Optimal Thinking: How to Be Your Best Self

Author: Rosalene Glickman
List Price: $14.95
Our Price: Click to see the latest and low price
ISBN: 0471414646
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (29 March, 2002)
Sales Rank: 447
Average Customer Rating: 4.34 out of 5

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5 out of 5
How to be your best and bring out the best in others.
Optimal Thinking is a pure, universal resource suitable for professionals and non-professionals, and people of all backgrounds and ages. From an individual perspective, Optimal Thinking is the mental path we travel for a successful and fulfilling life. Optimal Thinking enables us to take responsibility for our lives, and optimize thoughts, feelings, and situations.

I use Optimal Thinking to obtain optimal solutions at home and in business. I start each day with five specific optimal questions, and use various optimal questions to help my family, friends and colleagues find their own optimal solutions. I definitely recommend this simple, uniquely powerful guide to personal and professional optimization.


Rating: 5 out of 5
One of 3 classics in professional and personal development.
The 7 Habits is principles-based and offers solid timeless advice. It takes you from being a victim (dependent on others) to a victor (taking control of your life and relating well with others.) 5 Stars!

Emotional Intelligence makes a clear case for the value of emotions and WHY emotional intelligence is more important than IQ for success. 5 Stars!

Optimal Thinking: How To Be Your Best Self, endorsed by Stephen Covey, shows you HOW to optimize your mental and emotional intelligence, and make the most of everything in your personal and professional life. 5 Stars!

Read these three books, and you will never need to read another self-improvement book!


Rating: 5 out of 5
Read a great book!
Pecking, pricking, fighting over food and yet all you want to do is fly not waste your time chasing and fighting over something as meaningless as fish!

Jonathan Livingston Seagull loves pushing his limits and flying faster then any other gull ever did but his flock didn't believe so. Jonathan becomes an outcast sent away to never return. Jonathan's hunger to learn grew stronger as he ventured to new places. He met new friends other outcasts that also loved to fly. After many years Jonathan thought he should go back to his old flock and try to teach his flock to appreciate flying like him. Jonathan's friends even said, "If any one can teach a simple gull to fly its Jonathan." He found few that were willing to learn. All the others said, "If you look, talk or think like an outcast you are an outcast. Jonathan realized he was meant to be with his students so they wouldn't have to fly alone like Jonathan Livingston Seagull

I liked the way the author described how that you shouldn't just waste your life away with unneeded things and you should go seeking knowledge not just sit and wait for knowledge to sink in.
I recommend that other people like Jonathan should read this book. People whom like pushing their limits and thinking there is more to life then fighting and bickering.

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