Breaking the Rules, Removing the Obstacles to Effortless High Performance

From inside the dust jacket:

Excellence, empowerment and peak performance are timely issues. Breaking the Rules shows that being at your best is your birthright, and that returning to that natural state is the essence of empowerment and peak performance. Self-empowerment—accessing your own power, your own inner knowing, and being guided by that—is the key to excellence and peak performance.

Unlike many popular books on excellence, Breaking the Rules does not lead you on yet another fruitless chase—looking outside yourself for answers. Being on a roll is not about copying others or relying on someone else’s rules. Instead, Breaking the Rules offers profoundly insightful guidance for the inner work you must do before you can achieve true, self-sustaining excellence.

Key things you’ll learn:

  • LIFE PURPOSE — It is one thing to identify your purpose in life. It is quite another to bring your daily life into alignment with that purpose. Readers call Breaking the Rules a breakthrough work because of its practical guidelines for doing both.
  • RIGHT QUESTIONSBreaking the Rules brings you a new approach to asking questions that will open you up to the on-stream guidance you need from your intuition to get on a roll and stay there.
  • RELATIONSHIPS — Relationships with the people around you often mirror the internal relationship between your head and your heart. External relationships improve quickly when you do the inner work described in Breaking the Rules.
  • A MENTOR-COACH — Totally different from an advice-giving mentor, the mentor-coach you need must model the style of asking right questions that comes through clearly in Breaking the Rules. 

Kurt Wright is founder and President of Clear Purpose Management, Inc.Kurt.gif, an international consulting firm. He has coached leaders from some of the most respected companies in the U.S., Canada, South America and Europe. His work, as well as the ideas included in Breaking the Rules, grew out of his 1970 decision to spend the rest of his life working to understand what each of us is like at our very best. With his typical thoroughness, he now shares these findings with readers everywhere.


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