Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Reviews. Show all posts

Review: It’s Time to Start Living with Passion! My Journey to Self Discovery, by Jean Paul Paulynice


Title: It’s Time to Start Living with Passion! My Journey to Self Discovery
Author: Jean Paul Paulynice, MBA
Publisher: PAULYNICE CONSULTING GROUP, LLC
Publisher’s contact info: INFO@PAULYNICECONSULTING.COM
Non-Fiction
Genre: Self-help/Inspirational
Publication Date: May 30, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-7330427-9-6 (Hardback)      $16.99
ISBN: 978-1-7335601-9-1 (Paperback)    $9.99
ISBN: 978-1-7330427-0-3 (eBook)           $3.99
ISBN: 978-1-7335601-2-2 (Audiobook)   $3.95

Do you feel as though you’re on autopilot, going through the motions every day—wake up, go to work, come back home, have dinner, sleep, repeat—without real meaning, depth, and purpose in your life?

Even if you have a fulfilling job and earn a good salary, that doesn’t mean you’ve found your passion in life. The problem is, finding your passion can be elusive, especially in our present society where we are constantly seeking external validation from others and are being judged in public platforms more than ever (i.e. social media). Perhaps the wisest statement in this book is that “the moment you start to listen to yourself, you can start shutting out all the noise.” This little book is all about soul-searching, self-analysis, and reflection. Sometimes you have to step out of your comfort zone and seek out your passions. Sometimes you have to change your mindset and shift your perspective about things in order for transformation and growth to take place. Likewise, it’s also about the choices you make, not so much the major ones but the little ones you make on a daily basis.


In his light, honest, and engaging prose, Jean Paul Paulynice encourages you to do some introspection so you can begin your path toward finding your passion and bliss in life. For those who journal, the reflection questions he asks make very good journaling prompts. A very quick read, under fifty pages, It’s Time to Start Living with Passion! is a little morsel of goodness and wisdom that will help on your journey to self-discovery.







Book Review: Healing With Words by Diana M. Raab

Title: Healing With Words: A Writer’s Cancer Journey
Author: Diana M. Raab
Paperback: 206 pages
Genre: Memoir; Self-Help
Publisher: Loving Healing Press
Language: English
ISBN-1615990100
ISBN-978-1615990108
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About the Book:
Healing With Words: A Writer’s Cancer Journey is a compassionate and wry self-help memoir written by an award-winning author, nurse and poet, who at the age of forty-seven found her life shattered first by a DCIS (early breast cancer) diagnosis and five years later by another, seemingly unrelated and incurable cancer—multiple myeloma.

Review:

Before I begin my review, I’d like to share a passage from Diana M. Raab’s new book, Healing With Words: A Writer’s Cancer Journey:
“It seems as if the past couple of weeks have been surreal. A thick cloud suspends over me. How did I get here? I was diligent about my annual mammograms and check-ups. On the first day of my menstrual cycle, I religiously did self-breast exams in the shower. There is no cancer in my family. Why am I lying here all mutilated?”
Healing With Words: A Writer’s Cancer Journey is Diana M. Raab’s second foray into the world of writing but her first journey into the world of healing. By combining the two, she has written a memoir that not only pulls on the heartstrings but helps to show us the power of the written word in our everyday lives and how we can utilize that to heal. Keeping that in mind, I began to read Diana’s story.
At the age of forty-seven, Diana (who incidentally had no cancer in her family) was diagnosed with breast cancer. Enduring a mastectomy and the pain and embarrassment associated with it, Diana never really fully healed mentally. She found herself depressed (she had every reason to feel this way) after the operation which left her feeling less of a woman. Five years later, she was diagnosed again with an incurable cancer this time – multiple myeloma.

This is Diana’s story. What is unique about her story is that over the course of her journey dealing with cancer, she decided to take up journaling to talk about her experiences and in so doing discovered something so powerful that pills couldn’t even touch – the power of healing through words – intimate words, gut-wrenching soul-searching words that enabled her to talk about her feelings and emotions that were always bottled up inside of her, thus inhibiting her ability to full heal until they all spilled out onto paper.

Thus, Diana decided she not only was going to tell her story but by incorporating an interactive question and answer section to the back of every chapter, it would enable those who had cancer themselves to put their own words on paper and discover what a healing process it was. By doing this, they would find it would alleviate some of the stress which is so detrimental in the healing process.

Healing With Words: A Writers Cancer Journey takes us down Diana’s path of fears and frustrations. You’ll definitely need something to wipe your eyes as this is a story that will touch you deeply, no matter if you have cancer or not. Diana’s words are powerful, yet sensitive to the plight of a woman’s journey who is given the diagnosis of cancer and should not only be read by victims of the disease, but loved ones as well.

Book Review: Fast Food Vindication by Lisa Tillinger Johansen

Title: Fast Food Vindication
Author: Lisa Tillinger Johansen
Genre: Nonfiction; Self-Improvement
Paperback: 244 pages
Publisher: J Murray Press (October 4, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN: 0578110431

BLURB:
The fast-food industry has long been the whipping boy for all sorts  of health ills. Obesity in children and adults? Blame it on fast food.  Heart problems, diabetes, high cholesterol? Fast food is the culprit.
Not so, says Lisa Tillinger Johansen in her new book, FAST FOOD  VINDICATION. Johansen, a Los Angeles-based registered dietitian, takes  the bold position that “fast food is not the enemy, and it can be  incorporated into a healthy lifestyle.” In fact, Johansen says, the  media’s current wave of anti-fast-food sentiment may actually be  detrimental to society’s health and well-being. “By focusing solely on  the fast-food industry, the onus is all too often removed from more  important factors:  personal responsibility and smart choices.”

In FAST FOOD VINDICATION, Johansen takes a lively, informative, and  realistic look at our eating habits, and, using her expertise and  experience as a registered dietitian, seeks to educate readers on making  smart dietary choices no matter where they eat.

“The book refutes the notion that fast food is an evil force in  society,” Johansen says. “The laser focus on fast food being the cause  of the obesity epidemic is not true, nor is it the complete picture.  There’s so much press about how fast food is detrimental to us. In  reality, that’s not the case. It’s about how we eat. We can eat poorly  at home and at sit-down and fast-food restaurants, but we can also make  healthier choices at all of these places. The majority of us don’t make  great choices. We need to look at everywhere we eat and how we eat.  Personal responsibility plays a big role.”

“Fast-food restaurants make big and easy targets,” Johansen  maintains. “So many of us eat at them, and, unfortunately, so many of us  are overweight or obese. But research has shown that we eat the  majority of our meals at home, so restaurants of all types are just a  part of the puzzle.”

“There are a lot of ways to make good choices at fast-food  restaurants,” according to Johansen. “For example, a grilled chicken  sandwich without mayo, coupled with a side salad with low-fat dressing  on the side and apple dippers without the dip, is one good meal that you  could put together. Most fast-food restaurants carry entrée salads,  yogurt parfaits, oatmeal, and other, more nutritious foods.”
On the other side of the issue, Johansen notes that an unhealthy  fast-food meal could include “fried foods of any type, regular sodas or  anything that is double, triple, quadruple or more.”

With the publication of FAST FOOD VINDICATION, Johansen hopes to  “present the side of an issue that hasn’t really been discussed much in  the media. By doing so, it should ultimately help people to learn to  look at the big picture and make appropriate changes to their diets as  needed.”

REVIEW:
Who would have believed it’s okay to eat at fast food restaurants?  Of course, it’s not everything you can eat there just as it’s not good to eat certain foods at regular restaurants but Lisa Tillinger-Johansen, author of Fast Food Vindication,  really opened my eyes to the food you can eat and actually are quite healthy for you.

Johansen is currently a registered dietitian working the health education department at a major hospital in Southern California.  She also teaches nutrition to at-risk senior adults as part of a grant program.  Before that, she spent seven years as a real estate executive at McDonald’s Corporation.  Her move to leave McDonalds wasn’t spurred by the fast food industry’s reputation but just that she was ready for something else.

In Fast Food  Vindication, Johansen teaches us how to eat for life, where to focus our eating habits and to understand how fast food affects our lives because, face it, fast food is here to stay.

From a health perspective, Johansen knows firsthand that the menus of fast food restaurants are loaded with high-fat, high-calorie items and names certain items on these menus you should avoid altogether.  She agrees that the sodium content of many of these items are off the charts.  With Fast Food Vindication, Johensen shows you how to open your eyes to this and what items are perfectly healthy to eat such as garden burgers, grilled chicken sandwiches (my personal favorite), salads, apple slices, carrot sticks (I didn’t even realize fast food restaurants carried these), baked potatoes (yum yum) and fruit and yogurt parfaits.

Johansen believes it is important to be aware, to be knowledgeable and to accept responsibility for what you eat.  If you choose fries and a double whopper burger, that’s on you.

One point Johanson brought up was interesting.  Fast food restaurants introduce light fare but because sales are lackluster, they discontinue them.  If we want to keep healthier choices on these menus, we have to get it in our heads to buy them even when a dripping burger is tempting us.  We need to be in control.  The fast food companies are doing their part and are concerned with nutrition but if they put their plan into action and introduce these more nutritional foods and no one buys them, are we going to continue berating fast food restaurants by calling their food “junk food” or are we going to get smart, agree to eat smart, and keep these companies from discontinuing food that would be good for us?  Are we to blame for these companies offering calorie-laden burgers?  Yes.  Because that’s what we buy.

Another point that was interesting was the fact that when we go to sit down restaurants to eat, we are consuming more calories than if we went out to eat at most take outs.  Some of these sit downs, you are served baskets of rolls or tortilla chips or whatever and because you in hungry, you tend to eat more of these before your main meal is served.  Then when it is served, you are taking in lots of calories.  This was a point I never thought about and I’m sure you haven’t too.

Johansen’s book is definitely worth checking out.  Not only does it open your eyes to a healthier eating lifestyle, you don’t have to give up your favorite fast food restaurants.  A must read for families who likes the convenience of take out and saving money and yet wants to feed their families healthy choices.  Have you ever taken a family of four out to a sit down restaurant?  It breaks the bank nowadays.  The main thing about this book is that it teaches you how to eat healthier and whether you want to admit it or not, it’s the better way to go.

Book Review: Fabulously Fifty and Reflecting It! by Tamara Elizabeth

Title: Fabulously Fifty and Reflecting It
Author: Tamara Elizabeth
Genre: Self-Help; Motivational
Paperback: 124 pages
Publisher: Trail Blazing Press
Language: English
ISBN-13: 978-0983064800

BOOK SUMMARY

This is my story, a story of a woman who has discovered how through my reflections, the truly fabulously lovable me; the authentic me that I was born to be. I have moxie like the trail blazing women of the 20’s.

Today I am a confident, lovable courageous woman who realizes that fairy-tales don’t always have the ending of children’s books, but they can have the ending and continuation of what we truly want and believe. I have sass, courage, spunk, determination and attitude.

This book is the result of hard work and perseverance on a self love journey. It is the reflection of my life and from these reflections I have created a workbook for you, the readers, to assist you on your own journey to find the most authentic loveable you. I am your voice. I speak as you. I have been where you have traveled. I have finished licking my wounds and jumped back into the ring. I am MOXIMIZED!

My reflections shared are not to place blame on anyone in my path, for I take responsibility for my reactions to every challenge I have come across in my life. I just want you to understand that I have walked in your shoes and have never given up. You can restart your life at any time you want and still succeed in whatever you desire. This is not always easy but if it was then the journey wouldn’t be quite as exciting. “Easy is never fun” – to quote my fabulously delicious self love coach.
So I invite you into my world and to reflect upon your world. Enjoy the journey – I promise you it will be the most fabulously wonderful ride of your life.

BOOK REVIEW

Tamara Elizabeth felt unloved and set out on a journey of self-love and in so doing has written a book aptly titled Fabulously Fifty and Reflecting It to help others learn how to love themselves when they feel no one else did.  Fabulously Fifty is a pep talk and soulful journey all wrapped up in one.  Tamara shows women how to step out of their comfort zone by showing them that rejection often wasn’t about them, but their ideas, actions or opinions.  Tamara tells us to treat rejection as a positive moment because it gives you a chance to reevaluate your decisions and thus are able to grow.
One particular part of the book stood out: Tamara is talking to her inner child and says, “I will not let my ex-husband’s words and actions influence the way I feel about myself.  I left my husband, who never respected me; I have moved on and I have become strong.  I have started a new life in another city – Vancouver. I will not let my happiness depend on how my ex-husband treats me.” I wanted to say, “You go girl!”

Sometimes women (and men) are in relationships for the wrong reason (financial for example) and when that happens, something’s going to give.  These women and men are so afraid to go out and live their own lives, they take abuse for years.  But one day, some wake up and realize that if they were just pushed or pushed themselves to make that jump, their lives will become better.

I also liked a chapter called “The Lemon Tree.”  The Lemon Tree is a group she started on Facebook after fleeing from her bad relationship.  As head lemon sqeezer, she would provide the shade of a tree with plenty of comfortable chairs.  “There would be cold water, sugar and pitchers,” Tamara writes.  “All anyone had to bring for the visit were their own lemons.”  One particular sentence in that chapter says it all, “It’s not the load you carry, it’s how you carry that load.”


Tamara’s words of wisdom comes through as she tells us to look back at our past and turn whatever happened into positives.  It’s a self-help book on finding yourself and discovering self-love what many women may have lacking in their lives.  If you want to get to that place where you can say what you want, when you want and are willing to take responsibilities for your own words, read Fabulously Fifty and Loving It!