The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari || Robin Sharma || Book Review

 #the_monk_who_sold_his_ferrari 

 - Robin Sharma


"The monk who sold his Ferrari" is written in the form of a conversation between two friends. The story is about Julian Mantle who is a successful lawyer but is full of tension and work pressure , who finally decides to leave his luxurious and baggage of past and goes to Himalayan mountain in search of peace while reading this book you will literally feel that you are in the beautiful forest of Savana, India where everything is very beautiful. Julian's journey is described in 7 practical lessons. At the end of every chapter is a summary containing action points, it makes love to remember.

Core of the book is the 7 virtue of enlightened learning , learned from Himalayan across,

1. Master your mind

2. Follow your purpose

3. Practice Kaizan

4. Respect your time etc.


The-Monk-Who-Sold-His-Ferrari robin-sarmah-books
The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari

Most of them are very inspiring and potentially very useful. A well cultivated mind will blossoms beyond our expectation. Quality of our life literally depends upon our thoughts. It is said in this book that even the best conditioned thinkers are using 1/100th of a parent of their mental resources. Only well trained mind can explore the untapped potential of the mental capacity. Mind is a wonderful servent but a terrible master. If you have become a negative thinker, this is because you haven't cared for your mind and taken the time to train in to focus on the good. The mind truely like any other muscle in our body. Use it or lose it.

Most part of the book contain nothing that we wouldn't already known. For example - Be positive, think positive, don't let negative Thoughts spoil etc. Which are easy to say but difficult to follow and practice. But the thing that you will gain from from the book is simply life changing. Books simply help you to see what is already within yourself, that's what enlightenment is all about.

It's all about how to master ourselves. There is no mistakes, only lessons, see setbacks as opportunities for personal expansion & spiritual growth.