Your Earliest Life Changing Book

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bradly1101

Diamond Member
May 5, 2013
4,689
294
126
www.bradlygsmith.org
For anyone interested in off topic painting of pictures behind the literary discovery, mom moved to acting later in her life, opera was really going nowhere around L.A., better had my parents picked San Francisco when making their choice in the desert of San Bernardino on their first drive west from their verdant, Ohio roots with my 8 m.o. brother crying in the car from the heat before wide adoption of AC, and no child seats, and she was pregnant with me, but L.A. had more construction, and dad knew he could make money at that. He told me once about how his crew would wax nails so that they could be banged in more easily. They'd soak them in a coffee can with a flame beneath it. I always wondered if that affected long term reliability or creakiness of the structures he helped build.

Mom starred in a funny children's short "Harry and the Lady Next Door," in which she played the opera singer she was, and played the nurse, the lady in the black dress at the party, and the nun who was mysteriously replaced by Bernie Taupin in DejaView's "A Whiter Shade of Pale" with Harry Dean Stanton. She had bit parts in lots of stuff, including Night Court, where she played another opera singer whose troupe was arrested for starting a food fight. She looked hilariously sheepish in a Wagnerian, horned helm. She died in '98. I'm still so proud, and so humbled. She introduced me to Ram Dass (Be Here Now) at such a formative age. Beyond her death, my brother shared a book she bought when starting to have health problems, Healing Into Life and Death, which led me to Who Dies?: An Investigation of Conscious Living and Conscious Dying, which led me to A Gradual Awakening, all by Stephen Levine, who led me to Buddha’s Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love & Wisdom by Rick Hanson, PhD, and Richard Mendius, MD, all four totally life changing at a much older age, she still skilled me in absence.

An early mockup of her resume photos before having to change her last name for SAG membership:



An earlier opera role:



 
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Mai72

Lifer
Sep 12, 2012
11,562
1,741
126
"Mans Search for Meaning" by Victor Frankl.

Everyone should be required to read that book. Victor who had spent 4 plus years in concentration camps in Germany recounts the horrors that he witnessed. He lost his wife, kids, everyone he held dear.

In that book Victor states that everything can be taken but the will to choose. He had lost everything yet had more freedom than the guards at the camp. He talks about recreating his lifes work on a little scrap of paper that he safely hid from the guards. Death was everywhere, yet here he was imagining the day he would be lecturing in college about his trials.

Finally, it makes you question the things that we complain about. Oh, the traffic. The weather is bad outside. I have to wait in line for 15 minutes!! Oh really? I try to not complain about much anymore. Read the book. It's truly life changing.
 
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thebestMAX

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2000
7,489
124
106
Earliest books I can remember that opened up my world was the Mutiny on On The Bounty trilogy and Moby Dick.
 

Thebobo

Lifer
Jun 19, 2006
18,574
7,671
136
Death be not Proud by John Gunther. Was also a movie but was required reading in english in Jr High.
 

bradly1101

Diamond Member
May 5, 2013
4,689
294
126
www.bradlygsmith.org
"Mans Search for Meaning" by Victor Frankl.

Everyone should be required to read that book. Victor who had spent 4 plus years in concentration camps in Germany recounts the horrors that he witnessed. He lost his wife, kids, everyone he held dear.

In that book Victor states that everything can be taken but the will to choose. He had lost everything yet had more freedom than the guards at the camp. He talks about recreating his lifes work on a little scrap of paper that he safely hid from the guards. Death was everywhere, yet here he was imagining the day he would be lecturing in college about his trials.

Finally, it makes you question the things that we complain about. Oh, the traffic. The weather is bad outside. I have to wait in line for 15 minutes!! Oh really? I try to not complain about much anymore. Read the book. It's truly life changing.
There was a man walking down the street who fell into a hole. He couldn't get out. A priest walked by, and the man asked him for help. The priest wrote out a prayer and tossed it in the hole. A professor walked by and again the man asked for help. The learned man studied the problem and recommended a complex solution.

Just then a friend walked by, saw his buddy in the hole, and jumped in with him. The man said, "What are you doing? Now we're both stuck!" His friend said, "No, I've been down here before, and I know the way out."

The pitfalls of life aren't so seemingly impossible to exit.
 

bradly1101

Diamond Member
May 5, 2013
4,689
294
126
www.bradlygsmith.org
I don't know the name of the book, but it was a book that taught me Objective-C back in like 2010. It was really the first time I ever went out and learned a new technology on my own and since that point I've pretty much looked at my software development skills more as a career than a job and I enjoy it a lot more now. I also can pick up technologies a lot more and I felt that was when I kind of transitioned from a more beginner/mid to a mid/senior developer as far as my skillset goes. And now my salary is more than double what it was in 2010.
I have tremendous respect for software developers. I remember in lab at school (I didn't learn this stuff until I was 26) learning about the machine code of the 8088 proc., and how to spell my name in 7-segment LED's, the clock cycle performed by a momentary switch on my breadboard, registers fed by dip-switches, later learning some BASIC. I went in more of a hardware direction in my career, but was always amazed by the resourcefulness, patience, and inventiveness of software developers.
 
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bradly1101

Diamond Member
May 5, 2013
4,689
294
126
www.bradlygsmith.org
"Mans Search for Meaning" by Victor Frankl.

Everyone should be required to read that book. Victor who had spent 4 plus years in concentration camps in Germany recounts the horrors that he witnessed. He lost his wife, kids, everyone he held dear.

In that book Victor states that everything can be taken but the will to choose. He had lost everything yet had more freedom than the guards at the camp. He talks about recreating his lifes work on a little scrap of paper that he safely hid from the guards. Death was everywhere, yet here he was imagining the day he would be lecturing in college about his trials.

Finally, it makes you question the things that we complain about. Oh, the traffic. The weather is bad outside. I have to wait in line for 15 minutes!! Oh really? I try to not complain about much anymore. Read the book. It's truly life changing.
It's now on my list. Thanks.
 

bradly1101

Diamond Member
May 5, 2013
4,689
294
126
www.bradlygsmith.org
That's about when I read it too. Pre high school I read tons of horror. I used to read lots. Sometimes the only reason kids could get Schoolastic books(remember that?) was because of me. I'd get so many books, It would boost it past the minimum order level, and I'd get to keep the box to carry them home :^D

The internet's really fucked my attention span, and I seldom make time for books anymore :^(
It seems that to be digestible, everything has to be bite-sized anymore. Depth seems to pass through like the seed that it is.
 

Oyeve

Lifer
Oct 18, 1999
21,993
853
126
read Charlotte's Web when I was 5 in '71. Enjoyed it very much. I stopped killing insects because of it. Now I only kill roaches.
 
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Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
81
Probably the Little House On the Prairie series by Laura Ingalls Wilder or Jurassic Park.
 

BarkingGhostar

Diamond Member
Nov 20, 2009
8,409
1,617
136
1969 World Book Encyclopedia set.

I was only six or seven or so what I went through them. My parents (entire family, really) looked at me like I was swapped with some other baby from the hospital, but that was the basis for me telling folks for decades that I was adopted as I couldn't be genetically part of them monkeys.

I then moved onto dictionaries and phone books before starting on literature.
 
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Majes

Golden Member
Apr 8, 2008
1,164
148
106
I had a comic strip bible as a kid that I read through at least a dozen times. That was pretty important in my development. After that I really enjoyed reading anything about military history, and I got into Hardy Boys books. Now I read Sci Fi/Fantasy almost exclusively. I would recommend the following authors...

Fantasy:
Brandon Sanderson
Brent Weeks

Science Fiction:
Peter F. Hamilton
Timothy Zahn
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,131
30,082
146
Everybody Poops. Helped me through some difficult times and I adopted lessons from that book that I apply every day.
 

DietDrThunder

Platinum Member
Apr 6, 2001
2,262
326
126
How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive: A Manual of Step-by-Step Procedures for the Complete Idiot; Paperback; Author - John Muir

I was 15 and just bought my first car and it didn't run. My dad told me that if I wanted my driver's license I had to repair it myself.

I read a lot of literature for school when I was young, but I wouldn't consider any of it to be life changing.



 
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Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,910
2,141
126
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. Seriously. Adams's humor was so unique it opened my mind to a different way of looking at things. It made me realize that breaking any event into its base components reveals everything we are familiar with is just an absurd string of interactions- none of which have the same goal as the result.
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
70,201
28,896
136
Does it explain how a pagan blacksmith god ended up on the begat tree?
 
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