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Somebody Should Have Told Us!

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Bringing his trademark knowledge of principles for living, Dr. Jack Pransky's latest literary work has the ability to change the lives of those who follow the simple, yet powerful, wisdoms stored in this book. If what you seek is a better, more joyous way of being, what is contained in these pages can indeed transform your life. Unlike listening to Dr. Phil, Dr. Laura, or Dr. Joy Brown, this book contains no advice. It offers no skills, nor any techniques. Initially, to some this may be disconcerting, but advice, skills and technique all reside in the outside world. This book contains something far more valuable. True change happens only from within, from one's own insight. It is far more comforting to realize there really is nothing to do because we already have everything we are looking for inside us, and it is always available to us no matter what difficult life situations we encounter if we know how to access it. This book points people in the direction of true self help.

184 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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Jack Pransky

26 books11 followers

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5 stars
219 (59%)
4 stars
87 (23%)
3 stars
43 (11%)
2 stars
13 (3%)
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9 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for Sandy Morley.
402 reviews7 followers
September 28, 2018
Some of the content is downright sensible, but it's written like an MLM sales pitch, replete with testimonials and questionably well-remembered "conversations." Even when the author is discussing something I know to be true, red flags are waving and alarm bells are ringing.

One of my favourite elements is that you don't *do* anything. You just get it! And if you don't get it then maybe you should go on a three principles course? The system is flawless--it's not even a system!--so any criticism just means you don't get it yet.

It's incredibly cult-like, too. There are great sages that changed the paradigm for everyone that met them. There are epiphanies where Doubting Thomases are eventually proven wrong after years of sin... There's even a foundational text!

I read the whole thing. In part because there were rare points that reminded me of things that are easy to know and easier to forget. The largest part was simply because I wanted to see how overt the proselytising would get. Pretty overt. It's a shame, because it detracts from the parts that are useful and do make sense.
Profile Image for Richard Tubb.
Author 5 books30 followers
April 7, 2015
As somebody who is exploring the "Three Principles" idea, I found this book by Jack Pransky to be highly illuminating.

The author doesn't offer advice, nor tips, nor techniques in this book -- and yet thanks to a style of writing that is very easy to read, you find yourself understanding the concepts he shares and how they might apply to your own life.

For anyone who has read a lot of self-development books (of which I am one) it might feel strange not to have any actions to take upon reading this book. Not to have to dash off and change anything. Despite that, I came away feeling good about how I might tackle future challenges.

The biggest personal learning I took from this book is to not trust your thinking when you're in a low mood -- tired, angry or upset. I've already found it a powerful lesson.

I'm sure I'll be revisiting this book often.
Profile Image for Flyingbroom.
126 reviews45 followers
June 1, 2024
More victim-blaming "your thoughts create your reality" nonsense.
Profile Image for Andrew Marshall.
Author 35 books63 followers
June 9, 2018
The problem is that they have! We weren't listening or our old habits were too largely ingrained. Effectively, there is one big idea in this book: 'Our thinking is our experience of the world. Our thinking is our life.'

Within the endless stories of people who Pransky has helped is this great paragraph: 'Every time we feel an emotion such as anger, frustration, stress, jealousy, guilt, anxiety, worry, fear, depression, we are at a fork in the road. One path of the fork is to see this emotion coming from the outside world; that is, somebody doing something to us or something about our circumstances. The other path is to see the emotion arising from our own thinking, from ourselves. As long as we believe our emotion is coming from the outside world we're stuck feeling that way until the outside world changes. When we see our emotion is coming FROM OUR OWN THINKING, we know it will dissipate when our thinking changes because our thinking always changes eventually.'

Unfortunately, this is a typical American self help book which claims that even the most miserable life can be turned round with a few magical words. Even though I knew my thinking will effect my feelings AND I was reading a book telling me this (over and over again). I still found myself getting stressed not about what happened but my interpretation. Sadly, Pransky has no advice about how to take this from known knowledge into our everyday lived life.



4 reviews
March 5, 2024
Someone should have told us indeed.
This book is about four simple yet powerful concepts:
1- you have the power to create any thoughts
2- you have the power to believe those thoughts
3- behind all your thoughts there’s peace of mind and wisdom that’s always there and available (if your mind quites down enough to hear it)
4- observing our emotions is the best way to know the quality of our thoughts (and whether we should trust them). If we are feeling down then their quality is not great and we should wait for our mind to calm down before acting. If we’re feeling “good emotions” (like compassion, humility, gratefulness,etc) than we’re at or near our health and wisdom and we can trust our judgement.

For me the most amazing part is that some of these actually goes against convencional wisdom (and against the current psychological paradigm afaik), yet (at least point 1 and 2) are obviously true.
For example, a big difference from normal psychological therapy would be that you don’t really need to fix or solve any past traumas to feel better. In fact frequently talking and reliving these traumas would probably be the complete opposite of what you’d want to do ir order to get better.

Long story short I think it’s really worth the read and for some it might be a life changing book.
Profile Image for Sarah Cook.
3 reviews5 followers
July 10, 2014
This book is beyond phenomenal. Had I read this 2 years ago I probably wouldn't have been as affected by it. Not because it wasn't accurate then but because I would have said it was too simply to be this easy. I was in my own way. This is a book that I will undoubtedly be reading repeatedly and often. It really is just as simple as he makes it out to be. Hands down the most effective self help book I've ever read.
5 reviews3 followers
December 4, 2010
This book is so phenomenal. I wish that more people were aware of the insight this Author speaks of. Would read this book over and over again.
Profile Image for Yakov Pyatnitskov.
95 reviews13 followers
February 5, 2025
Do you want to have less on your mind? To be less stressed and anxious and instead live more in a quiet, beautiful feeling? This book will explain how every beautiful feeling we searched for outside is already within us and that only our thinking can stop us from seeing it.

For me, this was the most relatable, deep and clear book about 3 Principles that I've ever read.

I liked that Jack included stories of people who attended his 3P seminars and showed how the teaching affected them. And I also liked that he included extensive parts of his conversations with clients which helped me to see this understanding "in action".

I was introduced to 3 Principles through a better-known The Inside-Out Revolution: The Only Thing You Need to Know to Change Your Life Forever by Michael Neill. And while I'll forever be grateful that that book found me, Jack's work is much more intimate, like talking to a calm, wise friend where he shares what helped him and many others applying it to different life situations.

Reading some stories included in the book I kept thinking: "My problems are NOTHING in comparison to what those people went through." And yet they were able to see their life differently and forgive their past and people who did them harm.

We create our experience of life by believing our thinking, and then try to change our outer circumstances to feel ok inside. But it's not about the outside. It's about how our thoughts create our experience and how when we realize that, everything changes.

Why nobody ever told us that?
5 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2019
Hodgepodge of boasting, well known ideas from other sources & questionable anecdotes. The author describes what's commonly referred to as "mindfulness". While most sources would say it's more of a journey where you progressively get more mindful until potentially reaching "enlightment", this book claims you can just "get it" without any hard work. That's the TV dinner form of spirituality.

In order to make up some substance that appear useful, he uses the word "thinking" to describe "habits" so it would appear as if we can magically change them without much effort. Possibly, by going to his seminar. Instant inspiration anyone?
9 reviews
October 27, 2018
Great Read

It brings it home just how much how thinking can effect the way we behave and best ourselves up emotionally. This book has given me a good understanding how to control that.I will read this again as I feel it would only benefit to reinforce the understanding.I would highly recommend this to anybody.
Profile Image for Alexander.
4 reviews1 follower
May 19, 2019
Simple and thought provoking, especially with regards to challenging your own intrinsic bias and thought processes.

The stories are a bit meandering at times, but the three key principles are a stand out and easy to apply in day-to-day life.

It’s a pleasure to read a book that is simply written, and doesn’t need to hide the “golden nugget” in 400+ pages of content.
Profile Image for Alistair Miller.
164 reviews1 follower
March 4, 2020
This is possibly my favourite book on the 3 Principles mainly because of it's simplicity. It's very easy to follow and to understand. It's one I've returned to again just recently and after a period of time, it has made more sense to me. I would recommend this as a starting point for anyone who wants to learn about the 3 Principles.
Profile Image for Steve Joe.
7 reviews1 follower
October 18, 2025
This is the best book I have read on the inside- out revolution. I never really got the concepts until I read this book. It contains stories of people who have attended the courses and how it affected them. I struggled with the definition of “Mind” before reading this, but it appears it is the same as the collective unconsciousness and makes sense.
5 reviews1 follower
December 8, 2018
Simple and Life-Changing

The Three Principles Jack Pransky teaches us in this book are so very simple, yet if you understand and use them, they are Life-Changing! Amazing book. It's like a summary of all other self-help books with the three simple principles.
Profile Image for Rus.
45 reviews1 follower
September 19, 2021
3 principles and simple truths. Our experience of life is created from our thoughts, which we control and are solely responsible for. Waking up to this and transforming this knowledge in to wisdom is the hard part!
2 reviews
August 10, 2025
what an absolutely amazing book

I’m loving 3 principles books and this is one of my favorites so far. Hands down, amazing. I would recommend this to anyone; especially if you already know about the 3 principles, but anybody for sure still.
Profile Image for Christian.
Author 6 books2 followers
February 3, 2019
Brilliant book. Jack knows what he is talking about.
2 reviews
August 18, 2021
Excellent Book

Very simple concepts that work. This book can be transformational for people who want to understand how we all make our own reality out of life. Well worth the read.
Profile Image for Michael.
Author 5 books7 followers
October 17, 2024
It's true someone should have told us. But because they won't, thankfully, there's this book. And this authors other books
5 reviews
February 3, 2023
game changer

Amazing insights the missing pieces of the self help puzzle. Wish I’d found it years ago
When I started my self help journey.
Profile Image for Helena.
Author 3 books36 followers
January 27, 2016
A simple yet very poignant book by Jack Pransky, on the three principles behind what makes up the human experience of the world. An easy read, but still, with a lot of really significant insights! And I have to say, once I grasped this myself, a few years back, I too had the notion the title implies: "Why oh why didn't anybody tell me this is how it works? It would have saved me so much heart aches and pain!".
Profile Image for Barbara Twiss Murphy.
2 reviews3 followers
February 15, 2009
My intro into Heath realization... taking his seminars and enjoying them....Looking forward to reading his next book...
34 reviews
May 3, 2015
Fantastic! I feel compelled to look into the Three Principles more.
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews

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