Sunday, September 1, 2019

The Truth About Pseudo Self-Help

 

                   The Truth about the Pseudo Self-Help Business

                                                                                    “Heaven helps those who help themselves.”

                                                                                    ---Anonymous.





            There are over 300,000 books available on Amazon.com in the category of “self-help.” Given this astounding amount of literature, how can one possibly decide where to look for an authentic self-help book? Nowhere is this more apparent than in regards to individuals flocking   to programs seeking shortcuts in the hope of achieving rapid results. Modern culture has seen many proponents of self-help, including advocates of positive thinking; they market their books, CDs and DVDs to anyone willing to buy them. But first, they create their market selling ideas that indoctrinate people to believe that they are powerless and need the help of these false self-help coaches.

In modern times, self-help has become a business enterprise. Some authors use this label as a means of making money. There are many bestselling books in the self-help industry that promise many wonders in a short period of time. Self-help has become synonymous with quick fix. For instance, the self-help culture in America has become a staggering $12 billion industry.  

Most of the time, people follow the recommendations given in these books, audio-books, seminars, workshops. Then, when the material bought does not deliver the benefits they promised, they blame themselves and think that there is something wrong with them; thus, their effects can be detrimental. The self-help programs that are supposedly harmless can do more harm than good, making people believe that they are helpless.

Several authors and sociologists, such as investigative journalist Steve Salerno, who wrote a book titled SHAM: How the Self-Help Movement Made America Helpless, have examined this social problem. As the title of the book suggests, inauthentic self-help culture can result in clients victimizing themselves. The popularity of motivational speakers such as Dr. Phil, Dr. Laura, Tony Robbins, and so on who profit from this industry, is well-known. These people organize seminars and workshops, where they sell their books, audio-books, CDs, etc., while charging seminar fees ranging from $500 to several thousand dollars in the case of Tony Robbins. The same can be said regarding some Christian motivational speakers who use their popularity and their church platforms to indirectly promote their books and audiotapes. Furthermore, Salerno points out that market surveys reveal, "The most likely customer for a book on any given topic was someone who had bought a similar book within the preceding eighteen months." Since the person did not find what he/she was looking for, he/she kept searching for another book, audio book, or CD, or enrolled in seminars and workshops, in an endless search, hoping to find a solution to their problems.

A number of televangelist authors of self-help books have access to mass communication, such as TV and radio, which gives them tremendous power to influence naïve and uninformed people to buy their books, CDs, audio-books and so on. The self-help industry is infested with life coaches but not authentic self-help providers.  

Some self-help gurus promote self-victimization; that is, they advocate the idea that people have problems in adulthood because they have been victimized in early childhood. The theory is the inner child has been traumatized by past events, which have become negative "tapes" that replay over and over in their subconscious minds. They then tell people that redemption comes through empowering themselves with the material they are selling.

The real issue could be that some people may need professional therapy, but since they cannot afford it, they seek help on their own, flocking to these kinds of literature and workshops.

The mass media is basically oriented to manipulate and domesticate ordinary people, creating superficial and unnecessary needs. Most people’s behaviors are based upon the actions, decisions, and opinions of others. Under this scenario come false New Age “gurus,” some Protestant religious leaders, and sensationalistic and fake self-help authors take advantage of naïve people to financially profit from them. They offer a panacea or “snake oil” to solve all humans’ problems under the name of self-help. They demand that people uncritically believe in them or in their products or services.

Thus, it is extremely important to raise awareness about these modern “snake oil” peddlers who take advantage of gullible people. Again, they sell the idea of victimization; once the client accepts this idea, the next step is to propose the idea of empowerment, for which the client needs their techniques. Their main motivation is to fatten their wallets and not to help people. A friend of mine accurately posited the inquiry: Why is it called "self-help" if one has to pay for it?

In this environment, someone has to have the courage to clear the air and put things into correct perspective. Millions of people are wasting time, money, and energy buying ineffective and detrimental systems. Therefore, it is imperative to rescue authentic self-help from that which is business oriented. Contrary to critics who blithely dismiss self-help methods, or New Age gurus who sell them as miracles, the book Awaken the Power Within: In Defense of Self-Help explores the conditions under which self-help is authentic and effective.

The book analyzes the accuracy of self-help and explores what works, what doesn’t, and why. It uncovers the gimmicks of cheap literature that offer the “snake oil” solution to all problems. Snake oil may provide people with temporary relief, but it does not last, because the remedy did not address the root of the problem.  It offers only a momentary boost of inspiration that fades after a few weeks, turning buyers into repeat customers.

This book further clarifies the concept of “self-help” as a mental discipline, which some abuse for the sake of entrepreneurship. It surveys the main assumptions of inauthentic self-help culture that keeps humans enslaved in a herd mentality and fully demonstrates that all the power dwells within each individual.    

Thus, it is imperative to stress the notion of Help Yourself to tap the human potential. This takes us to the concept of self-help and its derivative self-healing. The concept of self-help is anchored in the popular saying, "Heaven helps those who help themselves."

The message is to awaken people from their slumber and make them realize that humans have the inner capacity to confront any difficult circumstances in life; there is no need for external intervention. People are responsible for creating their own reality with their thoughts and beliefs, and they are the only ones who can take back their power. This book offers a deeper perspective on the culture of self-help and self-improvement and empowers us to rely on our inner voice for motivation, authentic self-empowerment and self- reliance.



Albert Amao Soria

www.amazon.com/author/amao 

About the Author

Albert Amao Soria is a sociologist, social theorist and cultural critic. He is an independent researcher – a life-long student of metaphysics and philosophy; with over 30 years’ experience in comparative religion, psychology, and mysticism with emphasis on Western spiritual traditions. Mr. Amao is the author of several books, including Awaken the Power Within (Perigee/Tarcher, 2018); Healing without Medicine (Quest Books, 2014); and The Dawning of the Golden Age of Aquarius (AuthorHouse, 2012). He is available for lectures upon request. Mr. Amao can be contacted by email at Stgermain777@gmail.com. For further information, visit the websites: http://www.amazon.com/author/amao and www.albertamao.com.



                                               





    
                              

                   


           

Monday, April 22, 2019

Book Review 3: Awaken the Power Within You




Midwest Book Review

Wisconsin Bookwatch, Volume 13, Number 6, 
June 2018

         http://www.midwestbookreview.com/wbw/jun_18.htm#Self-Help
The Self-Help Shelf
Awaken the Power Within
Albert Amao Soria
Tarcher/Perigee
c/o Penguin Group, USA
375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014-3657
www.tarcherbooks.com
9780143132592, $16.00, PB, 288pp, www.amazon.com

In "Awaken the Power Within: In Defense of Self-Help", sociologist Albert Amao analyzes the accuracy of self-help and positive-thinking claims in this groundbreaking exploration of what works, what doesn't, and why, substantially based upon his own life experience. Born in a poor Latin-American country into a very impoverished family with both parents practically illiterate, he was the oldest of five children and began working at six years of age, shining shoes and selling newspapers to help his family. Unable to finish high school, he nevertheless was able to acquire a diploma by going to night school, which then allowed him to be admitted at the San Marcos University in Lima to obtain a Ph.D. in sociology. All these things were possible in his view because when he was teenager he had access to New Thought" or positive-thinking philosophy. Contrary to the critics who blithely dismiss self-help methods, or the New Age gurus who sell it them as miracles, in the pages of "Awaken the Power Within, Amao writes with sobriety, scholarship, and draws on his personal experience to deftly explore the conditions under which self-help is authentic -- and successful. Accessibly written and thoroughly 'reader friendly' in organization and presentation, "Awaken the Power Within" is an inspired and inspiring read from beginning to end. While unreservedly recommended for both community and academic library Self-Help/Self-Improvement collections, it should be noted for personal reading lists that "Awaken the Power Within" is also available in a digital book format (Kindle, $11.99) and as a complete and unabridged audio book (Tantor Audio, 9781977356659, $24.99, CD).
About the Author:
Albert Amao Soria is a sociologist, social theorist and cultural critic. An independent researcher – a life-long student of metaphysics and philosophy; with over 30 years’ experience in comparative religion, psychology, and mysticism with emphasis on Western spiritual traditions. Mr. Amao is the author of several books including, Awaken the Power Within (Perigee/Tarcher,  2018); Healing without Medicine (Quest Books, 2014); and The Dawning of the Golden Age of Aquarius (AuthorHouse, 2012). He is available for lectures upon request. Mr. Amao can be contacted by email at Stgermain777@gmail.com. For further information, visit the websites: http://www.amazon.com/author/amao and www.albertamao.com

Book Review 2: Awaken the Power Within You


Spirit of Change Magazine - Holistic New England

Fall/Winter 2018 Book Reviews

BY GAIL LORD

http://www.spiritofchange.org/Fall-2018/Fall-Winter-2018-Book-Reviews/

 Albert Amao Soria: TarcherPerigee, New York, NY 2018

Self-help is an eleven-billion dollar industry. What a task it is to sift through the plethora of books and programs in trying discern what’s helpful. Sociologist Albert Amao Soria is sympathetic to the needs of the dedicated self-help seeker as he himself is one. In Awaken the Power Within, he brings his experience as a student of the mystical, metaphysical and occult to evaluate both esoteric and conventional self-help. Authentic self-help is actually just listening to the guidance of the inner voice of the higher self. Some of the most helpful and effective self-help practices come from traditional esoteric thought. Many of these old teachings are repackaged and commercialized to gain profit; still other programs make false and overreaching claims, and Soria’s names them. He tells of his disillusionment following the hype of the video “The Secret,” which he watched in someone’s home, paying seven dollars admission, along with twenty others eager to learn the newly discovered secret occult knowledge that even Oprah promoted with fanfare. But there was nothing new; the secret was simply The Law of Attraction, a concept that’s been part of the American New Thought philosophy for over a century, and one that was widely disseminated by Esther and Jerry Hicks through the nonphysical being Abraham. Further, “The Secret’s” Law of Attraction manifests nothing unless it’s combined with the Law of Deliberate Creation and the Law of Allowing.

Amao’s is also critical of the work of Eckhart Tolle, having attended a weekend workshop knowing nothing about Tolle beforehand and finding the workshop both simplistic and boring. In addition, Tolle’s talks and writings completely dismiss the power of the subconscious mind. The subconscious mind can be our greatest healer, both physically and mentally, yet it also allows pseudo-gurus to convince people they lack the power to change unless they purchase solutions in the form of books and seminars. The subconscious mind uses deductive reasoning, so what we say we want needs to be in congruence with our actions and beliefs. If a person wants health but doesn’t eat healthy food or exercise or breathe properly, that person is instilling negative suggestions into the subconscious mind. The subconscious mind takes its conclusion from whatever premise we give it. This is how placebos work, through the powerful subconscious. When people believe medicine will heal them, even if they receive a placebo, it’s the belief in the healing that cures them. Almost all people credit something or someone else when they are healed. Robert Park, a university physics professor points out, “We recover from most of the injuries and illnesses that afflict us without either prayers or medicine. Like all animals, we have built-in repair mechanisms… Modern medicine can often intervene to assist nature in the healing process. But if the patient then recovers, how do we know the medicine was responsible?” Medicine, placebo, prayers, miraculous or spontaneous recovery? As Dr. Bernie Siegel says, “All healing is self-induced.”

 About the Author:

Albert Amao Soria is a sociologist, social theorist and cultural critic. An independent researcher – a life-long student of metaphysics and philosophy; with over 30 years’ experience in comparative religion, psychology, and mysticism with emphasis on Western spiritual traditions. Mr. Amao is the author of several books including, Awaken the Power Within (Perigee/Tarcher,  2018); Healing without Medicine (Quest Books, 2014); and The Dawning of the Golden Age of Aquarius (AuthorHouse, 2012). He is available for lectures upon request. Mr. Amao can be contacted by email at Stgermain777@gmail.com. For further information, visit the websites: http://www.amazon.com/author/amao and www.albertamao.com


Book Review 1: Awaken the Power Within


THE EDGE magazine, Holistic Living - Book Review
http://www.edgemagazine.net/2018/07/new-books-summer-2018/



 
Awaken the Power Within: In Defense of Self-Help, by Albert Amao Soria, Ph.D. (Tarcher Perigee), 288 pages

— The $12 billion self-help industry is under constant attack for pedaling false miracles to duped believers. But sociologist Albert Amao Soria demonstrates that Americans eagerly support self-help books, seminars, and programs because, under the right conditions, these things work. Soria analyzes the accuracy of self-help and positive-thinking claims in this groundbreaking–and wholly unexpected–exploration of what works, what doesn’t, and why. “Regarding my personal experience,” Amao writes, “I can testify that positive thinking and positive action have worked wonderfully for me. Born in a poor Latin-American country into a very impoverished family with both parents practically illiterate, I was the oldest of five children. I started working when I was six years old, shining shoes and selling newspapers to help my family. Nobody then would have believed that I would be able to finish high school. Nevertheless, I was able to do it going to night school, which allowed me to be admitted at the San Marcos University in Lima to get my Ph.D. in sociology. All these things were possible because, when I was teenager, I had access to New Thought, or positive-thinking philosophy.”
Albert Amao Soria is a sociologist, social theorist and cultural critic. An independent researcher – a life-long student of metaphysics and philosophy; with over 30 years’ experience in comparative religion, psychology, and mysticism with emphasis on Western spiritual traditions. Mr. Amao is the author of several books including, Awaken the Power Within (Perigee/Tarcher,  2018); Healing without Medicine (Quest Books, 2014); and The Dawning of the Golden Age of Aquarius (AuthorHouse, 2012). He is available for lectures upon request. Mr. Amao can be contacted by email at Stgermain777@gmail.com. For further information, visit the websites: http://www.amazon.com/author/amao and www.albertamao.com





Sunday, November 25, 2018

Awaken the Power Within You



                                     Awaken the Power Within You

"Man alone, of all the creatures on Earth, can change his own pattern. Man alone is architect of his destiny" (William James).

The sell-help culture in the modern developed countries around the world has become a pervasive social system. Taken as an example North America alone, this issue has become a staggering $12 billion industry. There are over 300,000 books available on Amazon.com in the category of “self-help.” Given this astounding amount of literature, how can one possibly decide where to look for an authentic self-help book? We are becoming quick-fix societies. Nowhere is this more apparent than in regards to individuals flocking to programs seeking shortcuts in the hope of achieving rapid results. It is frequently seen many proponents of self-help, including advocates of positive thinking, mind/faith healing and other fictitious techniques with the purpose to help others; when they real purpose is fattening their bank account.
Self-help is used by some as a business enterprise. No wonder there are many bestselling books in the self-help industry that promise many wonders in a short period of time such as Eckhart Tolle’s The Power of Now, Rhonda Byrne’s The Secret, and many others.
The purpose of the book Awaken the Power Within  is precisely to analyze the accuracy of self-help and positive-thinking claims and to explore what works, what doesn’t, and why.
Most of the time, people assume to be true the recommendations given in most of these books, audio-books, and seminars. Then, when the material bought does not deliver the benefits promised, they blame themselves and think that there is something wrong with them; thus their effects can be detrimental. Consequently, the self-help programs that are supposedly harmless can do more harm than good and may also reflect the social problems now plaguing our modern society.
This problem has been addressed by many authors, such as investigative journalist Steve Salerno, who wrote a book titled SHAM: How the Self-Help Movement Made America Helpless. As the title of the book suggests, inauthentic self-help culture can result in clients victimizing themselves. Motivational speakers organize seminars and workshops, where they sell their books, audio-books, CDs, etc., charging seminar fees ranging from $500 to several thousand dollars in the case of Tony Robbins. The same can be said regarding some Christian motivational speakers who use their popularity and their church platforms to indirectly promote their books and audiotapes. Furthermore, Salerno pointed out that market surveys revealed "the most likely customer for a book on any given topic was someone who had bought a similar book within the preceding eighteen months." Since the person did not find what he/she was looking for, he/she kept searching for another book, audio book, or CD, or they enroll in future seminars and workshops in an endless search for self-help.
Those who have access to mass communication such as TV and radio have tremendous power to influence naïve and uninformed people. The self-help industry is infested by life coaches but not by authentic self-help providers.  
Thus, self-help gurus promote self-victimization; that is, they advocate the idea that people have problems in adulthood because they had been victimized in early childhood. The theory is that their inner child has been traumatized by past events, which have become negative "tapes" that replay over and over in their subconscious minds. They then tell people that redemption comes through empowering themselves with new "life scripts," which are their books, CDs, DVDs, seminars or workshops.  The real issue is these “gurus” are selling themselves as the healers and projecting their own shortcomings on their clients. The gimmicks used to sell self-help material and workshops may provide people with temporary relief but this does not last much. They offer only a momentary boost of inspiration that fades away after a few weeks, turning buyers into repeat customers.
Thus, the main goal of this book is to raise awareness about the modern “snake oil” peddlers who take advantage of gullible people. Again, they sell the idea of victimization; once the client accepts this idea, the next step is to propose the idea of empowerment with their techniques. Someone accurately posited the inquiry: Why is it called "self-help" if one has to pay for it?
In this environment, someone has to have the courage to clear the air and put things into realistic perspective. Millions of people are wasting time, money, and energy buying ineffective and detrimental systems.
Nevertheless, we can’t throw the baby out with the bath water; it is imperative that we rescue authentic self-help from the business mindset. Contrary to critics who blithely dismiss self-help methods, or New Age gurus who sell them as miracles, the book Awaken the Power Within explores the conditions under which self-help is authentic and effective.
There is a pattern of powerlessness among common people. From early childhood, we have been indoctrinated with false ideas and beliefs about our true nature as self-sufficient human beings. We took the beliefs of our parents, grandparents, mass media, and the so-called “conventional wisdom” for granted because we did not know better, and with time, they became part of our belief systems.  This set of ideas and beliefs is generally oriented to make us feel powerless and victims of circumstances. It seems that there is a huge conspiracy to inflict a sense of powerlessness on humans.  Moreover, some religious organizations create a sense of guilt by making us believe that we need them to be saved.  
The mass media is basically oriented to manipulate and domesticate ordinary people, creating superficial and unnecessary needs. Most people’s behaviors are based upon the actions, decisions, and opinions of others. Under this scenario come false New Age “gurus,” some Protestant religious leaders, and sensationalistic and fake self-help authors to take advantage of naïve people to financially profit from them. They offer a panacea or “snake oil” to solve all humans’ problems under the name of self-help. They demand that people uncritically believe in them or in their products or services.
The book clarifies the concept of “self-help” as a mental discipline which some abuse for the sake of entrepreneurship. It surveys the main assumptions of inauthentic self-help culture that keeps humans enslaved in a herd mentality and demonstrates that all the power dwells in the individual and only in him or her. Thus, the purposes of the book Awaken the Power Within are as follows:  
  • To raise awareness about modern “snake oil” peddlers who take advantage of gullible people for financially benefit.
  • To elucidate manipulation with false ideas through TV, radio, and newspapers
  • To analyze the pseudo self-help movement in America and discuss what makes it a “cotton candy dream.”
  • To empower people to rely on themselves and their inner strength for guidance.  
  • To review the history of the New Thought movement and its offshoots.
  • To make sense of positive thinking
  • To explain how intentions and the power of assumption play active roles in shaping the future
  • To explain the nature of reality, consciousness, and awareness.

To sum up, this is the message of the book in one paragraph: Its goal is to raise awareness about the gimmicks of inauthentic self-help entrepreneurs and empower people in their search for true sources of help. Humans have the inner capacity to confront any difficult circumstances in life; there is no need for external intervention. People are responsible for creating their own reality with their thoughts and beliefs, and they are the only ones who can take back their power and correct whatever is not working for them. The book offers a deeper perspective on the culture of self-help and self-improvement and empowers us to rely on our inner voice as source of motivation for authentic self-empowerment and self-reliance.

Albert Amao Soria, Ph.D.
www.amazon.com/author/amao  

   
Foreword by Mitch Horowitz
Awaken the Power Within

This is one of the most illuminating and unconventional books about self-help that you will ever read. Author Albert Amao eludes either/or thinking on nearly every page. He rejects the false and intellectually withering choice of “take it or leave it,” which often clouds our political, cultural, and social dialogues.

Rather, Albert examines the question of what really works in self-help, at once rejecting overdone promises that emanate from certain quarters of the field (and he names them), while at the same time eschewing the practice of lumping together all self-help under the overused label of “snake oil,” as do many academic and journalistic critics. Rather, Albert writes from three fresh and original points of view:

1) As an author, Albert has personally experimented with the therapeutic philosophies he critiques in this book. This gives him rare insight into the agencies and pitfalls they present. Born into an impoverished urban family in Peru, Albert movingly writes of how his life took an unexpected and fruitful path because he had access to self-help literature as a boy. Specifically, he read works of New Thought, which deals with the question of mind causation.

2) He is deeply sympathetic to the needs and wishes of the individual self-help reader—he does not mock, distance, or place himself above the “motivation junkie” as Barbara Ehrenreich and other critics sometimes term the dedicated seeker. Rather, in understanding the drive and dignity of the therapeutic and spiritual inquirer, Albert can clearly evaluate, as a sociologist and critic, what programs are promising (such as Napoleon Hill’s Think and Grow Rich), and what modalities rest on oversold claims, and are bound to leave readers dejected and confused.

3) Finally, Albert writes as a dedicated, lifelong spiritual seeker. He is deeply serious not only about conventional self-help philosophies, but is a student and searcher within mystical, metaphysical, and occult lines of thought. I first met him at a summer conference of the Theosophical Society of America, where I was delivering a talk on my first book Occult America. At the time, Albert was a completing his previous book, Healing Without Medicine, an evaluation of placebo and mind-therapeutic phenomena. As you will see, Albert locates some of the deepest and most effective aspects of self-help practice within the continuum of traditional esoteric thought. This is historically accurate. I’ve argued that you cannot fully understand today’s self-help culture without realizing how it arose, in its earliest iterations, from mystical and occult movements, which today would seem as culturally out-of-place as magician’s robes at a business motivational conference; but the thought lineage is nonetheless there, particularly with regard to the positive-mind movement, and its key contention that thoughts are causative.

You need not share Albert’s interests in the esoteric (as I do) in order to profit from his insights. Whatever your intellectual and therapeutic tastes, this book gives you a deepened perspective on the culture of self-help and self-improvement, now an $11 billion yearly industry; a better understanding of what works and what does not; and a new sense of the hopes and needs of self-help readers, who are rarely seen or understood in critical literature.

To evaluate an ethical, spiritual, or therapeutic philosophy, and to grasp its values, weaknesses, and strengths, one must—as Albert does—bring a participatory element to the investigation. William James believed this deeply, and lived and worked by this ethic. I attempt to, as well. Albert’s role as a critical observer-participant allows him to open windows that many conventional observers are unaware of. His revealing perspective will not only add to your own, but may, depending on your outlook, enrich your personal experiments into self-development.   
--Mitch Horowitz
 New York City
 

Mitch Horowitz is a PEN Award-winning historian whose books include Occult America and One Simple Idea: How Positive Thinking Reshaped Modern Life. A vice-president and executive editor at TarcherPerigee, his latest book is The Miracle Club: How Thoughts Become Reality.


Thursday, August 18, 2011

Is Life an Illusion or Reality?

                                        
What you are seeing and hearing right now is nothing
                                         but a dream. You are dreaming with the brains awake.[i]
                                                                                        (Don Miguel Ruiz)

                                  
            
In the book entitled Beyond Conventional Wisdom, the author Albert Amao made the following question: Is life a theater or a dream? Dream meaning is an illusion. Is the world we perceive actually an illusion? Indian philosophy states that life is only a “maya” meaning illusion.
However, some philosophers such as William James and famous psychiatrist such as Carl G, Jung have indicated that man can’t live without an illusion, or a myth. It is part of human nature; we need a myth or religion to life on, to have a purpose and to make life worth living. It gives us strength and endurance to cope with the daily life challenges. Lack of meaning will turn man in a neurotic situation without sense of existence. The myth or religion gives meaning to man’s life, because it hides from him the incomprehensibility of his destiny and fills up the nothingness or emptiness of existence. The great Solomon after enjoying power, money, wisdom, and all material thinks in life he concluded: “ Vanity of Vanities, everything is vanity (futile, useless).” And Jesus has stated: “What good is for a  man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul? “  (Mark 8:36)   

On the other hand, our perception of the physical world is shaped by our own prejudices and biases. Likewise, the perceptions of ourselves and of those around us and the rest of the world are tinted primarily by our past inputs and experiences.  Depending on the “quality” of our programming, our personal outlook of this world can range from fairly realistic to a very pessimistic point of view.  It is extremely difficult to determine where our perception ends and reality begins.  Of one thing we can be sure.  Our individual perceptions of life are the foundations for our personal reality. However, if you are not getting what you desire in life, then it’s worth putting a little effort in examining your “mental program” or outlook of life to see if there are basic changes you’d like to make in your habitual thought processes and the way you’re viewing life.

Constructive comments and suggestions are most than welcome at stgermain777@gmail.com.

For further information visit:
www.albertamao.com
              or
stgermain777@gmail.com 

[i] Don Miguel Ruiz: The Four Agreements. Amber-Allen Publishing, San Rafael, California. ISBN: 1-878424-31-9.