Reflections on Life: Year One Coaching Insights of Dr. Ray

Sale Price:$11.99 Original Price:$19.99
sale

Everybody leaves a legacy. Their life matters. Hopefully each person’s legacy will be something wonderful formed in the love of special people. But this is where we encounter Mystery. 

Not everyone produces a legacy that matters to anyone else.  So many twists and turns in life can place people on the less noble path. These people leave legacies that consist of death and destruction and evil and fear.    

Obviously, life isn’t the same for everyone. We can be thankful for this. We forge our own legacies uniquely. Whether for good or bad, our legacies are our handiwork.  

All legacies have one thing in common: They reveal the deep personal history of a single human life and imply the wider influences that formed each life. Think of Steve Jobs and Albert Einstein. Contemplate their legacies. They are possibly admirable and deeply interesting. 

Add To Cart

Everybody leaves a legacy. Their life matters. Hopefully each person’s legacy will be something wonderful formed in the love of special people. But this is where we encounter Mystery. 

Not everyone produces a legacy that matters to anyone else.  So many twists and turns in life can place people on the less noble path. These people leave legacies that consist of death and destruction and evil and fear.    

Obviously, life isn’t the same for everyone. We can be thankful for this. We forge our own legacies uniquely. Whether for good or bad, our legacies are our handiwork.  

All legacies have one thing in common: They reveal the deep personal history of a single human life and imply the wider influences that formed each life. Think of Steve Jobs and Albert Einstein. Contemplate their legacies. They are possibly admirable and deeply interesting. 

Everybody leaves a legacy. Their life matters. Hopefully each person’s legacy will be something wonderful formed in the love of special people. But this is where we encounter Mystery. 

Not everyone produces a legacy that matters to anyone else.  So many twists and turns in life can place people on the less noble path. These people leave legacies that consist of death and destruction and evil and fear.    

Obviously, life isn’t the same for everyone. We can be thankful for this. We forge our own legacies uniquely. Whether for good or bad, our legacies are our handiwork.  

All legacies have one thing in common: They reveal the deep personal history of a single human life and imply the wider influences that formed each life. Think of Steve Jobs and Albert Einstein. Contemplate their legacies. They are possibly admirable and deeply interesting. 

This Book is the First Volume in a series of books consisting of the shared insights of Dr. Raymond L. Newkirk, including his ruminations and shared wisdom about human life, generally, and professional life specifically.  You might say that this series is about the “wonderment” of being human in the 22nd Century.  It is a humorous and yet very series book about the complexity, state, and challenges that impact human development.              

The format of this Book is unusual in that it does not require deep reading. Rather, it requires deep thinking. Here you will find a single bit of shared insight delivered at the rate of one a day. If you follow this pattern, you will cover 365 bits of wisdom in one year.  No doubt, you have heard of “One a Day Vitamins”?  Dr. Newkirk thought he would like to share his ruminations about life one thought a day, seven days a week, twelve months a year.   He got this idea from an experience he had way back in the 1990s when he and a friend had come up with the idea of an Online Fortune Cookie.