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A Dream is a Wish The Heart Makes: or if at first you don't succeed change the rules

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Can you Handle More Happiness?What if you had the ability to behappy more of the time? Would you do it? If you would, here's the book thatwill tell you how.In clear, direct, everydaylanguage, A Dream is AWish The Heart Makes describes how life's challenges can distract usfrom our happiness and provides do-able techniques for redirecting ourselvesback to our natural joy and fulfillment.Our world is in a process ofchange, and change is one of the key elements to most peoples' discomfort anddistraction from their happiness. Yet change doesn't have to be difficult. Inthis book you will find keys to:¿ Understand change¿ Re-define change so it doesn'thave to be distressing¿ Use situations of change topropel you forward instead of hold you back¿ Empower yourself no matter whatlife throws at youThough the techniques presentedhere appear simple, they are powerful and can produce profound results. Theyare in the language of today, yet many are secrets once known only by ancientmystics. Their effectiveness for you is limited only by your willingness towork them.If you are ready for morehappiness, this book will put you on the fast track to having it.

88 pages, Paperback

First published April 14, 2004

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About the author

Grace Allison Blair

4 books141 followers
Grace Allison Blair is an award-winning self-help and motivational author who has assisted thousands to find their spiritual wisdom to solve everyday challenges.

Throughout her adult life, Grace became a serious student of the spiritual. She found that, often, psychological principles and practices were incomplete, but could be filled out by adding the missing spiritual component. Her approach was always to see practical applications for what she uncovered in the mystical. It was through immersing herself in this field of study and experience that she produced her idea for her book, Einstein’s Compass.

Einstein's Compass Book Awards:

2020 Best Sci-Fi Audiobook Reviewer

2020 Certificate of Excellence in Literature Spirituality/Religion Story Monster Approved

2020 Texas Indie Best Book Award Winner – YA Fiction

2020 Royal Dragonfly Book Award 1st Place – Historical Fiction

2020 Royal Dragonfly Book Award 2nd Place – YA Fiction

2020 Royal Dragonfly Book Award Honorable Mention – Sci-Fi/Fantasy

2020 RONE Cover Award 1sr Runner-Up – Fantasy/Sci-Fi

2019 Readers’ Favorite Book Award Winner

2019 eLit Award Winner – Juvenile/YA Fiction

2019 National Indie Excellence Award Finalist – YA Fiction

2019 International Book Awards Finalist – YA Fiction

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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Author 65 books230 followers
March 16, 2017
Grace Allison's pithy little book, Do You Have a Dream? (ThinkAHA 2017) shares 140 ways to address change and come out better for it. It's broken into ten sections like Do You Believe in God and Emotions -- Energy in Motion so you can quickly focus on where you need help. Each tip is brief but rich with a section at the end where you can write items that you want to refer back to. With a focus on the spiritual and the positive, I found many that resonated with me. My favorites: What is the Value of Prayer? and Five Keys to Creating Your Dream.

The whole book takes only about twenty minutes to read. It's called a ThinkAHA book because you think about the tip and later, after re-reading it, you get that epiphany. Recommended for those seeking solutions to recalcitrant problems in their lives.
1,178 reviews14 followers
August 21, 2016
This slim book is broken into two parts. Concepts contain several anecdotes regarding life’s obstacles and belief in god. The second part, workbooks, contains many religious stories with a series of self-evaluation questions. The theme does not appear to favor one Christian sect over another. The author does not provide which version or edition bible was used as a bases for the biblical mottoes. It is interesting that this book is marketed as a self-help book based on the some autobiographical information when there is a disclaimer at the beginning of the book, that places, event, and situations in this story are purely fictional.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews