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Heart-Centered Life Workbook: Integrating Money & Meaning for Personal Growth & Fulfillment | Daily Journaling, Self-Discovery & Financial Wellness Guide
Heart-Centered Life Workbook: Integrating Money & Meaning for Personal Growth & Fulfillment | Daily Journaling, Self-Discovery & Financial Wellness Guide
Heart-Centered Life Workbook: Integrating Money & Meaning for Personal Growth & Fulfillment | Daily Journaling, Self-Discovery & Financial Wellness Guide

Heart-Centered Life Workbook: Integrating Money & Meaning for Personal Growth & Fulfillment | Daily Journaling, Self-Discovery & Financial Wellness Guide

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Description

This workbook is a companion to the book Integrating Money and Meaning: Practices for a Heart-Centered Life, by Maggie Kulyk with Liz McGeachy. Integrating Money and Meaning is a guide to living within our society’s complex financial system with integrity and meaning. The book offers practices for bringing money out of the shadows, healing its wounds, and creating a new relationship with money based on our true “heart.” Readers are expected to read through Integrating Money and Meaning, and then use the workbook as a place to “practice” what is described in the book.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
The book was okay. It’s easy to read, but i found it was less about how I related to money than it was Kulyk’s memoir/spiritual journey with some helpful exercise that could help the reader find a path to making their lives more spiritual. I found the concept of our money system as a whale to be a bit vague. I appreciated how she used the movie, “A Wonderful Life” as archetypes of ways we deal with money, but that was only in the chapter relating to “looking back.” She spends far less time on “looking in,” and ”looking out,” than looking back. I felt that these chapters could be more developed.I do think the exercises were helpful and for that reason I gave the book three stars. While it is billed as a spiritual book, it is not “Christian book.” The author appears more “spiritual” than religious. She doesn’t develop any “money theology,” but encourages each of us to come to terms with how we use money (which isn’t a bad idea.). While there are some Christian thoughts in the book, she also quotes Gnostic and non-Christian thinkers (which is okay as long as you realize what you’re getting).