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Theresa Francis-Cheung

Self-esteem: The Lazy Person’s Guide!

Change how you think and feel about yourself — and change your life.

You've had a glance at the vast array of self-esteem books on the shelves and been thoroughly daunted. It all seems so complicated. You don't have time to wade through pages and pages of technical jargon, therapeutic approaches, discussions, case studies or quizzes. You don't want to have to take up yoga or tai chi, let alone swim with dolphins or nurture your inner child. You just want to feel better about yourself — and fast!

Enter The Lazy Person's Guide! In no time at all this little guide will help you understand and improve the way you think and feel about yourself. It will give you all the essential information and advice you need and will help you change your life for the better, right now.

The Lazy Person's Guide! is a series of popular, cheerful yet thoroughly grounded, practical and authoritative books on various health issues and conditions. Other titles in the series include Beating Overeating, Detox, Exercise, Improving Your Memory, Midlife, Quitting Smoking and Stress.
Self-esteem: The Lazy Person's Guide!: Table of Contents
PART ONE: Self-Esteem

— Self-esteem
— Do you have it?
— Why haven't you got it?
— How can you get it?
PART TWO: Eight Secrets to Better Self-Esteem

— Get to know yourself
— Don't believe it because you think it — Manage your emotions
— Improve your communication skills
— Make decisions
— Take care of yourself
— Manage stress
— Enjoy yourself
PART THREE: Extra Help

— Extra help, if you need it — Confidence-boosting tipsAfterword
111 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2002
Publication year
2002
Publisher
Gill Books
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
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Impressions

  • b8987300472shared an impressionlast year
    👍Worth reading
    💧Soppy

    Thanks

  • Trisha Angela M. Macapagalshared an impression5 months ago
    👍Worth reading

Quotes

  • krstlannhas quoted10 months ago
    Improving your self-esteem isn’t about becoming selfish, loud, competitive and arrogant. It’s about taking care of yourself so that you have the strength and energy to help and give to others when appropriate.
  • Blagoje Mirosavljevichas quoted7 days ago
    The problem with self-esteem based on temporary externals is that you only feel good about yourself when things are going well, but when things don’t go so well, you lose your self-esteem.

    To prevent this, self-esteem needs to be grounded firmly in self-acceptance. The concept of self-acceptance is based on the knowledge that we are all fallible human beings, we all make mistakes and nobody is perfect. So although you would like to be 100 per cent perfect all the time, the important thing is to learn to accept that sometimes you will be wrong and you are fallible.
  • Amani Al Saidihas quoted9 days ago
    MEEK INHERITING THE EARTH

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