Not a "Great book". Some even say, "Not a good book". And I agree. In hindsight, there are things I would have done differently. I suppose that's true about most things in life. But still some pretty good takeaways. I think the strongest section of the book is the section titled, "Foundations for Truth". This section gets to the message and intent of the book this is what I would, and still might, focus and expand on. Available on Amazon.com
Consider this…
For every negative comment that someone makes about you it takes 1000 positive comments to reverse the effects of that one negative. Not to feel great about yourself. Not to feel the opposite of whatever that negative was. These 1000 positives will only get you to neutral, zero, flat. The positive words and comments you hear or tell yourself from this point forward is what will propel you forward. Identifying the negative words and comments made about you, rejecting them and then replacing them with what you know to be true about yourself forms the core of the precept of "Foundations for Truth".
The original working title of this book was, "Process Living, A Guide to Uncovering Your Potential". It seemed to make sense at the time: title the book after the human technology it speaks of. The original intent was to publish a book that was the companion piece or, if you will, the instruction manual for, "Process Living, Personal and Professional Life Coaching, which is a coaching methodology I developed many years ago and that I continue to practice today. The book can still be used as a manual for this coaching, but under the revised title, "Who Told You That! And why did you believe it?", the content seemed to take on a new dimension and appeal to a broader audience.
I'm seriously considering doing a rewrite of the book and including the accompanying coaching materials that I developed under the "Process Living" banner.