How many days have you been on this earth? How many days
might you have left? How are you going to spend each one of those? Robert D.
Smith raises many good questions and offers some real food for thought in his debut book, 20,000 Days and Counting. The
title comes from the event that started Smith on this journey: he was curious
how many days he had been alive and typed in his birthday to a counter. He
decided that he would celebrate the next big milestone, and that was 20,000
days. His way of celebrating was to check himself into one of the world’s best
hotels (he doesn't say which one) and plan out his next
20,000 days (I guess he plans on living well into his hundreds). The rest of
the book comes from that plan with chapter titles such as: Motivation Is a Myth, You Only Have Two Choices,
Focusing Your Morning Vision, Doing What You Know, How to Conquer Rejection
Forever.
First of all, I’ll say that this book was an easy and enjoyable
read—short easy-to-read sentences, lots of interesting quotes, and good
stories. The academic in me always feels a bit cheated if a book hasn't punished me a
little, and while I was reading this short book I didn't feel like I was
working out the ‘ol intellect too much. Many of his points were familiar to me; much of the advice seemed somewhat obvious. So this wasn't one of those works I
see destined for literary greatness. However, it won’t get out of my head, so
Smith has done something special here. He has written a book that will stick
with you and make you rethink your life and how you live it. How many days have
I wasted? How will I use my remaining days on earth? What does this mean for my
day? These are questions I have been thinking about ever since I finished the
book.
Thankfully, Mr. Smith doesn't just give us a longer version of "Live Like You Are Dying" or "Live each day as if it where your last." He actually addresses this approach and says that it's impractical. So, while he is delivering thoughts on an old topic, he is giving it a somewhat new twist.
He also talks
about his good friend Andy Andrews a lot (he is a promoter for Andrews), so at first it
seem like he was still on the clock or either name-dropping to give his work
credibility. After listening to an interview with Robert D. I have come to understand that he has dedicated years of hard work in the service of others, especially Andy Andrews, while writing and promoting his own material has never been on his radar. So I suppose it only makes sense for him to talk about what and who he knows.
It is a very quick read, and well worth the time. All in all 3 1/2 out of 5 stars. I would also add that Mr. Smith has a counter on the home page of his website [here] where you can see how many days you have been alive. At the time of this edit (8/18/14) I have been alive 13,060 days.
It is a very quick read, and well worth the time. All in all 3 1/2 out of 5 stars. I would also add that Mr. Smith has a counter on the home page of his website [here] where you can see how many days you have been alive. At the time of this edit (8/18/14) I have been alive 13,060 days.
If you have read 20,000 Days and Counting, I would love to hear your thoughts. If you have not, at least do yourself the favor of "number[ing] your days" and asking yourself how many of those days did you spend doing something important--something that would effect lives.
Thomas Nelson Publishers and Booksneeze.com gave me a
free copy of this book in exchange for an unbiased review.
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