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Jesse S. Smith
Author
Start Today
Improving the conversation you have with yourself can help you to improve your relationships with others, and set you on the path to achieving a more fulfilling life. Start Today offers a vision of self-help as a personal philosophy, which shares many of its timeless precepts with major world religions from Christianity to Buddhism. In his quirky, conversational writing style, author Jesse S. Smith describes the simple decisions that any of us can choose to make, at any time, to get our lives onto the best possible path. After his own journey to rock bottom and back, Smith embarked on an amazing series of life adventures: including campaigning for public office, working on a movie crew, traveling abroad, and much more! When you begin to believe that anything is possible, then you become unstoppable. Based on Smith's own personal experience, as well as a number of case studies drawn from the lives of the author's personal and musical heroes, Start Today illustrates how each of us can live with purpose, beginning with this moment, right now. Whatever change you’re ready to make in your life, you can start today. It all begins when we make that choice. We can choose how we focus our attention, and how we direct our efforts. It’s a choice we can continue to make, at every moment of every day. Start today!
Reviews
“Wherever you are in life, you can set yourself on the path to being happier and more successful” writes Smith (author of Principles for a Self-Directed Society) in this upbeat homage to the power of self-love. Acknowledging life’s ups and downs—and drawing from his own experience hitting rock bottom after a failed business venture—Smith calls on readers to move past their present circumstances, step outside of the opinions and judgments of others, and “chang[e] the story you tell yourself about your life.” That mindset transformation is the first step on Smith’s prescribed journey for self-improvement, a necessary shift that, he urges, must be followed by hard work and a hopeful outlook.

Smith renders self-help as a personal and intimate experience, with a slew of personal advice, anecdotes, and, most of all, encouragement—to stay positive, practice self-forgiveness, and stop worrying about situations outside of your control. He speaks to readers in gentle, casual tones, never losing sight of his rosy outlook—even when addressing weighty topics like end-of-life events and toxic emotions. “The more time we spend feeling bad about our mistakes,” he writes, “the more likely we are to do something else bad,” pushing instead for readers to “make amends… and move on.” Those pep talk snippets are both welcoming and refreshing, a soothing answer to the moments in life that can feel insurmountable.

Smith's references to religion, philosophy, and case studies on well-knowns like The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix underscore his desperate search for answers. From there, ideas such as the power of the self, mindfulness, and gratitude spring forward, as Smith demonstrates that the path to recovery will be long and challenging but ultimately rewarding. Change hinges on willpower, mindset, and being true to yourself, he writes, and, in his own words, there’s no time like today to start “enjoy[ing] a more fulfilling life.”

Takeaway: Upbeat guide to creating a joyful, fulfilling life.

Comparable Titles: Brianna Wiest’s The Mountain Is You, Sue Varma’s Practical Optimism.

Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-

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