This book is a self-help book for teenagers and adults. There is a book that follows it called, Seven Habits of a Highly Effective Person, however it was a little dry. For this reason I read the book for teenagers. Even though, this book was written for teenagers it sounds like the author wrote it to adults. The book is broken into four parts, and the habits are broken into groups accordingly.
Part one talks about what a habit is, and that it can make or break you. It is also an introduction. The author introduces himself, and writes the book as if he is holding a conversation with you. It also gives an outline of the book. It also tells you how this book is going to help you. He also tells you what a paradigm, or perception, can work for you or against you. He then talks about what the center of your life is. He then tells you to look at your
This was a very well written and motivating book. I enjoyed how periododically the author would put in comics and quote to keep your attention. This made it a much more enjoyable book. I like this much more than the adult version. I recommend this book to anyone that wants to be more motivating. It helped me quite a bit.
Part four it talks about the last two habits. Habit six is singernize or the high way. Sinergize in a nutshell is achieved when two or more people work together to create a better solution than either could alone. It’s not my way or a better way it’s the high way. It talks about celebrating differences. Habit seven is called sharpening the saw or it’s me-time. This talks about how in every day there needs to just be alone time. And the final part of the book just sums all the habits up, and put them in action.
self as a personal bank account. And tells you such things as “positive depo