Small, Broke, and Kind of Dirty - Affirmations for the Real World
Hana Shafi
Unabridged
3 horas 4 minutos
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Unabridged
3 horas 4 minutos
Algunos artículos contienen enlaces de afiliados (marcados con un asterisco *). Si hace clic en estos enlaces y compra productos, recibiremos una pequeña comisión sin coste adicional para usted. Su apoyo ayuda a mantener este sitio en funcionamiento y a seguir creando contenidos útiles. Gracias por su apoyo.
De la editorial
Let's get one thing straight: Small, Broke, and Kind of Dirty: Affirmations for the Real World is not a book of advice. You're not going to find a step-by-step guide to meditation here, or even reminders to drink lots of water and get enough sleep. Those things are all good for you, but that's not what Hana Shafi wants to talk about.
Instead, Small, Broke, and Kind of Dirty-built around art from Shafi's popular online affirmation series-focuses on our common and never-ending journey of self-discovery. It explores the ways in which the world can all too often wear us down, and reminds us to remember our worth, even when it's hard to do so. Drawing on her experience as a millennial woman of colour, and writing with humour and a healthy dose of irreverence, Shafi delves into body politics and pop culture, racism and feminism, friendship, and allyship. Through it all, she remains positive without being saccharine, and hopeful without being naive.
So no, this is not an advice book: it's a call to action, one that asks us to remember that we are valid as we are-flaws and all-and to not let the bastards grind us down.
Instead, Small, Broke, and Kind of Dirty-built around art from Shafi's popular online affirmation series-focuses on our common and never-ending journey of self-discovery. It explores the ways in which the world can all too often wear us down, and reminds us to remember our worth, even when it's hard to do so. Drawing on her experience as a millennial woman of colour, and writing with humour and a healthy dose of irreverence, Shafi delves into body politics and pop culture, racism and feminism, friendship, and allyship. Through it all, she remains positive without being saccharine, and hopeful without being naive.
So no, this is not an advice book: it's a call to action, one that asks us to remember that we are valid as we are-flaws and all-and to not let the bastards grind us down.
Book*hug
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