This is very encouraging to me. The authors are Lisa Price, the owner of Carol's Daughter, a body products company, and Hilary Beard, an author hired by an agency to work with her, but it reads as if Lisa Price were speaking throughout. I guess that means Ms. Beard did an excellent job. Mrs. Price tells about her fears and challenges, about how the universe has blessed her, and the many times she has received inspiration. I feel she is a builder, not a destroyer; a creative person, not destructive at all. Because I'm embarking on writing a screenplay, intending to submit it for production, I'm nervous about the whole process of putting my work out there to be seen, commented on, and loved/hated. She expresses the process she went through in moving from a very dysfunctional relationship with finances, men, and self-care, to a very uplifting and wholesome relationship with finances, her husband and children, and caring for her self. She frequently stresses how important it is to do things that make you feel alive and loved; she focuses on baths and fragrances and body products because that's her passion and because these things have and are helping her and many other people through her efforts. I felt she was like me (not exactly, but a lot of the same fears). I also felt empowered to do good with the gifts I've been given.
It was a challenge to understand her belief system, partly because she doesn't go into much depth; it's definitely not the same as mine, but a lot of the same behaviors are rewarding in her system and in mine. I found it useful to get outside the boundaries of organized religion and realize that God cares about all of His children and will answer when they ask in faith.
I had never heard of Carol's Daughter, the company, before; I want to look it up online and maybe order something from them. She expresses that she has tried to grow organically, as resources come available, without an excess of debt and without outside investors, because she wants to keep control of her company. Her reasoning for wanting to keep control is so that she can continue the values she started it with: giving employment to people who really need it, developing products as she sees a need and feels inspired, not focusing on profits for the sake of earning money but rather focusing on genuinely helping people in a way that people are happy to pay for. I like this outlook and wonder, since the book was written in 2004, how she's doing now.