The Path of the Everyday Hero is a unique and powerful workbook to guide us along in our search for answers to five major challenges of life. Each challenge is compared to a great myth, and the reader is the hero or heroine who must "take a great journey" to overcome an obstacle blocking the path to success. Illustrated.
Now, in this groundbreaking book, Sharma makes his transformational system available to anyone who is ready for undefeatable positivity, monumental productivity, deep spiritual freedom and a life of helping others.
... Koei, and Capybara Games. His work on Bubble Guppies and Clash of Heroes has won multiple awards. ... Studios and IDW, and her illustration work has appeared in The Globe and Mail, Reader's Digest and The Walrus, among others.
Now, in this groundbreaking book, Sharma makes his transformational system available to anyone who is ready for undefeatable positivity, monumental productivity, deep spiritual freedom and a life of helping others.
Profiles twenty young men and women of a variety of ethnic backgrounds whose courage and determination have helped them overcome such obstacles as poverty, racism, abuse, neglect, illness, and drugs.
Twenty-one poems celebrate and chronicle the actions of real-life persons (and one dog) who have performed heroic acts in service of others.
In Unleashing Your Hero, renowned speaker Kevin Brown shares how the heroes who transformed his life are people just like you.
The result is this groundbreaking book profiling some of America’s leading social entrepreneurs whose energy and nonprofit organizations have changed the lives of millions around the world, very often one at a time.
FROM ZERO TO HERO .
Notes to Chapter 11: Assuming The Mantle of Hero 1. Lorna Catford and Michael Ray The Path of the Everyday Hero: Drawing on the Power of Myth to Meet Life's Most Important Challenges (Los Angeles, Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc. 1991) 2.
Instead she walked to my house and stood at the edge of the small driveway, watching me as I walked down the path and then up the three green steps to the front porch. “Alice?” she said. I put the key in the lock and turned it.