the Mango and Tree: A Way of Seeing When to Wait, Cut, Let Go
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7,48 |
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7,48 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
The Mango and the Tree A Way of Seeing When to Wait, When to Cut, and When to Let GoYou have never resented a mango for having a seed.You have never demanded that the peel be edible. You have never expected the fruit to last longer than it does.You accepted its structure without argument.Somewhere along the way, you stopped granting life that same clarity.You began expecting every effort to reward you. Every season to show progress. Every relationship to justify itself. Every delay to mean failure.This book returns to something you already know.Through the quiet metaphor of the mango and the tree, it reframes: - Why not everything you carry is meant to feed you- Why some seasons look empty but are not dying- Why patience is sometimes alive-and sometimes not- Why removal can be preservation- Why clarity does not require drama- Why contribution is often shade, not fruitThere are no systems here. No steps. No personality types. No inspiration.Only structure.Fruit and Tree become two modes of living. Seed, Peel, and Rot become distinctions that clarify effort, waste, and harm. Cutting becomes an act of care, not aggression. Shade becomes legacy without performance.This is not a book about self-improvement.It is a book about perception.By the end, nothing dramatic changes. There is no breakthrough moment. Only this: You may stop arguing with the shape of your life.And that may be enough. This book is part of the "Timeless Wisdom Series", offering insights into spirituality, philosophy, psychology, and self-growth for readers of all ages.
The Mango and the Tree A Way of Seeing When to Wait, When to Cut, and When to Let GoYou have never resented a mango for having a seed.You have never demanded that the peel be edible. You have never expected the fruit to last longer than it does.You accepted its structure without argument.Somewhere along the way, you stopped granting life that same clarity.You began expecting every effort to reward you. Every season to show progress. Every relationship to justify itself. Every delay to mean failure.This book returns to something you already know.Through the quiet metaphor of the mango and the tree, it reframes: - Why not everything you carry is meant to feed you- Why some seasons look empty but are not dying- Why patience is sometimes alive-and sometimes not- Why removal can be preservation- Why clarity does not require drama- Why contribution is often shade, not fruitThere are no systems here. No steps. No personality types. No inspiration.Only structure.Fruit and Tree become two modes of living. Seed, Peel, and Rot become distinctions that clarify effort, waste, and harm. Cutting becomes an act of care, not aggression. Shade becomes legacy without performance.This is not a book about self-improvement.It is a book about perception.By the end, nothing dramatic changes. There is no breakthrough moment. Only this: You may stop arguing with the shape of your life.And that may be enough. This book is part of the "Timeless Wisdom Series", offering insights into spirituality, philosophy, psychology, and self-growth for readers of all ages.
AmazonPagina's: 103, Paperback, Independently published
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