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A Personal Handbook, Making Changes is about the 'how' of achieving your life goals. You already know that when you are motivated, committed and focused on your goals you can achieve almost anything despite the obstacles. Yet how precisely do you motivate yourself? What do you do to get energy and commitment to tackle challenges and overcome obstacles? This handbook is for ordinary people, leading ordinary lives. People facing daily challenges, with hopes and desires and who strive to overcome the small stuff. Well here's your handbook. So if you make a million, great! In the meantime, let's…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A Personal Handbook, Making Changes is about the 'how' of achieving your life goals. You already know that when you are motivated, committed and focused on your goals you can achieve almost anything despite the obstacles. Yet how precisely do you motivate yourself? What do you do to get energy and commitment to tackle challenges and overcome obstacles? This handbook is for ordinary people, leading ordinary lives. People facing daily challenges, with hopes and desires and who strive to overcome the small stuff. Well here's your handbook. So if you make a million, great! In the meantime, let's make a difference. Bruce Clarke is a social entrepreneur, chair of trustee of several charities, founder of the Third Age movement on age discrimination, and a radio presenter for Swindon 105.5 Bruce is a Master Practitioner, and an accredited trainer, in Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP). He's also an ESOL teacher and a student of Integral Theory and the Enneagram.
Autorenporträt
Bruce Clarke practiced criminal law as a defense attorney in Washington, D.C.,, as a partner in the firm Clarke & Graae, and as a staff attorney with the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia (PDS). He later worked for the Federal Judicial Center, eventually becoming Director of the Center's Education Division. While on sabbatical from the law, Clarke studied script analysis in New York with Stella Adler and began writing plays. His plays include Bluesman (Helen Hayes Nomination, Best New Play, Kennedy Center Front and Center Award, Larry Neale Award for Dramatic Writing) and Fifteen Rounds With Jackson Pollock, produced in D.C. and regionally. He is the recipient of a playwrighting grant from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities, and was awarded a playwriting residency at the Edward Albee Foundation. He currently teaches creative writing courses in correctional institutions in D.C. and Maryland.