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Stillness is the Key
Stillness is the Key: An Ancient Strategy for Modern Life | Ryan Holiday
'Whether you are an athlete, an investor, a writer or an entrepreneur, this little but soulful book will open the door to a healthier, less anxious and more productive life and career.' - Arianna Huffington 'Ryan's trilogy of The Obstacle is the Way, Ego is the Enemy and Stillness is the Key are for sure must-reads.' Manu Ginobili, 4x NBA champion and Olympic Gold Medalist Throughout history, there's been one indelible quality that great leaders, makers, artists and fighters have shared. The Zen Buddhists described it as inner peace, the Stoics called it ataraxia and Ryan Holiday calls it stillness: the ability to be steady, focussed and calm in a constantly busy world. This quality, valued by every major school of thought from Buddha to Seneca, John Stuart Mill to Nietzsche, is urgently necessary today. And, Holiday shows, it is entirely attainable. Just as Winston Churchill used bricklaying as a time to recharge and reflect, or Oprah Winfrey learned deep empathy from her quiet childhood, we can all benefit from stillness to feed into our greater ambitions - whether winning a battle, building a business, or simply finding happiness, peace and self-direction. Filled with wisdom and examples from historical and contemporary figures, this book shows how to cultivate this quality in your own life. Because stillness is not merely inactivity, but the doorway to the self-mastery, discipline and focus necessary to succeed in this competitive, noisy world.
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JenReadsAlot
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Pickpick

Decent. I think I would have enjoyed this more in print than on audio.

KadaGul @JenReadsAlot, some books are better in one medium or the other. Dry by Jane Harper #AuthorAMonth I started this before in Audio 🎧, but this time around, I'm enjoying the physical copy. #Bookvsaudio 1mo
36 likes1 comment
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SqueakyChu
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This is so true. It‘s often hard to get away from all the information that‘s thrown our way day after day. It‘s overwhelming!!

TEArificbooks Yes there is. That is why those “screen free” days are so popular but so hard to do. They like the concept but we are so used to that peace and quiet makes us uncomfortable after a few hours (like we are missing out on something important). 1y
SqueakyChu @mdm139 During pandemic, I had to learn how to tune out the news. Under the previous administration, I would read the news online and have actual panic attacks. I started only reading the headlines each morning. I‘m working really hard in trying to keep my anxiety level down. I like this book! I thought it would just be about meditation (which I don‘t like to do!), but it gives practical advice for how to calm oneself. I‘m impressed. 😊 (edited) 1y
6 likes2 comments
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SqueakyChu
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Someone left this book in my #LittleFreeLibrary. With all the chaos of the holiday season surrounding me, this actually seemed as if it would be a good read so I did start reading it today!

TEArificbooks Happy Hanukkah 1y
SqueakyChu @mdm139 Thank you so much! Merry Christmas to you and your family! 🎅 🎄 1y
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Smarkies
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A short concise book about the aspects of Stoicism and the need for the practice of stillness in our lives.
A fact I gleaned from it - Churchill used to lay about 200 bricks a day {for a wall around his garden) so that he could instill this practice of stillness. When he had finished laying his allotment for the day, he would then retire (probably to his writing / lunch), a actual bricklayer would come by, disassemble his work and re-lay it. 😂

Smarkies This was my #bookspin book for November @TheAromaofBooks . Also one of my non fiction books that I planned to read for #nfn2020 3y
TheAromaofBooks haha that's a fantastic Churchill fact, and honestly a good reminder that our “stillness time“ doesn't have to be productive! 3y
16 likes3 comments
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Dnickel

“We suffer more often in imagination than in reality”
Seneca

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nikhilcartoon
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