

Hero image 0 of Full Breath of Gratitude : A journal for reclaiming your passion & purpose (Paperback), 0 of 1
Full Breath of Gratitude : A journal for reclaiming your passion & purpose (Paperback)
(No ratings yet)
Key item features
I don't know about you, but it seems like the world we live in always seems to be focused on "more." If I just had ____, I would not be angry. If I had this car, house, relationship, or job, I could be happy. The idea is that the world would tell you when you're "enough…" or that an alarm would go off in your head when you had enough status, faith, money, power, love, homes, jobs, freedom, etc. Many of us have inner voices that tell us that if we could just reach ____, we would not feel angry, empty, depressed, or so very alone.
But how much stuff is enough? How high would you have to reach to have others deem you to be successful? Or before you could allow yourself to "feel" successful? Most of us want our lives, our work, our relationships to be experienced as significant; we want our lives to matter. But at the end of the day, what have we done with what we already have? Have we utilized our gifts? Have we treasured the relationships we have or the people we encounter throughout our lives?
What have we done with the money, power, knowledge, and opportunities with which life has already blessed us?
Often in our search for more, we get caught in a mental loop of feeling like we are never good enough. When we consider how entrenched we are in our need for more and how much we define our worth around the things we feel we do not have, then we begin to understand the value of gratitude.
Think about this: we are born naked, and then our parents feed us, clothe us and introduce us to the communities we grow up in. Our communities quickly begin to tell us what we need to do in order to be accepted if we want to be seen as being successful. So, in a sense, "needing more" is not native to us. We are born into a world that naturally feeds and nourishes us, but it is the world outside ourselves that tells us we must constantly want more and "be more" in order to be deemed significant.
Appreciation for what one has challenges our notion of a world of scarcity… the idea that there is not enough in the world and especially that there is not enough for YOU. All of a sudden something shifts in a person's mind when each day they transition their thoughts from considering what they need to what they have been blessed with and currently have.
This journal is meant to be a launching platform-- a thirty-day tool to slowly and quietly dismantle your habit of running towards getting more "things." The exercises begin a mental and spiritual journey toward abundance, which could awaken you to a new sense of fullness of your life and the world around you.
But how much stuff is enough? How high would you have to reach to have others deem you to be successful? Or before you could allow yourself to "feel" successful? Most of us want our lives, our work, our relationships to be experienced as significant; we want our lives to matter. But at the end of the day, what have we done with what we already have? Have we utilized our gifts? Have we treasured the relationships we have or the people we encounter throughout our lives?
What have we done with the money, power, knowledge, and opportunities with which life has already blessed us?
Often in our search for more, we get caught in a mental loop of feeling like we are never good enough. When we consider how entrenched we are in our need for more and how much we define our worth around the things we feel we do not have, then we begin to understand the value of gratitude.
Think about this: we are born naked, and then our parents feed us, clothe us and introduce us to the communities we grow up in. Our communities quickly begin to tell us what we need to do in order to be accepted if we want to be seen as being successful. So, in a sense, "needing more" is not native to us. We are born into a world that naturally feeds and nourishes us, but it is the world outside ourselves that tells us we must constantly want more and "be more" in order to be deemed significant.
Appreciation for what one has challenges our notion of a world of scarcity… the idea that there is not enough in the world and especially that there is not enough for YOU. All of a sudden something shifts in a person's mind when each day they transition their thoughts from considering what they need to what they have been blessed with and currently have.
This journal is meant to be a launching platform-- a thirty-day tool to slowly and quietly dismantle your habit of running towards getting more "things." The exercises begin a mental and spiritual journey toward abundance, which could awaken you to a new sense of fullness of your life and the world around you.
Specs
- Book formatPaperback
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- GenreNonfiction
- Publication dateAugust, 2021
- Pages188
- Reading levelGeneral (US: Trade)
Current price is USD$20.44
Price when purchased online
Out of stock
How do you want your item?
Out of stock
About this item
Product details
In Chris's new book, Full Breath of Gratitude, Chris has developed a journal for reclaiming one's passion and purpose through an internal daily practice of gratitude. Making space for gratitude is by no means a quick-fix, self-help, fly-by-night tool. As readers contemplate gratitude, they will need to consider what obstructions are keeping them from making changes in their lives. Obstruction comes from the Latin' obstruere, which means to block up from a movement of air.
The first part of the book looks at nine obstacles to a life based in gratitude. Many of us are hard-wired to resist the possibility of change. Even when the books offer prescriptions which are as simple as self-discipline or straightforward suggestions of a different way to look at life, we rebel at the idea of change even when the suggestions are well within our capabilities. When we consider some of the inner paradigm shifts that could occur, suddenly, there are often obstacles or obstructions that could come up when you consider a new breath in your gratitude.
The second part of the book is a 30-day gratitude journal that offers tools and prompts to assist people with an internal exploration into a new life perspective of abundance. The Full Breath of Gratitude explores nine obstructions that people encounter when considering a life based on gratitude.
The first part of the book looks at nine obstacles to a life based in gratitude. Many of us are hard-wired to resist the possibility of change. Even when the books offer prescriptions which are as simple as self-discipline or straightforward suggestions of a different way to look at life, we rebel at the idea of change even when the suggestions are well within our capabilities. When we consider some of the inner paradigm shifts that could occur, suddenly, there are often obstacles or obstructions that could come up when you consider a new breath in your gratitude.
The second part of the book is a 30-day gratitude journal that offers tools and prompts to assist people with an internal exploration into a new life perspective of abundance. The Full Breath of Gratitude explores nine obstructions that people encounter when considering a life based on gratitude.
I don't know about you, but it seems like the world we live in always seems to be focused on "more." If I just had ____, I would not be angry. If I had this car, house, relationship, or job, I could be happy. The idea is that the world would tell you when you're "enough…" or that an alarm would go off in your head when you had enough status, faith, money, power, love, homes, jobs, freedom, etc. Many of us have inner voices that tell us that if we could just reach ____, we would not feel angry, empty, depressed, or so very alone.
But how much stuff is enough? How high would you have to reach to have others deem you to be successful? Or before you could allow yourself to "feel" successful? Most of us want our lives, our work, our relationships to be experienced as significant; we want our lives to matter. But at the end of the day, what have we done with what we already have? Have we utilized our gifts? Have we treasured the relationships we have or the people we encounter throughout our lives?
What have we done with the money, power, knowledge, and opportunities with which life has already blessed us?
Often in our search for more, we get caught in a mental loop of feeling like we are never good enough. When we consider how entrenched we are in our need for more and how much we define our worth around the things we feel we do not have, then we begin to understand the value of gratitude.
Think about this: we are born naked, and then our parents feed us, clothe us and introduce us to the communities we grow up in. Our communities quickly begin to tell us what we need to do in order to be accepted if we want to be seen as being successful. So, in a sense, "needing more" is not native to us. We are born into a world that naturally feeds and nourishes us, but it is the world outside ourselves that tells us we must constantly want more and "be more" in order to be deemed significant.
Appreciation for what one has challenges our notion of a world of scarcity… the idea that there is not enough in the world and especially that there is not enough for YOU. All of a sudden something shifts in a person's mind when each day they transition their thoughts from considering what they need to what they have been blessed with and currently have.
This journal is meant to be a launching platform-- a thirty-day tool to slowly and quietly dismantle your habit of running towards getting more "things." The exercises begin a mental and spiritual journey toward abundance, which could awaken you to a new sense of fullness of your life and the world around you.
But how much stuff is enough? How high would you have to reach to have others deem you to be successful? Or before you could allow yourself to "feel" successful? Most of us want our lives, our work, our relationships to be experienced as significant; we want our lives to matter. But at the end of the day, what have we done with what we already have? Have we utilized our gifts? Have we treasured the relationships we have or the people we encounter throughout our lives?
What have we done with the money, power, knowledge, and opportunities with which life has already blessed us?
Often in our search for more, we get caught in a mental loop of feeling like we are never good enough. When we consider how entrenched we are in our need for more and how much we define our worth around the things we feel we do not have, then we begin to understand the value of gratitude.
Think about this: we are born naked, and then our parents feed us, clothe us and introduce us to the communities we grow up in. Our communities quickly begin to tell us what we need to do in order to be accepted if we want to be seen as being successful. So, in a sense, "needing more" is not native to us. We are born into a world that naturally feeds and nourishes us, but it is the world outside ourselves that tells us we must constantly want more and "be more" in order to be deemed significant.
Appreciation for what one has challenges our notion of a world of scarcity… the idea that there is not enough in the world and especially that there is not enough for YOU. All of a sudden something shifts in a person's mind when each day they transition their thoughts from considering what they need to what they have been blessed with and currently have.
This journal is meant to be a launching platform-- a thirty-day tool to slowly and quietly dismantle your habit of running towards getting more "things." The exercises begin a mental and spiritual journey toward abundance, which could awaken you to a new sense of fullness of your life and the world around you.
info:
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. Â
Specifications
Book format
Paperback
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
Nonfiction
Publication date
August, 2021
Warranty
Warranty information
Please be aware that the warranty terms on items offered for sale by third party Marketplace sellers may differ from those displayed in this section (if any). To confirm warranty terms on an item offered for sale by a third party Marketplace seller, please use the 'Contact seller' feature on the third party Marketplace seller's information page and request the item's warranty terms prior to purchase.
Similar items you might like
Based on what customers bought
A Cold Day in Hell (Paperback) $16.85
$1685current price $16.85A Cold Day in Hell (Paperback)
Significant Others, (Paperback) $19.14
$1914current price $19.14Significant Others, (Paperback)
Best seller Zip It: The Keep It Shut 40-Day Challenge, (Paperback) $14.11
Best seller
$1411current price $14.11Zip It: The Keep It Shut 40-Day Challenge, (Paperback)
234.5 out of 5 Stars. 23 reviewsSchiffer Book for Woodworkers: The Art of Marquetry (Paperback) $21.19
$2119current price $21.19Schiffer Book for Woodworkers: The Art of Marquetry (Paperback)
Anew: Living Life As A Better You, (Paperback) $19.99
$1999current price $19.99Anew: Living Life As A Better You, (Paperback)
Gratitude on Country, (Paperback) $22.03 Was $25.99
$2203current price $22.03, Was $25.99$25.99Gratitude on Country, (Paperback)
Craig's Money Articles, (Paperback) $13.99
$1399current price $13.99Craig's Money Articles, (Paperback)
The Roads I Took to Finding Oz (Paperback) $10.85
$1085current price $10.85The Roads I Took to Finding Oz (Paperback)
A Sense of Wonder (Paperback) $19.90
$1990current price $19.90A Sense of Wonder (Paperback)
In the Footsteps of the Few, (Paperback) $16.99
$1699current price $16.99In the Footsteps of the Few, (Paperback)
Motivational Nudges to Empower Your Life, (Paperback) $16.56
$1656current price $16.56Motivational Nudges to Empower Your Life, (Paperback)
Keep It Shut: What to Say, How to Say It, and When to Say Nothing at All, (Paperback) $7.49
$749current price $7.49Keep It Shut: What to Say, How to Say It, and When to Say Nothing at All, (Paperback)
104 out of 5 Stars. 10 reviewsYou are God: So What Do You Want to Do with Your Life? (Paperback) $10.99
$1099current price $10.99You are God: So What Do You Want to Do with Your Life? (Paperback)
Porn-Free In 40 Days (Paperback) $12.99
$1299current price $12.99Porn-Free In 40 Days (Paperback)
Learn, Let Go, Live: All Experiences Can Be Used to Make Our Life Better., (Paperback) $8.98
$898current price $8.98Learn, Let Go, Live: All Experiences Can Be Used to Make Our Life Better., (Paperback)
Where do we come from and Why are we here?: A story of our spiritual beginnings, (Paperback) $12.38 Was $14.95
$1238current price $12.38, Was $14.95$14.95Where do we come from and Why are we here?: A story of our spiritual beginnings, (Paperback)
Improve Your Life: 21 Strategies That Will Make The Difference, (Paperback) $18.20
$1820current price $18.20Improve Your Life: 21 Strategies That Will Make The Difference, (Paperback)
Rethinking Orphanages, (Paperback) $20.68
$2068current price $20.68Rethinking Orphanages, (Paperback)
Exploring Christian Ethics, (Paperback) $19.99
$1999current price $19.99Exploring Christian Ethics, (Paperback)
Customer ratings & reviews
0 ratings|0 reviews
This item does not have any reviews yet

