This witty guide to Lynn Grabhorn's Excuse Me, Your Life is Waiting is no ordinary workbook. The Playbook not only takes the reader well beyond the basic ground rules of deliberate creation, as laid out in Excuse Me, but also does so in a uniquely entertaining manner.However, don't be fooled by the goofy, upbeat graphics. Whether The Playbook is to be used by groups or individuals, its overall content is designed to gently awaken and enhance the great Master in us all.
While The Playbook holds within its unusual pages many more ideas and techniques than presented in Excuse Me, Your Life Is Waiting, it also holds a myriad of keys to enhance one's spiritual path, should any awakening soul be so inclined to accept them.
Usually, I love these kinds of books; self-help with practical action based steps. I love thinking about life, trying to make it better, or more organized, or just appreciate in a real way. I also love the "homework aspects of action based books (nerdy, I know).
I don't have an aversion to different ways of thinking, I grew up with a mom who was ahead of the game in terms of greenness and back to basics/ natural living and thinking (aka, often new-age ideas that weren't so popular where I was growing up), but this book was too far out there for me. The author wrote all of her opinions as fact, instead of opinions, and it made me immediately not trust her. It felt too far out there for me and I really wasn't able to get anything meaningful from it because of that. Ended up giving it away unused.
As with anything you want to get good at, you have to take the "test" to make sure you understand the material.. this is what the workbook does for you. Give you the best way to put your life to work for you... based on the principals you learn from the book.