20 Oct Reading for Self-Improvement

Written by Published in iZania Community Blog Read 1184 times
Rate this item
(0 votes)
   

I have been reading for self-improvement since 1989 when I was taking Black Studies courses at Penn State University. Black Studies taught me concepts like paradigm shifts, reframing and ultimately personal transformation. After this experience I continued to seek answers to life's struggles and dilemmas by reading. Staying true to my academic roots, after college I continue to read history, literary fiction, political and cultural books.

I don't think I truly believed in the actual self-help genre for a long time even after I purchased my first self-help books during the early 1990s.  That is until I discovered Iyanla Vanzant's One Day My Soul Just Opened Up: 40 Days and 40 Nights Toward Spiritual Strength and Personal Growth in 1999.  Later that year I was initiated as a Sacred Woman by Queen Afua, author of Heal Thyself: For Health and Longevity and Sacred Woman: A Guide to Healing the Feminine Body, Mind, and Spirit

Another book that changed my mind about self-help was a parenting book I read in 2000.  Unfortunately I can't recall the name of it, but it taught me how to care for, entertain and teach my toddler while I was pregnant with a second child.  The book was a life saver. Gradually I became hooked on self-help.  I read one right after the other, sometimes two or three at a time in a variety of areas-parenting, self-actualization, job satisfaction, conduct of life etc.

In 2005, I was named the Life Coaching editor for Bellaonline.  Since then I've read and reviewed hundreds of self-help books and interviewed dozens of life coaches and other experts.  My goal is to teach myself and others how-through self-help-we can adopt new habits, change our way of thinking and arrange our lives for success.

 Please visit my blog for more information. 

BLOG COMMENTS POWERED BY DISQUS
Last modified on Sunday, 02 October 2016 23:55