EBOOK

The Long Fuse - Why the Buddha Never Took Aspirin

Thejendra SreenivasSeries: Executive Self Help Novel
(0)
Pages
47
Year
2012
Language
English

About

Q: What is this book about?A: The Long Fuse: Why the Buddha Never Took Aspirin is a practical and reflective personal development book about emotional resilience, anger, stress, and unnecessary suffering. It explores you get upset, irritated, disappointed, or exhausted by other people's behaviors, and how to stop reacting in ways that damage your peace of mind.Q: Why does the book mention aspirin and the Buddha?A: Aspirin symbolizes our modern habit of treating emotional stress as a medical problem, while the Buddha represents inner calm and self-mastery. The book uses this contrast to show that much of your daily stress is self-created, and therefore avoidable, if you change how you think, react, and seek validation.Q: What core problem does this book address?A: The book addresses your constant need for appreciation, approval, and recognition, and how this silent dependency makes you angry, disappointed, and emotionally fragile. It explains why expecting gratitude, fairness, or good behavior from everyone is one of the biggest sources of frustration in modern life.Q: Is this a spiritual or religious book?A: No. While it draws inspiration from timeless wisdom, the book is practical, psychological, and grounded in everyday situations. It focuses on real workplace stress, difficult people, criticism, temper, resentment, and emotional exhaustion, without religious preaching or abstract philosophy.Q: What will I learn from this book?A: You will learn how to stop seeking appreciation from everyone, manage your temper, handle criticism intelligently, understand why certain people irritate you so much, let go of grudges, and respond calmly instead of reacting emotionally. You will also learn simple habits that help you remain balanced under pressure.Q: How does this book help with anger and irritation?A: It shows how anger is often fueled by expectations, ego, and emotional attachment rather than real harm. The book teaches you how to lengthen your "emotional fuse," so minor insults, criticism, or disappointments no longer trigger stress, rage, or bitterness.Q: Who is this book for?A: For professionals, employees, managers, caregivers, and anyone who feels stressed, unappreciated, easily irritated, or emotionally drained by people and situations. It is especially useful for readers who are tired of carrying resentment, anger, or disappointment into their daily lives.Q: What is the main takeaway of the book?A: That peace of mind does not come from changing people, receiving appreciation, or being treated fairly-it comes from changing how you interpret events and control your reactions. When you stop wearing the invisible "make me feel special" hat, life becomes lighter, calmer, and far less painful. Thejendra Sreenivas is a Technology manager with nearly 28+ years of experience in the IT industry handling a variety of technical roles & projects. He is also an Author and Life Skills coach. He offers personalized coaching in Self-Publishing, Financial Literacy, IT Asset Management, and various Self-Improvement concepts. He has also written 20+ mild & wild books on a number of subjects. His inspiration for writing unique books comes from Toni Morrison who said, "If there is a book that you want to read, but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it."Please visit his web cave - www.thejendra.com for details of his books, articles and coaching information. The Executive Self Help Novel is a series of short non-fiction books on business management, leadership, inspirational, motivational and self-improvement topics. Each book is an imaginary discussion between a retired professor who thinks unconventionally and a corporate executive who thinks like the crowd. This is a unique professor who thinks, "What is popular may not be right, and what is right may not be popular."Most self-help books are normally written in a textbook or step-by-step guide format. But these books are written like a novel in a conversational style with inter

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