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The Secret to Life Transformation: How to Claim Your Destiny Now!

The Secret to Life Transformation: How to Claim Your Destiny Now!
By Julie Chrystyn

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Product Description

The Secret to Life Transformation takes the law of attraction and shows it in action, depicting twelve people who brought their visions of success to life. From their testimonials a pattern emerges, and readers who connect the dots will discover the secret common to these individuals—and to anyone willing to enlighten him or herself.

Author Julie Chrystyn interviewed more than 100 highly successful people and picked an eclectic dozen who illustrate her theory the most vividly. The Secret to Life Transformation uses their stories to guide readers through their own self-imposed roadblocks. Often drawing on the wisdom of Scripture, Chrystyn also expounds on such eternal themes as hope, vision, fear, faith, and perseverance, and on the role each one plays in life transformation.

Chrystyn’s practical guidance and fresh perspective on self-improvement, all couched in lively and lucid prose, will instruct, uplift, and empower readers to claim their destiny.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13860 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-03-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 252 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
JULIE CHRYSTYN was a best-selling ghostwriter for eminent statesmen and tycoons from across the globe. As an author, humanitarian and philanthropist, she is a perpetual student of the human condition. The Secret to Life Transformation is a cumulative account of her lifelong fascination with the difference between the successful and the unsuccessful.




Customer Reviews

12 Success Stories Plus Author's Tips4
Julie Chrystyn is a ghost writer turned inspirational writer. For The Secret to Life Transformation, she interviewed over 300 people and presents 12 of their stories in this book. In between the 12 stories are her inspirational tips.

Chrystyn writes about the self-made person. You are what you think, she claims. "Realizing that you live in a vast, infinite universe of energy will become the turning point in your life."

She believes we become what we think; if we believe we can achieve our goals, we will--if we don't, we won't.

Chrysten quotes the bible throughout the book, and encourages the reader to study the bible. A bit heavy on the bible quotes for me. She also writes about the hypocrisy of religion and how Catholics have presented poverty for the masses as a noble thing. She dismisses this, declaring that we all have the right to riches.

She believes that religion is the great oppressor of people and to cut out the middlemen and study and learn for yourself.

Chrystyn encourages the reader to become an independent thinker,a non-conformist. But is that realistic? Can people be transformed from a conformist to a leader by virtue of simply reading a book?

This book is motivating but not life transforming. It reminds me of The Chicken For the Soul Series. The 12 people who tell their stories fill the reader with hope that they, too, can succeed in their lives.

By the author of the award winning book, HARMONIOUS ENVIRONMENT: BEAUTIFY, DETOXIFY & ENERGIZE YOUR LIFE, YOUR HOME & YOUR PLANET.


No new insights3
In my opinion, The Secret to Life Transformation does not fulfill its promise of delivering the secret to life transformation. For that matter I do not believe it offers any real new insights into life transformation.

The book is actually a collection of essays by 12 very diverse but somewhat famous people. Most of the authors were well known in their field but certainly not household names.

Because the book is a collection of writings by different authors, it does not have a consistent voice. The lessons presented in each essay do not drive toward a common method for transformation. The theme is very loosely connected. While each attempts to tell how they transformed their lives, there is no system or step by step process for others to follow. There are some nuggets of wisdom scattered throughout the book.

Some of the essays are fairly interesting. It is always interesting to learn how a person rose to the top against some steep odds. But what I was looking more for guiding principles rather than the widely varied stories.

A high percentage of the stories have a significant religious foundation. Some people may object to the strong religious leanings.

Judge Sol Wachter takes a bit of a detour discussing the criminal justice system's handing of mentally disturbed inmates. While there is no denying the huge social problem and the fact that it is inadequately handled, I felt this veered off course. It created a distraction rather than giving additional insight into how to transform one's life.

If you are interested in reading 12 loosely connected stories of how some people rose from very difficult conditions to transform their lives, then this would be a good book. On the other hand, if you are looking for a how-to guide to transforming your own live, this will probably be a bit of a disappointment.

Not What it Promises1
A handful of biopics and some standard "feel good" advice does not a worthy self-help book make. I can get the same amount of enjoyment out of a couple old issues of Reader's Digest and then take in a couple of installments of Oprah.

This book's description is stunning in it's over-reaching claims. Sure, some of the advice is good advice, but it's nothing new and nothing you haven't heard before. The rest is basic "what I believe and why" bios from various people. It's a bit heavy-handed in its judao-christian leanings and therefore will not be much help to anyone who is Islamic or any other religion.

I read the book. Maybe I'm not trying hard enough, but I still have yet to be transformed.