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The Three Boxes of Life and How to Get Out of Them: An Introduction to Life/Work Planning

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Argues that three stages of life--education, work, and retirement--have become three boxes for learning, achievement, and leisure. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Thinking outside the boxes -- a book for a non-linear life

Richard Bolles writes a book that is better than his classic "What Color is Your Parachute?" The three boxes (education, career, and retirement) are re-examined by the master himself. Don't view these three important aspects of your life as part of a linear progression. Eat dessert first! Based on the advice from this book, I re-arranged my life pursuits and priorities. Enjoy !

A good guide, a different perspective

Bolles' What Colour is Your Parachute? has, in the short time since its release, become a classic in how to find a job. The Three Boxes is a related but rather different work. The author takes on the broader issues of life planning, which includes not only career, but also educational and personal planning. In some ways, this book is a rebuttal to the traditional college/career/retirement paradigm by showing that people don't have to (and,for that matter, won't even if they wished to) live their lives in the traditional career path straitjacket. The tone of the work is thoughtful but practical. A lot of self-help oriented material nowadays seems to focus on mustering your potential to achieve your dreams. These works have their place, but they fail to answer a preliminary question--how does one know what one wants from life?The Three Boxes is about the task of actually figuring out what you want, and then implementing what you want. It's remarkably free of needless fluff about the inner person, while filled with practical ideas on "breaking out" of the "traps" of modern career life. This is a book to own. It's an easy and thought-provoking read, presented in light style with interesting graphics.

Still a mind-opener after all these years

I first read this book when it had been out only a few years, and it turned my head around. I had been brought up, like most children of the 'fifties, to think of life as a series of rigidly defined serial roles: first you were a student, then you were a worker, and finally you retired and got to do all the fun things you'd been putting off for the past 40-odd years. Having worked my way through graduate school, and done a bit of traveling in the process, I of course knew how artificial these distinctions were -- but I still tended to feel vaguely guilty about my "immature" lifestyle and rebuke myself for not "settling down" like a Real Grownup was "supposed to." Bolles set me straight -- in fact I was doing a pretty good job of balancing growth, work, and leisure in my life, and had nothing to be ashamed of. My subsequent work history has borne out the wisdom of his advice: I've been happiest and most productive when my life achieves that same balance; the most miserable time of my life was the nine-year period when I succumbed to the siren song of Silicon Valley and became a money-obsessed workaholic. This is a terrific book, and one that bears rereading every few years, especially when you feel your life slipping out of balance.

This book will allow you to build the best lifestyle for you

Remember the Saturday Night Live episode when Eddie Murphy dresses up as a white man, make-up and all. Remember how all the rules would change for him as soon as he "became" white. Well, this book reveals the secrets of the white man, the ins-and-out of the current system. How to gather scholarships, how to look for work, how to still have a life...Richard Bolles helps us all become who we want to be. For example, don't look for work in the paper, look for companies you wish to work for and begin to hunt for the position you really want.

An expert's primer on building a balanced, satisfying life.

In a time when simplifying one's life, finding satisfaction and mission, and creating meaning are dominant issues for baby boomers and gen-x alike, this text is an unerring guide. Bolles patiently walks you through the process of evaluating and considering the roles of learning, working, and playing in your life. Constructing the optimal balance of those roles - the "three boxes" of the title - is up to you, but his guidance provides a starting place. This is a book I re-read, and re-consider, every two or three years.
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