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Reviews for Don't Sweat the Small Stuff for Women Journal: Inspirations for Doing What Matters Most & Finding Time for You

 Don't Sweat the Small Stuff for Women Journal magazine reviews

The average rating for Don't Sweat the Small Stuff for Women Journal: Inspirations for Doing What Matters Most & Finding Time for You based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-11-19 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Callum Harrower
My rule with self-help books is: Not everything in it will be helpful, but it is worth reading it because of what is helpful. Some say that self-help books don't provide anything new to the reader -- that is true. These books just condense all of the common sense stuff into 200 to 300 pages for you to digest, which is helpful when you need to be reminded of the things that you need to think about most. As a teenager, I don't think I should say that I already know everything that this book presents so easily. This book features 100 thoughts, and I found 16 of them to be very helpful and applicable to my life. The other 84 were good reminders. It was a good pick-me-up, and at the very least, put me in a track of positive thinking. I won't sneer at the self-help section yet.
Review # 2 was written on 2010-08-23 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Daniel Welsh
Reading Level: Adult. Over a decade ago Richard Carlson wrote the original Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff: And It’s All Small Stuff. This title was a huge bestseller, and spawned not only a number of spin-offs by Carlson, but at least one parody too. And now we have a version for teens. I found this in the library while I was looking for some other titles. I hadn’t planned on including it, but I took it home and read through it, and knew this needed to be in my collection. The book is small and simply presented, with no charts, quizzes, or pictures. The book is divided into 100 short (no more than three pages) chapters. It offers down-to-earth advice, much of which seem like common sense (like Chapter 33, “Get Ready Early”), yet are often things that we take for granted, or just don’t think much about. Carlson presents the chapter title, explains it, and often includes a story from his own life or from a teenager that relates to the chapter. His basic philosophy is that people expend too much energy getting upset or frustrated by the little things in life that don’t go their way. In this version of his series, he focuses on the issues that are affecting teenagers, such as peer pressure, their future, and drama. This book is as easy to read as the idea behind most of the chapters, and it can be read in any order. It’s a book that a teen could pick up, read for five minutes, put it back down, and still have gained something from it. It helps the reader to think about things in their life in a new way, and it gives them ideas on how to make useful changes. There is no backmatter in this title; at the end of Chapter 100, “Continue Your Journey”, Carlson (2000) merely states “Treasure the gift of life.” I am a fan of Carlson’s original title, and credit that book with greatly improving my driving skills, for one. I still think about some of the ideas from time to time, and reading through the teen edition made me yearn to have had such a book when I was a teenager.


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