Showing posts with label How to Do Everything and Be Happy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How to Do Everything and Be Happy. Show all posts

Sunday, July 7, 2013

How to Do Everything and Be Happy by Peter Jones



I am a sucker for books that tell me how to declutter and put my stuff in order. I can't tell you how many books I have read on that subject and am always on the lookout for another. They appeal to some part of my brain and I find them to be calming, even if I don't always follow the instructions.

In tandem with arranging stuff - papers, utensils, and yes, even books -- I also enjoy reading about how to organize my time. Once again, there are untold books that I have read on that subject.

So the book How to Do Everything and Be Happy practically jumped off the library's New Non-Fiction display and into my hands. I liked it right away. Author Peter Jones is a hoot and he writes not as a drill instructor but as a guy who has been in the trenches and wants to share what he has learned with you.

It is not a book about organizing every minute so you can get more work done. Its main goal is to help you change what you don't like about your life, find out what you do want in your life, and set goals to get you there.

Any book that advises me to keep a calendar and make lists is the one for me. I use my calendar but only to record what I have to do - appointments, meetings, and social engagements. What's missing, writes Mr. Jones, are the scheduled times for what I really want to do. Those appointments right now are hit-and-miss.

Mr. Jones, who is British, begins his book by telling me to take a day off every month and just do what strikes my fancy. He calls it Boxing Day (the day after Christmas celebrated in England). What? No planning? No. Schedule the day each month, call it anything I like, and try it. It is a day, he writes, to live totally in the moment.

He offers his own experiences with resistance to this idea - he is a plan-every-minute kind of guy - and offers tips along the way as to how he has spent his Boxing Days and how he is happier because of them. 

As to the lists, there is the Live Life Now List, the Wish List, and the List of Three Goals you are working on. He walks you step-by-step through every one and is very enthusiastic unlike some of the authors who write This Is So Very Serious books on the subject.

Along the way, he provides Stop! Action Point! summaries of his ideas and gives the reader a nudge to actually Stop! and set up the calendar or make the list. 

We all need a bit of nudging now and again. At least I do, and Mr. Jones has presented his nudges in a sound and humorous way.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

A Rain-filled Weekend Made for Reading



It promises to be a rainy weekend and I have three books in the offing:

1776 by David McCullough - I picked this one off the shelf the morning of July 4th. How appropriate. It is the story of General George Washington and his army vs. British Commander William Howe in the year of the Declaration of Independence. As always, Mr. McCullough tells a rousing tale.

How to Do Everything and Be Happy by Peter Jones - Its bright yellow cover caught my eye on the New Non-Fiction display at the library last week. Every now and again I feel the need to try and Regain Control of Life. This is a funny book with a different spin on how to get things done - not just the laundry, but accomplishing the things in life that really make you smile. It involves Making Lists which I love to do.

The Murder at Sissingham Hall by Clara Benson - I haven't yet gotten to the murder in this fun mystery that takes place in an English country house, and I do love a story like this that has all the suspects thrown together for a weekend house party. This is a Kindle book (2013) that is described as a "1920s whodunit" but I can't find an original copyright date or any information about the author. Who knows if it is modern or not, it has all the characteristics of an entertaining puzzle.