Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide!

How You Can Use Stress to Your Advantage

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Self Help, Self Improvement, Stress Management, Health
Cover of the book Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide! by Theresa Francis-Cheung, Gill Books
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Author: Theresa Francis-Cheung ISBN: 9780717165933
Publisher: Gill Books Publication: April 25, 2002
Imprint: Gill Books Language: English
Author: Theresa Francis-Cheung
ISBN: 9780717165933
Publisher: Gill Books
Publication: April 25, 2002
Imprint: Gill Books
Language: English

There are hundreds of books on stress and stress management, so why read Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide!? Because it’s the only lazy guide!

In other words, it promises that you won’t have to plough through pages and pages of interesting – but often useless – information. You’ll simply get what you need: a quick and easy guide to using your stress to your advantage.

Theresa Francis-Cheung doesn’t endorse the ‘stress is bad for you and must be avoided at all costs’ mantra. Instead, she shows you that you can’t – and indeed shouldn’t – avoid stress: you just need how to handle it instead.

Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide! doesn’t promise you a complete oasis of calm and contentment when you’ve finished reading it, but you will get close to being an expert on keeping your cool when the tension mounts.

The Lazy Person’s Guide! is a series of popular, cheerful yet thoroughly grounded, practical and authoritative books on various health issues and conditions. Other titles in the series include Beating Overeating, Detox, Exercise, Improving Your Memory, Midlife, Quitting Smoking and Self-esteem.

Other books by Theresa Francis-Cheung include Self-esteem: The Lazy Person’s Guide! and Worry: The Root of All Evil.

Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide!: Table of Contents

  1. The many faces of stress
  2. A state of alert
  3. Can you cope?
  4. Calming the body and mind
  5. Eating to beat stress
  6. Keeping fit
  7. Thinking errors
  8. Stress management secrets
  9. Addressing specific stresses
  10. Natural therapies
  11. I can’t go on like this
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

There are hundreds of books on stress and stress management, so why read Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide!? Because it’s the only lazy guide!

In other words, it promises that you won’t have to plough through pages and pages of interesting – but often useless – information. You’ll simply get what you need: a quick and easy guide to using your stress to your advantage.

Theresa Francis-Cheung doesn’t endorse the ‘stress is bad for you and must be avoided at all costs’ mantra. Instead, she shows you that you can’t – and indeed shouldn’t – avoid stress: you just need how to handle it instead.

Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide! doesn’t promise you a complete oasis of calm and contentment when you’ve finished reading it, but you will get close to being an expert on keeping your cool when the tension mounts.

The Lazy Person’s Guide! is a series of popular, cheerful yet thoroughly grounded, practical and authoritative books on various health issues and conditions. Other titles in the series include Beating Overeating, Detox, Exercise, Improving Your Memory, Midlife, Quitting Smoking and Self-esteem.

Other books by Theresa Francis-Cheung include Self-esteem: The Lazy Person’s Guide! and Worry: The Root of All Evil.

Stress: The Lazy Person’s Guide!: Table of Contents

  1. The many faces of stress
  2. A state of alert
  3. Can you cope?
  4. Calming the body and mind
  5. Eating to beat stress
  6. Keeping fit
  7. Thinking errors
  8. Stress management secrets
  9. Addressing specific stresses
  10. Natural therapies
  11. I can’t go on like this

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