
How to Win Friends and Influence People – 15 Years of Practice
I’ve never been the type to gravitate toward “life advice” books. In a world of KPIs, quarterly targets, and the relentless pressure of running a

I’ve never been the type to gravitate toward “life advice” books. In a world of KPIs, quarterly targets, and the relentless pressure of running a

When I was eight or nine, I spent an entire afternoon on the porch of our house, carefully knotting together scraps of thread I had

One handwritten question every morning. Thirty minutes of financial study every day. One page of a book every night. Nothing remarkable about any single action.

Most of us spend our entire lives trapped inside a loop: rush to work in the morning, drag ourselves home in the evening, repeat until

I remember those mornings five years ago vividly. The clock strikes 5 AM, the alarm blares, and instantly, an “emergency meeting” convenes in my head.

In the vast ocean of human knowledge, there are books meant for fleeting curiosity, and then there are “legacies” that arrive to help us restructure
There are books that find you by chance, and then there are books that show up exactly when you need a compass—not to find gold,

In this life, milestones aren’t measured by calendars. They are marked by those “spark” moments when your brain suddenly clicks and shifts your entire orbit.

Some books are meant to be read; others are designed to demolish and rebuild your entire existence. For me, Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad Poor Dad

In his world-renowned book, Richard Koch dropped a bombshell: “Most of what we do is of little value.” The world is inherently unbalanced. This imbalance