The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari Pages

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Frida Kosofsky

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Aug 5, 2024, 9:17:57 AM8/5/24
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Iadmit I started reading the book merely out of curiosity as to know how crazy the monk was to have sold his Ferrari. It started of like a John Grisham novel with a famous lawyer collapsing in the middle of a court-room.

I thought I was in for another one of those legal thrillers(which I happen to love) and I continued reading with renewed energy. Then I realized what I have gotten into as soon as I had completed about 15 pages of the book. I realized that agelessness, after all, does not require a fountain of youth, silver chalices and a person to give up their youth. I realized we've got the key to agelessness inside us. Some of the points that attracted me are:


When you already have a full cup, how can you pour in more tea? Empty the cup if you want to fill it with fresh tea. The same applies for our mind too. If we're already sure we know things, then we can never learn anything worth learning. Keep an empty mind.


When you are inspired by some great purpose, some extraordinary project, all of your thoughts break their bonds: your mind transcends limitations, your consciousness expands in every direction and you find yourself in a new, great and wonderful world. Dormant forces, faculties and talents become alive and you discover yourself to be a greater person than you ever dreamed yourself to be.


After all, we are ready to invest 150-200 bucks on a single movie that takes up 3 hours of our life and gives nothing in return. Invest the amount on this book and you'll never regret it long as you live. It's a must read, if you want to reach great heights in life.

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