At the start I would, but the temptation would grow and I'd eventually give in.
I might well EDIT It,
as I read along.
Sometimes, there is room for improvement.
David
Depends, too, on who would be handing anyone such a book.
I think, however, that if we examine our past until we understand it, then practice living-in-the-present, (always focusing on what we are now doing rather than constantly thinking and analyzing, blaming & denying) we may at least know our options as to what to do next.
Sounds good, except for the part knocking analysis.
( I hate to think of where we 'd be on the food chain, without it. )
David
OmSigDavid, don't take that so literally, some people are so distracted by their thoughts they can't focus in on the one thing they want to accomplish. Too much analyzing is, what? At some point we have to know the thinking, analyzing, planning is completed, then get lost in doing the work. As an attorney in planning a case?
If you're talking of self-examination, that should only take a "season." Guess that would be a year?
You know these things, I'm sure.