Aspire!
How to Create Your Own Reality and Alter Your DNA
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Narrated by:
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Frank McKinney
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By:
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Frank McKinney
About this listen
Can you really create your own reality? Real estate artist, best-selling author, philanthro-capitalist, and modern-day Renaissance man Frank McKinney has done just that. He's pushed his limits professionally (creating, then selling, 44 multimillion-dollar mansions on spec), philanthropically (building 29 self-sufficient villages in the poorest country on earth), creatively (writing seven books in six genres), and physically (running the Badwater 135-mile Ultramarathon 12 times).
During his journey, Frank discovered an eternal truth: To create your own reality, you don't change who you are. You just have to redirect or reignite what's already inside. For that, you need aspiration — an almost otherworldly desire to achieve something high or great.
In Aspire! and its 25 get-to-the-point chapters, McKinney reveals secrets for mastering risk, becoming a "relentless executioner", accentuating and amplifying your essence, developing personal magnetism, supercharging your love life, and embracing your highest calling.
©2021 Frank McKinney (P)2021 Frank McKinneyWhat listeners say about Aspire!
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- Anonymous User
- 03-01-2022
What a shame - ego suffocates content.
Good grief, welcome to the self-run Frank McKinney Appreciation Society. This could have been a quality self-development book, but instead it’s simply a justification for the author to read out his resume again and again and again. And again.
A.d. n.a.u.s.e.u.m.
He even manages to be self-congratulatory in the acknowledgements!
He does manage to crowbar in a few bits of wisdom amid the self-promotion, but the ratio is way off.
I struggled to retain anything other than the most oft-repeated messages of the book which were his list of achievements.
Is he an impressive human? Sure. But there’s no need to tell him that as he’s already very, very aware of it. I’d have been so much more impressed by his resume if he didn’t keep ramming it down my throat. Unfortunately my awe was replaced by annoyance and eye-rolling by the end. And that’s my biggest takeaway from the book.
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