Category Archives: BOOKS

Building Your Empowered Steps Virtual Book Tour

Building Your Empowered Step

Building Your Empowered Step cover

Nonfiction

Date Published:  05-01-2018

Publisher: Phenomenal One Press

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png
 

 

Our way of thinking about your ability to change and your worth in reaching
for it through active exercises and simple bites that when taken can guide
you in building your dreams and aspirations, one step at a time.

 

 

 

 

Conference Workshop for the Book 

 

Building Your Empowered Steps tablet

Building Your Empowered Steps

By LM Preston

Empowered Steps Series

Excerpt

Building Your Empowered Steps paperback

Key Triggers That Change Your Perception

Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.” – Albert Einstein

 

The experiences in our lives, our environmental noise and conditioning, all contribute to our perception of the world around us. It’s how people who live in other places of the world find peace and joy in things we may find repulsive or depressing.

  • Are you ready to assess your current perceptions about your environment, your life, and what contributes to your perception of them? 
  • Get out and explore the diverse views of others by meeting new people, going different places, and even watching videos on others’ opinions of experiences that you are interested in exploring. Listen with open ears so that you understand others’ point of view. Ponder on what people with different perspectives share, and think how it can relate to your personal interests. Absorb the things you find valuable and discard information you don’t want to compromise on or don’t find helpful.
  • When you find perceptions that call to you, that you want to experience for yourself, write them in your journal to do further discovery. Find others who are living that perspective; observe, and emulate them.

 

Perspective.

Your attitude in response to your perception of the world around you.

 

It is the way we view the world. The thing about perspective: it is a powerful way to manipulate our emotional and responsive make-up towards our current environment or situation.

Controlling perspective can be done from internal thoughts, feelings, responses, or external peer pressure, interpretation of circumstances, and voices from others. 

The mind is a powerful and underutilized tool that we were gifted with. When we realize that we are the owners of our thoughts, we are free to fill our thoughts with what feeds us. If we used our minds to change our perspective, then our experiences in life will gain us peace and contentment or motivate us to move forward like never before.

For instance, I grew up poor. My mother had to work three jobs and get aid, yet in my mind, we were rich. I was satisfied in a way that I don’t think I would have understood or accepted if I was an adult. I didn’t even feel as though my parents should be married because I was happy with the one-on-one time I got to spend with either of them during my allotted visitation time. It wasn’t until I was older, a teenager, that I questioned this perception. After understanding that many shows on TV had two parents—a mom and dad who lived together—I started to wonder if the definition of family I had wasn’t the ‘right’ form of family.

The influences that changed my positive perspective of family came from external sources. Therefore, that perspective change seriously impacted my emotional wellbeing. It made me ashamed of my family circumstances, and I took on sadness associated with that. At that time, I never realized that what I considered a contented existence wasn’t considered a happy existence by the majority of the world.

 

About the Author

L.M. Preston

L.M. Preston, a native of Washington, DC. An avid reader, she loved to
create poetry and short-stories as a young girl. She is an author, an
engineer, a professor, a mother and a wife. Her passion for writing and
helping others to see their potential through her stories and encouragement
has been her life’s greatest adventures.She loves to write while on
the porch watching her kids play or when she is traveling, which is another
passion that encouraged her writing.

 

Contact Links 

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Blog

Goodreads

Pinterest

Instagram

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

iBooks

Smashwords

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on Building Your Empowered Steps Virtual Book Tour

Filed under BOOKS

Defcon Blitz

Defcon banner

 

Defcon cover

Thriller

Date Published:  April 7, 2023

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

Compared to James Patterson and a name to watch, Packard was recently
awarded for her last novel – “Counterintelligence is one of the
year’s top political thrillers” by BestThrillers.

 

Buckle your seat belt and get ready for another rocket-fast thriller!

 

America’s top operative, Matti Baker, is launching an all out war in
this fast-paced, psychological, political thriller.

There is one quality that is unique to the human
species…GREED.

Enlisting the help of the President and her team, Matti Baker fights to
defend the hope for a world without chronic illness. No more cancer, no more
diabetes…if only she can stay alive long enough to reproduce her
genesis. But working against her is greed in every form. While conspiracies
abound, and time is short, the crosshairs are on her.

Baker is sacrificing all and doing what others are unwilling to do.
She’s serving justice.

Freedom comes at a cost. And Matti Baker is ready to pay the price as she
launches her own version of DEFCON.

The countdown has started.

 

DEFCON is a multi-layered, heart-pounding, thought-provoking, realistic
thriller in the ongoing AESOP series.

 

About the Author

Michele Packard

Award-winning author, Michele Packard, comes from a military family and
worked as a cable tv executive before staying at home to raise her three
children. She has written in both the fiction and non-fiction genres,
utilizing her experiences and wit to share stories with others. Her family
calls her “AESOP” as she tends to exaggerate. A lot. Packard grew
up watching her father read Patterson, Child, Flynn, Clancy, and Woods and
soon developed a penchant for conspiracy theories with strong protagonists
in the psychological, political, and military thriller genres. Her books
tend to lean heavy on sarcasm as she intertwines current and historical
events for thought-provoking stories. Recently deemed as one of the top
political thrillers of the year and a name to watch. She’s loving
every minute of it.

She is a frequent traveler with her husband and is the primary caretaker of
the family’s beloved two labs.

 

Contact Links

Website

Instagram

Bookbub

Purchase Links

Amazon

Kobo

iBooks

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on Defcon Blitz

Filed under BOOKS

Particles in the Air Blitz

Particles in the Air banner

 

Particles in the Air cover

A Dr. Mallory Hayes Medical Thriller

 

Thriller, Medical Thriller

Date Published: January 2023

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

In the wake of a natural disaster, a new pandemic is unleashed…

 

Dr. Mallory Hayes, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
medical investigator, is a committed physician and researcher quietly
battling height and air-flight anxiety. When a tsunami devastates the
coast of Southern California, the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) establishes a camp to house the tens of thousands of people
displaced by the disaster, and the Army is brought in to provide medical
services.

Mallory is dispatched to the camp by the CDC to prevent the potential
spread of disease from contaminated water. What she discovers is far worse
than anything she could have imagined—an accelerated HIV-like virus,
and a common, everyday microbe, are proving to be extremely deadly.

 

Particles in the Air is a shockingly realistic tale only an immunologist
could write—a tense, high-concept thriller meant to appeal to fans
of A.G Riddle, Michael Crichton, Terry Hayes, Richard Preston, and
others.

 

 

 About the Author

Jenna Podjasek, MD

Jenna Podjasek, MD, is an Allergist/Immunologist who trained at Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

She lives with her husband, two children, and numerous pets in the
suburbs of Chicago, Illinois.

PARTICLES IN THE AIR is her first novel (more to come!).

Follow Dr. Podjasek on Twitter @JennaPodjasek and Instagram at
@JennaPodjasekauthor.

 

Contact Links

Website

Twitter

Instagram

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

B&N

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on Particles in the Air Blitz

Filed under BOOKS

KidVenture: There’s No Plan Like No Plan Virtual Book Tour

KidVenture: There's No Plan Like No Plan banner

KidVenture: There's No Plan Like No Plan cover

KidVenture Vol. 2

 

Middle Grade Fiction

Date Published: 02-23-2022

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

 

Chance & Addie are back for a new adventure. Riding high off of the
success of their first business, they decide to launch a new venture, this
time shoveling snowy driveways in the winter. They are full of confidence:
they have a team of kids, a shed full of shovels, repeat customers, and,
best of all, a great plan. But sometimes the perfect plan can get in the way
of adapting to something as fickle as the weather. Will they learn to be
flexible and figure how to make this new venture work? They’re losing money
fast as new challenges pile up faster than the falling snow. Perhaps a
curious new partner can show them the way.

KidVenture stories are business adventures where kids figure out how to
market their company, understand risk, and negotiate. Each chapter ends with
a challenge, including business decisions, ethical dilemmas and
interpersonal conflict for young readers to wrestle with. As the story
progresses, the characters track revenue, costs, profit margin, and other
key metrics which are explained in simple, fun ways that tie into the
story.

 

KidVenture: There's No Plan Like No Plan tablet
EXCERPT

I ordered a chocolate milk and a cookie. I know it wasn’t terribly professional of me to be drinking chocolate milk at my first official meeting with an investor, but I couldn’t resist. It’s chocolate milk. Who doesn’t love chocolate milk? And Dad was paying.

 

Ok so it wasn’t exactly an official meeting. Not really. I knew that Dad met weekly with Mr. Dubois at the coffee shop to go over the progress of their venture. I asked Dad if I could come along and at first he said no, but after much pleading and begging he finally agreed, but only if I could sit quietly during the meeting as they had important things to talk about. And then he offered to get me a cookie and chocolate milk, assuming that would keep me occupied and quiet.

 

Mr. Dubious arrived in a huff, quickly declared he was sorry he was late, plunked his briefcase down on the table and hurried to order his coffee, but not before shooting me a what-are-you-doing- here look. He returned a moment later with a tiny coffee cup. It looked like it held just a couple of sips, really one decent gulp. Yet he managed to sip at it throughout the meeting, gripping it fussily with his index finger and thumb, while his other fingers fanned out as if to announce to the world, “not now, go away.” His eyebrows had grown angrier since the last time I saw him. They were blacker, bigger, meaner and closed ranks into an impenetrable wall every time he took a sip of his espresso.

 

I tried to follow the conversation as best I could, but I have to admit I was pulled away by my cookie. There was a big chunk of macadamia in the middle. Who likes macadamia? If you ask me, it’s just an excuse to not put more chocolate chips into the cookie.

 

So at first I was eating around the giant nut strategically, thinking I’d just leave it on my plate when I was done. But then I realized there was a nice chunk of chocolate next to it, so about halfway through I switched gears and decided to nibble at the macadamia, and mix a bite of nut with a bit of chocolate and so, yes, maybe I

did get a little distracted and didn’t quite catch everything they said.

 

I did hear them talk about stock options and pricing models and cost basis and something about a vesting period, which I assumed meant they were supposed to wear vests for a certain amount of time, though I’m not sure why. I made a mental note to ask Dad about it later.

 

The meeting was over before I knew it. I hadn’t even finished the cookie! There was still a half-eaten chunk of macadamia left on the plate, taunting me. Everything I had planned to say to Mr.

Dubious went out the window.

“Wait!” I exclaimed, just as Mr. Dubious was standing to leave. He turned to me, his two eyebrows moving like searchlights to find the culprit who had disrupted his exit.

“Can I ask you something,” I said nervously. “Mr. Doobie—” I started to call him Mr. Dubious, realized my mistake as the word was coming out, tried to switch to Mr. Dubois and instead ended up calling him Dr. Doobie. Not a great start to my sales pitch.

He just nodded.

“Mr. Dubois,” I said, regaining my composure, making sure to pronounce his name as flawlessly as I could.

“Yes, that is my name,” he said flatly, shooting a questioning look at my father.

“I have a proposal,” I said, speeding up, realizing I didn’t have a lot of time. “Look, you’re obviously busy and I don’t want to waste your time.”

“Yes, let’s not waste my time.”

“I was wondering if you wanted to invest in my new company.”

He just stared at me. If it was possible for his eyebrows to jump off his face and strangle me, I’m sure they would have.

“It’s a…a…a new business.” I needed to focus and stay calm. I resolved to look at the spot on the wall above his head so I wouldn’t get intimidated.

“It’s a snow shoveling business. We’re going to make a lot of

money. And I wanted to…uh” I made the mistake of looking back down at him. I quickly looked back up at the spot on the wall. “…and I wanted to give you the opportunity to participate in this great, um, opportunity.”

 

Mr. Dubious smiled widely. I couldn’t tell if he was smiling because he liked the idea, or if he was smiling in anticipation of the bloodbath that was to come. It was hard to get a good read on him, between glancing at him and the spot on the wall above his head.

 

“What makes it a great opportunity?” he asked. Dubiously, I might add.

“Because we already did it once,” I said, mustering the courage to look him in the eye. “Over the summer, with our pool cleaning business. It’s the same idea, only for winter. So there’s really no risk, because you know I can do this.”

“How do I know you can do this?” The smile, if anything, widened. “Because I’ve already done it once before.”

“And how do I know it wasn’t just luck?”

“Luck!” I practically shouted. Now I was offended. “It wasn’t luck. You wouldn’t say that, not if you saw how hard I worked.”

“You can work hard all day digging a ditch,” Mr. Dubious said calmly. “That doesn’t mean it’s a good idea.”

“But…but…”

 

I couldn’t think of what to say. I was literally speechless. I had rehearsed my pitch to Mr. Dubious over and over again in front of the bathroom mirror, trying to anticipate what he’d say. I thought he would ask me questions like how many people we had on the crew and if we had shovels. You know, real questions. Important stuff. Not this luck stuff.

 

“But we have a plan,” I said, regaining my footing. “A real plan. It’s a good plan. Want to see it?”

 

About the Author

Steve Searfoss

I wrote my first KidVenture book after years of making up stories to teach
my kids about business and economics. Whenever they’d ask how something
works or why things were a certain way, I would say, “Let’s pretend you
have a business that sells…” and off we’d go. What would start as a
simple hypothetical to explain a concept would become an adventure spanning
several days as my kids would come back with new questions which would spawn
more plot twists. Rather than give them quick answers, I tried to create
cliffhangers to get them to really think through an idea and make the
experience as interactive as possible.

I try to bring that same spirit of fun, curiosity and challenge to each
KidVenture book. That’s why every chapter ends with a dilemma and a
set of questions. KidVenture books are fun for kids to read alone, and even
more fun to read together and discuss. There are plenty of books where kids
learn about being doctors and astronauts and firefighters. There are hardly
any where they learn what it’s like to run small business. KidVenture
is different. The companies the kids start are modest and simple, but the
themes are serious and important.

I’m an entrepreneur who has started a half dozen or so businesses and
have had my share of failures. My dad was an entrepreneur and as a kid I
used to love asking him about his business and learning the ins and outs of
what to do and not do. Mistakes make the best stories — and the best
lessons. I wanted to write a business book that was realistic, where you get
to see the characters stumble and wander and reset, the way entrepreneurs do
in real life. Unlike most books and movies where business is portrayed as
easy, where all you need is one good idea and the desire to be successful,
the characters in KidVenture find that every day brings new problems to
solve.

raised eyebrows

“I don’t invest in plans, Young Mr. Sterling.” And just like that, the smile went away. “I invest in people. Show me you can do this twice, and then it starts to get interesting.”

 

He nodded curtly at my dad and then hurried out the shop. I looked down at my cookie but had lost all interest in nibbling at the chocolate riding the big nut.

 

As we drove home, I was sure my dad would be mad at me for jumping on Mr. Dubious like that, when I was supposed to sit quietly and just listen. But he wasn’t.

“I’m proud of you Son.”

“You are?” It always takes me by surprise when he says that. “Why?”

“For asking Mr. Dubois to invest.” “But wasn’t it pretty much a disaster?” My dad chuckled.

“I can’t believe I called him Mr. Doobie.”

My dad laughed. “It’s going to be hard to sit in a meeting now and not think of him as Mr. Doobie.”

“Sorry Dad.”

He looked over at me and smiled widely. I’m glad he was amused. “A real disaster.”

“Well, maybe,” he said. “But what matters is you spoke up for yourself. Mr. Dubois can be a hard guy to talk to, I know.” “You do?” It had never occurred to me that perhaps those meetings with Mr. Dubois were hard for my dad too.

“He’s tough, no nonsense,” my dad continued. “You really have to have all your ducks in a row before you talk to him. He always seems to ask the one thing you didn’t prepare for…” my dad trailed off.

 

We drove around quietly for a few more blocks. I thought the conversation had receded into the rear view mirror. Then my dad spoke again. “But you know, I love meeting with Mr. Dubois. He keeps me sharp. I always come out of those meetings smarter.”

 

As my dad pulled into the driveway, I tried to think about why it bothered me so much that Mr. Dubious had been so dismissive of my new venture. It really bugged me and I couldn’t figure out why. I followed my dad into the house as he hugged my mom and played peek-a-boo with my baby brother.

 

I think maybe I wanted Mr. Dubois’ approval because he respected my dad.

 

 

 

What do you think Mr. Dubois meant when he said he doesn’t invest in plans, he invests in people?

 

Is this a great opportunity?

 

Would you invest in Chance’s new venture?

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Goodreads

Pinterest

Instagram

 

Purchase Link

Amazon

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on KidVenture: There’s No Plan Like No Plan Virtual Book Tour

Filed under BOOKS

That Sucked. Now What? Virtual Book Tour

That Sucked. Now What? banner

That Sucked. Now What? cover

Nonfiction

Date Published: 01-01-2023

Publisher: Hay House

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png
 

 

The Brave Table podcast host offers a practical five-stage framework to
embrace the possibilities in chaos, normalize sucky human moments, overcome
setbacks with grace, and fly forward every time.

You know those awful, terrible, sucker-punch moments in life? The ones that
knock you down, burn you up, or make you cringe so hard you wish it was all
a bad dream? Probably–because we all do. These epic, messy,
oh-no-oh-crap moments of chaos are just part of life–yet, as Dr. Neeta
Bhushan shows us, they’re also beautiful opportunities for change.

As co-founder of the Global Grit Institute, a mental health training
platform for leaders and coaches, co-founder of the Dharma Coaching
Institute, training thousands to live their best lives, and a thriving coach
in her own right, Neeta Bhushan has helped thousands of people move past
their heartbreaks, failures, and disappointments. And after years of
research into human behavior, observing people in their worst and best
moments, being a mother of two small children, and failing more than a few
times herself, Neeta knows what it takes to get back up no matter what
bowled you over.

That Sucked, Now What? is a real-talk guide to personal growth that draws
on and embraces the suck–and helps you break through to lasting,
audacious resilience. You’ll learn why it’s so hard to get back up when
stuff goes down, how four core components of your life shape your individual
Bounce Factor, and how to navigate the five stages of the Fly Forward
framework through Falling, Igniting, Rising, Magnifying, and on to Thriving.
Along the way, Neeta shares successes and failures of her own, from the
wonderful to the WTF, in an indispensable book to pull off the shelf
whenever life serves up a setback, no matter the size.

 

Praise for That Sucked. Now What?

 

“If you’re someone who feels that life just isn’t going
your way, read this book. Dr. Neeta lays out actionable tools for overcoming
obstacles and building your resiliency so you can get that extra push toward
your dream.”
 

— Vishen Lakhiani, New York Times best-selling author of The Buddha
& the Badass

 

That Sucked. Now What? tablet
 

 

About the Author

Dr. Neeta Bhushan

Dr. Neeta Bhushan is a cosmetic dentist turned three-time international
best-selling author and world-renowned emotional health advocate. She is
also the founder of Global Grit Institute, a wellness education platform for
optimizing well-being, and co-founder of Dharma Coaching Institute, a
coaching organization training coaches to become the highest versions of
themselves. Neeta has shared her thought leadership on grit and resilience
on international stages and as the host of her top-rated podcast, The Brave
Table.

After realizing how trapped she felt running the million-dollar dental
practice she built, Neeta embarked on a journey that led her across 45
countries as she researched the intersection of human behavior, ancient
wisdom, Eastern philosophy, and therapeutic psychology. That knowledge,
along with other life experiences overcoming multiple adversities, which
include being orphaned at a young age, surviving an abusive marriage, and
extensive loss, contributed to the powerful message of resilience she shares
in this book. Neeta is a mother of two and currently lives in Austin, Texas,
with her husband and children.

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Instagram

YouTube

 

Purchase Link

Amazon

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on That Sucked. Now What? Virtual Book Tour

Filed under BOOKS