Artwork for podcast Change Your Story, Change Your Life
89: Last Bad Day
17th March 2018 • Change Your Story, Change Your Life • Louis Di Bianco
00:00:00 01:03:29

Share Episode

Shownotes

YOUR LAST BAD DAY

How can a severe accident, a near death experience, become a person’s greatest gift? You will discover the inspiring answer to that question in this podcast.

Michael OBrien was living a successful life – on the surface. He had a career, money, family, everything that is supposed to add up to happiness. Behind this facade, at the core of his being, he felt trapped and unfulfilled. In his own words, he was a “human doer,” not a human being. Unfortunately,  many people live this way.

Fortunately,  you don’t have to almost lose your life to transform from human doer to human being. Michael’s experience and the lessons he learned from it can help you enrich your life personally and financially.

Michael fell in love with bicycles as a child. His passion for cycling grew into his adulthood. He took his bike with him on a business trip with the intention of combining work with pleasure. That decision almost killed him. For a while, it turned him into a vengeful person.

Learn how he  turned anger into love, fear into courage, despair into hope, how he stopped being a victim to life’s circumstances and became a victor instead.

Michael OBrien offers you many other gems in today’s episode. He illuminates the difference between chasing happiness and being truly happy; he helps you understand the importance of your moment to moment self talk and why you should doubt your doubts.

There’s more than exciting, valuable, serious stuff in today’s episode. There’s warmth, humor, and entertainment. So join us for some fun and enrichment. You may come away with the priceless fit of knowing how to have your last bad day.

BOOKS IN THIS PODCAST

Shift: Creating Better Tomorrows by Michael OBrien

Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl

QUOTES IN THIS PODCAST

“When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.”  – Viktor Frankl

“The one thing you can’t take away from me is the way I choose to respond to what you do to me. The last of one’s freedoms is to choose one’s attitude in any given circumstance.” – Viktor Frankl

“When the going gets tough the tough get going.” – Joseph P. Kennedy, Knute Rockne, Lottsa Peeps.

“Great teams work together after a tough loss.” – Ron Brown

CONTACT MICHAEL

www.MichaelOBrienShift.com

Michael@Peleton.net

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube