Most people plan their year from where they are, adding goals onto an already full life and hoping that effort alone will close the distance. The lists get made, the intentions feel genuine, and somewhere around February the familiar pattern reasserts itself — not from lack of trying, but from planning forward without ever asking what, exactly, they were moving toward. Reverse Engineering Your Best Year examines a different starting point: the end. This book explores what it actually means to begin with a clear, honest vision of what a genuinely good year would look like — not the aspirational version shaped by comparison or cultural expectation, but the quieter, more personal answer that emerges when the noise settles and real values surface. It looks honestly at the psychological challenges this approach reveals: the difficulty of defining success on one's own terms, the emotional resistance that arises when a desired future requires uncomfortable present changes, and the gap between what people say they want and what their daily choices consistently reveal. Rather than offering a goal-setting template, this book offers a compassionate exploration of what meaningful direction actually requires — self-knowledge, honest prioritization, and the willingness to let some ambitions go in service of the ones that genuinely matter. For anyone who has ended a year wondering where it went, this book offers not a better planning system, but a more honest conversation about what the best version of that year was always asking for.
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Liczba stron: 220
Rok wydania: 2026
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