In a world full of overwhelming change, it is not always easy to believe that you can make a difference every day. Individual efforts seem to count for little in these complex times. Yet throughout history, all human endeavours have been fuelled by the conviction that personal power can create change. In this spirited little book you will be offered many simple thoughts and strategies that demonstrate how ripples can be generated every day. These ideas will inspire you to believe in your personal power, and convince you that individual efforts an indeed make a difference.
Eat better and you’ll move more. And if you move more, you’ll sleep better and ultimately think and feel better. This is the ripple effect of good health and high performance.
The Ripple Effect can help you identify the seven most important decisions of each day. Like a pebble hitting the water creates a ripple effect, each one of these daily decisions creates momentum in your life.
Drawing on his years of lecturing on the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous and Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, he reveals Step 10 as the natural culmination of working the previous Steps.
In his new book, Dr. Greg Wells offers concrete strategies on how to get better and stay better—not just for a few weeks or a few months, but for life.
Awash with charming illustrations, this delightful tale will show children that happiness is a choice they get to make for themselves.
Consider your life as a series of ripples. The experiences in your life and your response to them have led you to exactly where you are now.
This work of investigative journalism shows how freshwater is the pressing global issue of the twenty-first century.
In his new book, motivator extraordinaire Steve Harper offers a simple but empowering set of principles for improving our lives, our businesses and our world by learning to put other people first.The Ripple Effect shows how our actions ...
This is my story.
The story became even more intense when Steven endured a second bout of pancreatic cancer that metastasized to his liver. Surviving a second bout of pancreatic cancer is so rare that no statistics are kept.