How Life Works
by Andrew Matthews
Paperback
Kindle
The runaway #1 bestseller!
How Life Works by Andrew Matthews is about:
why the same things keep happening to you- why bills come in bunches
It is about:
- how to find the love of your life
- how to find the work you love
- why some people always fall on their feet – and how you can be like them.
How Life Works explains why:
- it’s not WHAT you know
- it’s not WHO you know
It’s all about how you FEEL.
How Life Works
- When Bad Things Happen
- What Controls Your Life?
- Why Do the Same Things Keep Happening to Me?”
- “But I Am Positive!”
- What is a Thought?
- You Get What You Feel
- The Law of Attraction
- When the Law of Attraction Fails
- Imagine!
- The World is a Mirror
- How Important is Action?
- Resistance
- Let Go!
- When Everything Goes Wrong
- Acceptance
- Forgiveness
- Your Miraculous Body
- Your Heart
- We Are All Connected
- Inspiration
- A Better Way to Achieve Goals
- A Sketch of How Life Works
- Be Grateful
- Live Now
- Love Yourself
- Why Am I Here?
Testimonials
It is amazing and answered, or confirmed the answers, to all the questions I had floating around in my head. It has helped me so much.
As a psychologist I have been referring Andrew Matthews’ books to my clients for over 20 years. Use Andrew’s simple tips and life gets better.
So inspiring, such important messages – so fun and simple.
Fantastic books. They always help me when I feel sad or under the weather.
How Life Works by Andrew Matthews
THE MYTH: success makes you happy.
THE FACT: happiness makes you successful.
How Life Works is the latest in a series of “Happiness Books” by Andrew Matthews. Others include Being Happy!, Follow Your Heart, Happiness in a Nutshell, Happiness Now and Being a Happy Teen.
Already a #1 bestseller in Singapore and Malaysia, How Life Works has recently been published in Vietnamese, Russian, Spanish, Tamil and Hindi.
How Life Works is illustrated with 90 of Andrew’s trademark sketches. “My cartoons illustrate the message”, says Andrew. “Cartoons also remind us not to take life too seriously.”