we start?
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