Dale Carnegie

How to Stop Worrying and Start Living

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Learn how to break the worry habit – Now and forever with Dale Carnegie's timeless advice in hand.
More than six million people have learned how to eliminate debilitating fear and worry from their lives and to embrace a worry-free future. In this classic work, How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, Carnegie offers a set of practical formulas that you can put to work today. It is a book packed with lessons that will last a lifetime and make that lifetime happier.
The last 1/3 of the book gives you 32 stories of everyday men and women who tell you in their own words how they stopped worrying and started living.
'How to Stop Worrying and Start Living' will enable you to:
1: Eliminate fifty percent of your business worries immediately.2: Cultivate a mental attitude that will bring you peace and happiness.3: Lessen financial worries.4: Outlaw many of your worries.5: Turn criticism to your advantage.6: Avoid fatigue and keep looking young.7: Prevent fatigue and worry.8: Add one hour a day to your working life.9: Avoid emotional upsets.
What makes this electronic book different?
1: United States English Spelling2: Formated specifically for Mobipocket and Amazon Kindle electronic book readers.3: Chapter and sub-headings fit perfectly on the Amazon Kindle screen.4: Right justifed Link-enabled Table of Contents for easy select and search using the Kindle 'Select' Wheel.
This book is currently unavailable
388 printed pages
Publication year
2015
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Quotes

  • mischasadathas quoted2 years ago
    Business men who do not know
    how to fight worry die young.”
    —DR. Alexis Carrel
  • mischasadathas quoted2 years ago
    Rule 2 is: If you have a worry problem, apply the magic formula of Willis H. Carrier by doing these three things:
    1. Ask yourself,' 'What is the worst that can possibly happen?"
    2. Prepare to accept it if you have to.
    3. Then calmly proceed to improve on the worst.
  • mischasadathas quoted2 years ago
    reconciled myself to the worst that could happen—in my case, dying. And then I improved upon it by trying to get the utmost enjoyment out of life for the time I had left…

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