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Amazon Reviews


6 of 6 people found the following review to be helpful:

Working on yourself first is smart work.,  April 29, 2007

By Leslie A. Yerkes

It is difficult to have important conversations with yourself that are constructive. Noah Blumenthal with his book 'You're Addicted to You' makes it easier and more effectual. Acting as a guide 'You're Addicted to You' poses important questions, guides personal exploration and helps you to address what may be acting as obstacles to your personal success and happiness. This has been an important book for me to find and read as I explore my well-being in my midlife.





8 of 9 people found the following review to be helpful:

This Time I Kept the Change,  April 2, 2007

By C. Metzker

Whether you're looking to keep up an exercise program, speak up when you've never done it before, or adhere to a schedule that promotes better work-life balance, this book offers a solution. "You're Addicted to You" provides a clear, practical, step-by-step process that really is do-able. (I know, cuz I tried it. And it worked.) The personal anecdotes that the author sprinkles thoughout the book are funny - which helps along the process, too.





2 of 2 people found the following review to be helpful:

Good tool for life,  May 29, 2007

By J. Hoffman

Noah's book is a good tool for many areas of your life. It can be applied to personal as well as professional aspects of anyone's life. The book makes you think specifically about what you need to change and helps you outline steps to actually make the change happen. Noah helps you move from thoughts to actions.





1 of 1 people found the following review to be helpful:

Effective Change process made nonthreatening,  September 8, 2007

By Heather E. Loewecke

Making long-term changes can be a daunting process but this book breaks it down into manageable, nonthreatening steps. I found Part 1 on Raising Awareness to be particularly helpful in identifying specific and clear areas for change. Plus, the exerise boxes throughout the book are handy references when going through the actual steps. The composite case studies gave clear insight in practical application (and the realistic struggles) that happen when employing each of the steps. This book is a simple, yet well conceived guide for managing change.





1 of 1 people found the following review to be helpful:

Marilyn Bushey,  June 26, 2007

By Dallas Diva

This book is truly a change manual and takes accomplishing change to a whole new level. I quickly read it when I received it, then went back and did a deep read and next will start to apply the principles in the Circles of Strength. I think this is just the thing for individuals and companies in transition.







  • Introduces the breakthrough concept of "self-addiction" as the roadblock to making life changes
  • Offers a proven strategy for breaking self-addiction and fostering lifelong improvement
  • Includes hands-on tools, techniques, and exercises in every chapter

All of us have things about ourselves we'd like to change. Maybe you want to be more organized or more outspoken, healthier or thinner. Or perhaps you want to quit smoking, work more efficiently, be a better listener, or a better leader. Whatever you want to change, you probably believe that your success depends on your conviction. The fact of the matter is, willpower alone won't get you to change.

Noah Blumenthal illustrates how each of us becomes so thoroughly conditioned to act in old, counterproductive ways that negative behaviors become part of our very being. In a very real sense we become addicted to ourselves. The problem, he explains, isn't that you aren't trying hard enough, but that you've never learned the right way to make difficult changes. Here, he details a proven three-stage strategy--illuminated with practical tools, techniques, and exercises--for breaking self-addictions and conquering damaging behaviors like anger, workaholism, risk aversion, procrastination, overeating, under-exercising--just about anything. We all want to change our counterproductive behaviors. Here, Blumenthal offers a step-by-step guide for how to do it successfully.