"A gently reassuring guide for all who yearn for work that will express their particular creative abilities."— Library journal
NO MORE MONDAY MORNING BLUES…
You're about to be liberated! Here is the book you've been waiting for-a step-by-step guide to finding the 'work” that expresses and fulfills your needs, talents, and passions. Using dozens of real-life examples, Marsha Sinetar shows you how to overcome your fears, take the little risks that make big risks possible, and become a person whose work means self- expression, growth, and love!
Discover how to:
• Tune into your inner world and your unique talents
• Evaluate and build your self-esteem-the three key questions to ask yourself
• Banish your outmoded network of „shoulds”
• Deal with the Big R-resistance
• Liberate yourself from an un fulfilling job
…and much more!
DO WHAT YOU LOVE,
THE MONEY WILL FOLLOW
"Provides a much needed spiritual yet… (tovább)
"A gently reassuring guide for all who yearn for work that will express their particular creative abilities."— Library journal
NO MORE MONDAY MORNING BLUES…
You're about to be liberated! Here is the book you've been waiting for-a step-by-step guide to finding the 'work” that expresses and fulfills your needs, talents, and passions. Using dozens of real-life examples, Marsha Sinetar shows you how to overcome your fears, take the little risks that make big risks possible, and become a person whose work means self- expression, growth, and love!
Discover how to:
• Tune into your inner world and your unique talents
• Evaluate and build your self-esteem-the three key questions to ask yourself
• Banish your outmoded network of „shoulds”
• Deal with the Big R-resistance
• Liberate yourself from an un fulfilling job
…and much more!
DO WHAT YOU LOVE,
THE MONEY WILL FOLLOW
"Provides a much needed spiritual yet practical approach to following your heart and making a living.”—Michael Toms, Host, New Dimensions Radio Series
MARSHA SINETAR, Ph.D., is an organizational psychologist, mediator, and writer who for the past several years has been increasingly immersed in the study of self-actualizing adults.