In this guide, various women reflect on the key lessons they've learned in their lives.
Leid interviewed dozens of women in the course of assembling this string of quick, inspirational life stories. As the various women the author profiles in these pages tell their tales, the book's central question—"What is the mess that became your message?"—emerges as the motif tying the stories together. Whether it's Angie coping with the sudden loss of her husband, Rob ("He was in the hospital for only a day. Three surgeries were performed, but he never regained consciousness") or successful entrepreneur and community organizer Linda, who was temporarily sidelined with an aneurysm ("The message was clear: she needed to take better care of herself and put herself first"), a picture of resilience emerges. Each profile ends with a swift summary, a central message, and an "action step" for readers to implement in their own lives ("Take a walk outside or simply sit outside and listen to your heart"). In this sequel, the combination of these disparate stories makes for an upbeat, wide-ranging narrative intended for female readers. At the beginning of the engrossing book, the author warmly reflects on the problems of gathering the photographs that accompany each profile. The pictures had to be taken during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, when professional photo studios were off-limits and Zoom technology was sometimes the best option available. This course of action—of gamely embracing challenges and rising above them—is the theme Leid skillfully weaves through all of these intriguing profiles. Readers coming from their own difficulties will find a good deal of inspiration in these tales.
An engaging and uplifting collection of personal stories about and for women.
Alex Brown speaks with An Imperfectly Perfect Life Shari Leid, a life and mindset coach, about healthy versus toxic friendships
We all have our messy moments in life: losing a job, not getting the apartment we wanted, and maybe a failed relationship ... or five. Sometimes these things happen more often than we would like to admit.
Life coach and author of the book, "Make Your Mess Your Message," Shari Leid, joined New Day NW to talk about why we shouldn't hide from our messes, but instead embrace them and take them as messages of redirection.
How The Pandemic Forced Us To Re-Evaluate Friendships