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Edith EgerThe Gift: 12 Lessons to Save Your Life

Oprah Recommends
Oprah Recommends

R269

Retail: R340
About

This practical and inspirational guide to healing from the bestselling author of The Choice shows us how to release your self-limiting beliefs and embrace your potential.

The Gift is a Non-Fiction self-help book by Edith Eger who wrote The Choice which to this day is still in the top sellers lists. The Choice was her powerful and touching story of surviving the holocaust and choosing to live her best life afterwards. We already have thousands of pre-orders for The Gift just from the major book stores alone. Her story changed lives and now she’s telling us how we can do it too.

In the end, it's not what happens to us that matters most - it's what we choose to do with it. We all face suffering - sadness, loss, despair, fear, anxiety, failure. But we also have a choice; to give in and give up in the face of trauma or difficulties, or to live every moment as a gift.

Celebrated therapist and Holocaust survivor, Dr Edith Eger, provides a hands-on guide that gently encourages us to change the imprisoning thoughts and destructive behaviours that may be holding us back. Accompanied by stories from Eger's own life and the lives of her patients her empowering lessons help you to see your darkest moments as your greatest teachers and find freedom through the strength that lies within.

'I will be forever changed by Dr Eger's story' OPRAH

The prison is in your mind. The key is in your pocket.

Product Features
  • ISBN 9781846046278
  • Format Hardback
  • Published August 2020
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We're big believers in retail therapy

The stats we're presenting here are based purely on our staff, who make up a tiny percentage of the general population, but they tell us that 100% of our staff that ordered something online exhibited signs of excitement when that thing was delivered.

We know the saying "Money can't buy happiness", but you don't often see someone crying on a jetski - and not just because all that water splashing around would make it hard to identify the tears in the first place.

Although we do have to ask: if our savings are this good, shouldn't we be calling it discount therapy instead?