The Everyday Hero Manifesto by Robin Sharma

$7.99

The Everyday Hero Manifesto

  • Activate Your Positivity, Maximize Your Productivity, Serve the World
  • By: Robin Sharma
  • Narrated by: Adam Sims
  • Length: 9 hrs and 27 mins
  • Categories: Health & Wellness

Publisher's Summary

Aim for iconic 

Rise to legendary 

Make history 

For more than 25 years, leadership legend and personal mastery trailblazer Robin Sharma has mentored billionaires, business titans, professional sports superstars and entertainment royalty via a revolutionary methodology that has caused them to accomplish rare-air results. Now, in this groundbreaking audiobook, he makes this transformational system available to anyone ready for undefeatable positivity, monumental productivity, deep spiritual freedom and a life of helpfulness to many.

In The Everyday Hero Manifesto you will discover:

  • The hidden habits used by many of the world’s most creative and successful people to realize their visionary ambitions
  • Original techniques to turn fear into fuel, problems into power and past troubles into triumphs
  • A breakthrough blueprint to battle-proof yourself against distraction and procrastination so that you produce magic that dominates your domain
  • Pioneering insights on installing world-class routines, including rising early, achieving superhuman fitness and becoming the most disciplined person you know
  • Unusual wisdom knowledge to operate with far more simplicity, beauty and peace

Part memoir on a life richly lived, part instruction manual for virtuoso-grade performance and part handbook for spiritual freedom in an age of high-velocity change, The Everyday Hero Manifesto will completely transform your life. Forever.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio. 

©2021 Robin Sharma (P)2021 HarperCollins Publishers Limited

Customer Reviews

1-5 of 1 review

  • Anonymous User

    Shallow and Superficial

    First chapter is victim bashing nonsense. He then contradicts himself by saying we must always be kind and compassionate. In another chapter he warns us to stay away from suffering people because ‘hurt people hurt people’. Then he goes on to say absolutely everyone suffers from trauma. Of course its your responsibility to turn it into something sparkly and monetise it immediately, otherwise you are a total loser. Sharma is smug, insincere and can’t stop bragging about how great his life is and how he deserves the very best of everything. It’s a real ‘us successful people’ kind of book that invites you to be in his self-entitled little club of wealthy individuals. It plays on desperate people’s desires. It’s the kind of book that helps exploitative people feel good about themselves while they’re walking all over less important people. Sharma’s main talent is slogans and trite anecdotes, but he doesn’t bother about the fact that strung together, they don’t make any sense. I honestly found this book too irritating to finish it.

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    1 person found this helpful

    January 11, 2022

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