How to Stop Worrying and Start Living - by Dale Carnegie - AudioBook CD
Brand New (still shrink wrapped): 9 CDs
Dale Carnegie's perennial classic How to Stop Worrying and Start Living
Through Dale Carnegie's seven-million-copy bestseller, recently revised, millions of people have been helped to overcome the worry habit. Dale Carnegie offers a set of practical formulas you can put to work today -- formulas that will last a lifetime! Discover how to:
* Eliminate fifty percent of business worries immediately
* Reduce financial worries
* Turn criticism to your advantage
* Avoid fatigue -- and keep looking young
* Add one hour a day to your waking life
* Find yourself and be yourself -- remember, there is no one on earth like you!
How to Stop Worrying and Start Living deals with fundamental emotions and ideas. It is fascinating to listen to and
easy to apply. Let it change and improve you. There's no need to live with
worry and anxiety that keep you from enjoying a full, active and happy life!
About Dale Carnegie
Dale Carnegie (November 24, 1888 - November 1, 1955) was an American writer and the developer of famous courses in self-improvement, salesmanship, corporate training, public speaking, and interpersonal skills. Born in poverty on a farm in Missouri, he was the author of How to Win Friends and Influence People, first published in 1936, which has sold over 30 million copies through many editions and remains popular today. He also wrote a biography of Abraham Lincoln titled Lincoln the Unknown and several other books.
Carnegie was an early proponent of what is now called responsibility assumption, although this only appears minutely in his work. One of the core ideas in his books is that it is possible to change other people's behavior by changing one's reaction to them, but responsibility assumption is more along the lines of self-help religions rather than secular self-help courses.
Born in 1888 in Maryville, Missouri, Carnegie was a poor farmer's boy. In his teens, though still having to get up at 4 a.m. every day to milk his parents' cows, he managed to get educated at the State Teacher's College in Warrensburg. His first job after college was selling correspondence courses to ranchers, then he moved on to selling bacon, soap, and lard for Armour & Company. He was successful to the point of making his sales territory, southern Omaha, the national leader for the firm.
The official word from Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc is that he died of Hodgkin's disease on November 1, 1955. He is buried in the Belton, Missouri cemetery, Cass County.
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