Life Experiences & Relationships
30 Days to Change Your Habits

Look around you. What do you see? Look at your surroundings, the
atmosphere, and the people around you.
Think of your current life
conditions: work, health, friends, people surrounding you.
What do they
look like? Are you happy with what you see? Now look inside of you. How
do you feel RIGHT NOW in this moment? Are you satisfied with your life?
Are you longing for more? Do you believe that you can be happy and
successful? What is missing from your life that you need to call your life
happy and/or successful? Why do some people seem to have everything and
other people nothing?
Most people have no idea how they get what they get. Some of us just blame it on fate and chance. I’m sorry that I have to be the one to tell you: “Sorry friend! You have created the life you have!
Everything that happens to you is created by YOU – either consciously by
design or unconsciously by default; it’s not a result of fate or circumstances.
How to Stop Worrying & Start Living

Thirty-Five years ago, I was one of the unhappiest lads in New York. I was selling motor-trucks for a living.
I didn’t know what made a motor-truck run. That wasn’t all: I didn’t want to know. I despised my job. I despised living in a cheap furnished room on West Fifty-sixth Street-a room infested with cockroaches.
I still remember that I had a bunch of neckties hanging on the walls; and when I reached out of a morning to get a fresh necktie, the cockroaches scattered in all directions.
I despised having to eat in cheap, dirty restaurants that were also probably infested with cockroaches.
I decided to write this book because I’m seeing so many people that are
dreaming of improving their life, being happier, becoming wealthier yet
according to them, the only way that could happen would be due to some kind of miracle: winning the lottery, marrying rich, or some other stroke of luck.
Download this book to find out how…
Gandhi Autobiography

The Gandhis belong to the Bania caste and seem to have been originally grocers. But for three generations, from my grandfather, they have been Prime Ministers in several Kathiawad States.
Uttamchand Gandhi, alias Ota Gandhi, my grandfather, must have been a man of principle. State intrigues compelled him to leave Porbandar, where he was Diwan, and to seek refuge in Junagadh.
There he saluted the Nawab with the left hand. Someone, noticing the apparent
discourtesy, asked for an explanation, which was given thus: ‘The right hand is already pledged to Porbandar.’
Ota Gandhi married a second time, having lost his first wife. He had four sons by his first wife and
two by his second wife. I do not think that in my childhood I ever felt or knew that these sons of Ota Gandhi were not all of the same mother.
The fifth of these six brothers was Karamchand Gandhi, alias Kaba Gandhi, and the sixth was Tulsidas Gandhi.
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