Everything is figureoutable

Marie Forleo

Book - 2019

"Let's be honest--none of us were given an owner's manual at birth. If you're having trouble solving a problem or making a dream happen, the problem isn't you. It's not that you're not hardworking, intelligent or deserving, but that you haven't yet installed the one key belief that will change everything. My mom, who has the tenacity of a bulldog and curses like a truck driver, explained it to me this way, "Nothing in life is that complicated. You can do whatever you set your mind to if you just roll up your sleeves, get in there, and do it. Everything is figureoutable." Whether you want to leave a dead end job, break an addiction, learn to dance, heal a relationship, grow a business, master... your money, travel the globe, or solve world hunger, Everything is Figureoutable will train your brain to think more creatively and positively--especially in the face of setbacks. Inside, you'll learn: The simple practice that makes it 42% more likely you'll achieve your goals. How to overcome a lack of time and money. How to find two free hours a day. What to do if you're multipassionate and want to follow all your dreams. How to deal with criticism, haters, and imposter syndrome. How to tell the difference between fear and intuition. A fail-proof test to make the right decisions, especially in high-stakes situations. You'll also hear triumphant stories of everyday people confronting loss, illness, and heart-wrenching pain. Like the 23-year-old single mom with no education past 10th grade who used the Everything is Figureoutable philosophy to get her GED and then her bachelor's degree, and now she's in law school. I wrote this book because, if I got hit by a bus tomorrow, it's the one idea I'd want to leave behind. When I'm having a rough time or when a shitstorm comes to town, Everything is Figureoutable instantly turns things around. It's more than just a fun phrase to say. It's a philosophy of relentless optimism. A mindset. A mantra. A conviction. Most important, it's about to make you unstoppable"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Portfolio/Penguin [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Marie Forleo (author)
Physical Description
288 pages : charts ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [279]-282) and index.
ISBN
9780525534990
  • 1. The Tropicana Orange
  • 2. Your Road Map to Results
  • 3. The Magic of Belief
  • 4. Eliminate Excuses
  • 5. How to Deal with the Fear of Anything
  • 6. Define Your Dream
  • 7. Start Before You're Ready
  • 8. Progress Not Perfection
  • 9. Refuse to Be Refused
  • 10. The World Needs Your Special Gift
  • Epilogue The Real Secret to Lasting Success
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix: Even More Figureoutable Field Notes
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This book will certainly appeal to the millions of fans who watch life coach Forleo's award-winning show, Marie TV, and listen to her podcast, and to readers who gravitate to self-improvement titles. But it will also please those who fit neither category. Forleo presents the related premises that there is generally a solution to everything, and that beliefs, both conscious and unconscious, determine people's behavior and therefore their circumstances. In plainspoken, and sometimes explicit language, self-described Jersey-girl Forleo outlines the steps necessary to identify and examine these underlying beliefs before meaningful behavioral and life changes can be made. She does acknowledge the existence of societal and external forces, such as racism and sexism, that may prevent readers from achieving change in every area of their lives as she provides a detailed strategy for making meaningful change where possible. Not at all a passive endeavor, reading this book as Forleo intends requires speaking out loud, handwriting answers to questions, and making time for the honest self-reflection necessary to deconstruct foundational beliefs and make lasting change. This will be in demand.--Nicole Williams Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Chapter 1 The Tropicana Orange My mother has the tenacity of a bulldog, looks like June Cleaver, and curses like a truck driver. She grew up the daughter of two alcoholic parents in the projects of New­ark, New Jersey. She learned, by necessity, how to stretch a dollar bill around the block and is one of the most resourceful and industrious people you could ever meet. She once told me she rarely felt valued, loved, or beautiful, but she held tight to the promise she made to herself that, once she was old enough, she'd find a way to a better life. As a kid, I remember going through the Sunday paper together and cutting coupons. She taught me all the different ways to save money. She also taught me to pay close attention to the free stuff that brands would send you--like recipe books or cooking utensils--if you saved up and mailed in a "proof of purchase." One of my mom's most prized possessions was a little transistor radio she got from juice, for free. The radio was the size, color, and shape of an orange, with a red-and-white-striped antenna sticking out the side like a straw. She loved that little radio. My mom is one of those people who is constantly busy. As a little girl, I knew I could find her somewhere around the house or yard by listening for the tinny sound coming out of that Tropicana orange. One day I was walking home from school and heard the radio playing off in the distance. As I got closer, I realized the music was coming from above. I looked up and saw my mom perched on the roof of our two- story house. " Moooom! Is everything okay? What are you doing all the way up there?!" She yelled down, "I'm fine, Ree. The roof had a leak. When I called the roofer, he said it would be at least five hundred bucks, probably more. That's friggin' nuts! I remembered seeing some extra asphalt in the garage and figured it would just take a few minutes to fix it up." Another time, I came home from school and heard the radio buzzing from the back of the house. Mom was in the bathroom, surrounded by tools and exposed pipes. Dust particles filled the air. "Mom, what's going on?!" "Oh, I'm just retiling the bathroom," she said. "I saw a few cracks and didn't want it all to get moldy." You've got to understand, my mom is high school educated and this was the 1980s. It was a pre-internet, pre-YouTube, pre-Google world. I never knew where I'd find her or what she'd be doing, but all I had to do was follow the crackle of that radio. One fall day, I came home late from school and something was dif­ferent. Everything was dark. There was an unusual silence. Something was wrong. I quietly walked through the house afraid of what I might find. Where was the sound of the Tropicana orange? Where was my mom? Then I heard clicks and clacks. I followed that sound and saw my mom huddled over the kitchen table. It looked like an operating room. I saw electrical tape and screwdrivers, and spread out in front of her were countless tiny pieces of a dismantled Tropicana orange radio. "Mom, are you okay? What happened to your radio? Is it broken?" "It's fine, Ree. No big deal. The antenna got busted and the tuner dial was a little off, so I'm fixing it." I stood there for a second, watching her work her magic. Finally, I asked, "Hey, Mom, how do you know how to do so many different things that you've never done before, without anyone showing you how to do it?" She put down her screwdriver, turned to me, and said, "Don't be silly, Ree. Nothing in life is that complicated. You can do whatever you set your mind to if you just roll up your sleeves, get in there, and do it. Ev­erything is figureoutable." I was transfixed, reveling in and repeating those words in my head: Everything is figureoutable. Everything is figureoutable. Excerpted from Everything Is Figureoutable by Marie Forleo All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.