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The Slight Edge: Turning Simple Disciplines into Massive Success and Happiness

The Slight Edge: Turning Simple Disciplines into Massive Success and Happiness

byJeff Olson
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Top positive review

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James Rutter
5.0 out of 5 starsThis is how this book changed my life:
Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2014
It could be the shift in our thinking these days or maybe it was always like this. Taking responsibility seems to be less and less of an American trait among adults and, therefore, it will be a less likely trait of our children. As ashamed as I am to admit this, it took me over 30 years to begin to accept responsibility for my actions and for the situations I was at in life. When I did, EVERYTHING CHANGED.

When the switch got flipped for me, I was reading a book a friend suggested: The Slight Edge by Jeff Olson. A week before I began the book, I had just encountered what felt like a devastating blow to my business. My earnings dropped over $3,000 in just two weeks. Things were not going as I had planned. I fell far shy of the goals I had set for myself. All the time and effort I had poured into my business looked as if it had not paid off and I felt like I lost control of where I was going. So I did what most people would do… I blamed everyone except for myself. I starting pointing the finger and saying, “this person didn’t do what they were supposed to do and this person didn’t do that, etc.” To me, there were a bunch of people at fault and none were the person in the mirror.

You know when you lie about something long enough, you start to believe it? Well, it works the same way when you’re blaming others long enough. The more you blame others, the easier it becomes and the more you believe it yourself. You will actually start believing it’s their fault. The problem with that is, it takes the focus off of the one person that can change the circumstances… YOU. The only person you can control is you. You can’t control other people’s actions.

I prayed for things to get back on track. I expected God to just make it easy for me and reward me for the work I had already done. Well, He answered my prayers in a very clever way. He decided to answer them by forcing me to grow personally. He used the book I mentioned above. I received many great messages from that book, but if I read the book and only got this one thing out of it, it was worth the entire read. The one thing was a quote by John Burroughs that changed my life and it came right when I needed it. It read, “A man can fail many times, but he isn’t a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.” I posted it at the beginning of this post and now I’ll post it again below. It’s that important.

A man can fail many times, but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.

That quote hit my like a ton of bricks in the face. The entire week before reading that quote I had blamed everyone else for what was happening with MY business. In fact, my entire life before reading that quote I had blamed others for my circumstances. I blamed student loan companies for requiring such high payments. I blamed my law school for raising prices after I had already been attending. I did the same with my undergraduate college. I blamed my job for not paying me enough and putting me in a tough situation financially. No one had been given a raise in over 5 years because my employer was near broke and didn’t know how to manage money and because of that, I paid for it… literally.

My entire life was a huge blame game until I read that quote. It changed everything for me. It’s so simple that most people won’t even see the power in its truth. Here’s the simple breakdown: I have failed many times… MANY times. You learn through failure. It’s a part of life. You show me someone who has never failed and I will show you someone who has never been successful. You reach success through failing. Although I have failed many times, I am NOT a failure. I will never be one and, therefore, I will never blame somebody else for my circumstances.

I look at blaming as a form of whining now. Whenever I see someone post on social media or hear them complain about their jobs, how much debt their in, their horrible co-workers, their family, etc. I only see how much they are whining and that their focus is on everything except what it needs to be on to change things… themselves.

HERE’S THE GOOD NEWS
"The superior man blames himself. The inferior man blames others." - Don ShulaNo matter where you come from, no matter what situation you are in, no matter how bad of a hand you feel that life has dealt you, it’s your fault. The first time I heard a friend say that, the quote above popped in my head. He’s was right. IT IS YOUR FAULT. The good news? Well, YOU can do something about it. That’s right… YOU can and only you can. It’s a decision. That’s what it boils down to; a simple decision. You either are or you’re not going to take responsibility for your circumstances.

Here’s what happened to me when I took full responsibility for my actions. I bounced back. Not only did my business get back to where it was, but it far surpassed it. Soon I was earning in two weeks what I was previously earning in one month. Not only that, I was helping other people do the same. I eliminated over $100,000 of student loan and credit card debt in under two years. My wife and I paid for our wedding in cash. We more than replaced my salary in under a year’s time and we have given ourselves the opportunity for complete time freedom for the rest of our lives. It was as simple as making a decision to turn the finger around and point it at myself. It was as simple as that.

There’s a glaring truth in the book and I’ve posted it below. We are on one of two paths in life. Which one are you on?

“If you want to measure where you are, if you want to know whether you’re on the success curve or on the failure curve, or if you want to assess anyone else and determine which curve they’re on, here’s how. There is one attitude, one state of mind, which overwhelmingly predominates either side of the curve. The predominant state of mind displayed by those people on the failure curve is blame. The predominant state of mind displayed by those people on the success curve is responsibility.” – The Slight Edge

http://sparkinginterests.wordpress.com/2014/10/19/i-have-good-news-for-you-its-your-fault/
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Top critical review

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McDonald Madhouse
3.0 out of 5 starsMissing pages
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2022
As a book this rates way up there. Life changing. But I had gotten a copy at the library and the one I bought first of all cost $8 more than the jacket price and secondly is missing pages. Super disappointing when the page ends on and, and that's all there is. New chapter starts on the next page. Also 2 random chapters in the middle are totally in italics. Seems weird considering it's not throughout the book. Not sure whats up with this copy or this edition, but I would buy this book elsewhere if I were you.
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From the United States

Guardian 304
1.0 out of 5 stars Too repetitive and long-winded
Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2015
Verified Purchase
I have to agree with the few reviews that point out how long-winded this book is. Let me save you some money and summarize for you:

There is no magic bullet. Success is achieved by repeating small disciplines and taking small, ever-increasing steps.

The basic message and practical instruction in this book could have been condensed into about 10 pages and have been no less powerful. Instead every chapter is basically a repetition of the same thing, with endless anecdotes about well known and not so well known people and how they have applied the principles. I managed to read diligently up to about chapter 5, when I finally caught on that I was being sold the same thing in different words or from a slightly different angle in just about every chapter.

Hint: if you have read/watched anything by the likes of Jim Rohn or Brian Tracy, this book will offer you nothing new.

Moral of the story: if you want to change your life, start today. It starts with one pushup that becomes two tomorrow. One dollar invested instead of spent on nonsense. One healthy meal instead of the junk you usually eat. Show up, repeat and grow.

That's the Slight Edge. Good luck.
1,121 people found this helpful
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Emily Wood
1.0 out of 5 stars SO Repetitive
Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2020
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I heard such great things about this book but was really disappointed. It’s full of common sense knowledge that any common sense adult already knows. There are some great points, but then they’re repeated 20 different ways along with a dozen related analogies and quotes. Everything that’s taught in this book could be fit into 10 pages - make small choices every day that better yourself. Read 10 pages of a good book every day, get 15 minutes of exercise, and make healthy food choices every chance you get. I was hoping for more ideas on ways to actually practice the slight edge he speaks about, but these three points are the only ones that are made in the entire book! Finished it on a plane ride recently and laughed when I realized it was left in the seat back pocket on my way out. Hopefully someone else picks it up and gets more use out of it than me.
5 people found this helpful
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adam c mager
1.0 out of 5 stars Way too repetitive!
Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2015
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I've read about a quarter through the book and the repetitiveness is killing me! I keep reading hoping that there will be anything other than what was already mentioned. Here's literally the whole book, the "Slight Edge" is basically just using simple practices every day over time that will eventually lead you to success... Boom, there's ur whole book! Now I read many books on self improvement and understandably there we be repeated information but this book takes it to a whole other level. Now you might be wondering why is this book is so highly rated if the book sucks, well I suspect that it's because the "Slight Edge" is very valuable information and essential to success... It's just that the book could've been about half the size. This is my first book review cuz I felt compelled to save you money and time. I suggest that you read the "Compound Effect" by author Darren Hardy. This basically talks about the exact same thing but provides much less repetitiveness and loaded with quality information and is well written.
20 people found this helpful
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Shantanu Mishra
1.0 out of 5 stars Endlessly repetitive and Useless
Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2017
Verified Purchase
Save yourself the time and the money, there is nothing life changing here. Every other self-help book says these things in 2 chapters what took Jeff a whole book. It is endlessly repetitive, all he really says is work hard and getting good at something takes a long time. Mastery by Robert Greene is a much better book to learn that same lesson.

He just uses the words "Slight edge" to justify why only 5% people are successful without every quantifying or caring to elaborate on what exactly he means by slight edge. If you are at absolute rock bottom of your life and have never read a self-help book then yes this book might have some value for you but even then there are better contenders which more bang for your time and money.
173 people found this helpful
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SashaAKAAlexander
1.0 out of 5 stars Ignore the ratings above 3 stars
Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2019
Verified Purchase
The Slight Edge lacks real analysis. Throughout the entire book you can expect the same success stories repackaged repeatedly, with little application. When the author has opportunities to make insightful thoughts and conclusions, he uses his own coined term, the slight edge, to the point that it feels like he is taking credit for other peoples ideas that were dead before he was born. The constant use of the term, slight edge, will likely leave you feeling annoyed given it's excessive use. If you still choose to read this book, reading the essential points at the end of each chapter is almost enough to convey all the dragged on, unoriginal ideas he attempts to present.
15 people found this helpful
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Maki
1.0 out of 5 stars Everyone wants to be life coach
Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2019
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Poorly written, regurgitating many other authors, discussing his various successes and failures in life... He should get facts before writing about something . He gives an example of Michael Phelps "having slight edge" in Olympic games in Beijing. However Omega timing system confirmed Cavic touched TouchPad first "but not hard enough", so it is very wrong to give that example. He wants to use various therapeutic techniques, but has no education in that area which is evident. So he quotes other authors that had slight idea what they were talking about. Everyone wants to be"life coach" these days.
5 people found this helpful
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elizabeth bradford floyd
1.0 out of 5 stars Long winded and full of platitudes.
Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2017
Verified Purchase
Long winded and full of platitudes. This book could have been a wonderful book if it was smaller and not so rambling. I bought this for a friend for xmas, looked through it and realized that she would die of boredom! I am returning it, but I am being charged $4.98 for shipping, this makes me hate this book even more. I am being punished for being interested in the book and then realizing that it is not what I had in mind.
9 people found this helpful
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C. Comer
1.0 out of 5 stars Simplistic to a fault
Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2015
Verified Purchase
This is a really bad book on so many levels. The writing is intellectually shallow and just plain random. And, how many ways can the writer find to say 'work hard, every day'. That's pretty much the main and only message of the book... that's the extent of it. I couldn't finish it (made it to chapter 6).

On a relevant side note, a bit of searching online about the author and his previous companies and current company (and its products and marketing methods) added to my distaste for the book.
22 people found this helpful
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EPP
1.0 out of 5 stars Two thumbs down from momma
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2014
Verified Purchase
I purchased this for my mom as a Christmas gift. My thought was to get her a book that offered encouragement. By reading the back of this book I felt it would be a great book for her. Well, she was not happy with it. She states he is redundant, and who wants to read the same thing over and over...? She read the first 40 pages and asked if she could give it back to me.
I think I will give this away and get her a Joel Osteen book instead.
9 people found this helpful
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milo
1.0 out of 5 stars Ink is very light
Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2021
Verified Purchase
the ink is very light and difficult to read due to the lightness of the ink
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