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Loretta La Roche has helped millions of people find ways to lighten up and overcome stress. Now, in Life Is Short—Wear Your Party Pants, she gives you the tools you need to not only reduce feelings of tension, but also to bring joy, passion, and gusto into your life. Her techniques are a brilliant blend of old-world common sense and the most contemporary research in brain chemistry, psychology, and mind-body studies. Loretta gives you dozens of proven techniques for recognizing the ten simple truths that will lead you to an intense, happy, successful life: resilience, living in the moment, optimism, acceptance, humor, creativity, moderation, responsibility, meaning, and connection.
Loretta’s wisdom evolved from her own life—one filled with the demands of being a single mother of three; of starting her own business when she was broke; and of the wacky invasiveness of her Italian family. She’s like all of us: real, flawed, stressed out, and on edge. Her magic comes from an ability to not take herself too seriously, and to always shift her focus away from the self-destructive and toward the truly important things in life.
In her work, Loretta has seen tens of thousands of people who live their lives as if they’re sitting in a waiting room, hoping that their turn comes up next. This book will show you that life is not something to be endured, but is something to be truly appreciated. We need to remember how to access our inner abundance, which allows us to be heart-centered, joy-filled human beings.
As Loretta says: “Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, and today is a gift—that’s why they call it the present.”
I swear, Loretta and I are kindred spirits. In “Wear Your Party Pants”, she tells us that life is something to be enjoyed and savored, not endured. She talks about the “Food Police”, the people who say, “Do you know how many grams that has?” and “Should you be eating that?”
I was once in the grocery store where an elegant lady was holding a package of bacon. She looked at me and said, wistfully, “I used to love bacon.” I asked her if she had a medical condition and couldn’t eat it. She said she didn’t. I think I said something inspirational like, “For God’s sake, lady, have a piece of bacon.”
I’m sure Loretta would have said it better and with more tact, but you get the drift.
The only thing is that people can read about her doing funny and outrageous things and wonder if they could have the courage to do it, too. I think she makes you want to. I think that the average person can read her, laugh, aspire to enjoy everyday life, to use the good china, to have chocolate, to laugh out loud. We don’t have to be stressed out and self-destructive.
Her techniques and “10 Simple Truths” make sense. Loretta looks so happy. We like her