If you’re ready to surpass your current upper limit of happiness, success, health, or love, The Big Leap book by Gay Hendricks will show you how. (Kinda.)
Watch here:
How to Stop Hitting Your Upper Limit with The Big Leap (Book Summary) Click To Tweet“It’s like as soon as one thing starts going well…something else falls apart!”
How many times have you said this? For me… countless times.
When it came to money, love, fun…something was always keeping me under the threshold. That’s why when I was introduced to The Big Leap, I lapped it up.
So in today’s YouTube video I’m sharing something of a book summary of The Big Leap. It’s a long one, but we’re going to jump into juicy things like:
- What an “upper limit problem” is
- The 4 questions to ask yourself to test your own upper limits
- The 4 most common barriers to success and happiness
- The 4 “zones” we live in, and how to live in your Zone of Genius
- And how to get past your upper limit by increasing your tolerance for happiness and success
It’s definitely a listen-while-you-do-chores kind of video. 😉
Scroll up to watch ot head on over to YT to check it out now!
free tools to get your started
If you would like some more practical tools in terms on how to master your mindset definitely make sure you check out my free mindset training Bottlenecks to Breakthroughs. This is going to teach you the only 5 areas that you need to be addressing in order to up-level your mindset so that you can up-level your business and ultimately up-level your life.
These were the missing pieces for me from this book. Because I already had those pieces, I feel like I got so much more out of this book, but this does not have as many of those practical pieces. I was still confused when I read this book, but when I applied what I had already been learning and took those 5 pieces and applied it to this… that’s when things went to the next level.
So if you haven’t grabbed that free training yet, you can learn more here or grab it by clicking the button below.
What about you, boss lady?
What are your experiences with “upper limits”?
Scroll to leave your comments below!