Use All the Crayons!: The Colorful Guide to Simple Human Happiness - Softcover

Rodell, Chris

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9781469709420: Use All the Crayons!: The Colorful Guide to Simple Human Happiness

Synopsis

Chris Rodell likes to consult with a five-year-old anytime he needs a reminder as to what is important in life. In his uplifting, humorous, and spiritual guidebookUse All the Crayons, Rodell encourages others to become universally happy by becoming more colorful, interesting, and, most importantly, fun! Rodell insists that colorful people are invited to the coolest parties; with that goal in mind, he presents over five hundred tips and entertaining, Dale Carnegie-like anecdotes that provide a glimpse into how he has personally transformed his life into one not focused on money or fame, but instead on inspirational experiences, laughter, and fulfillment. Accompanied by personal diary entries, Rodell shares simple ideas for living a more colorful life, including making balloon animals, juggling bean bags, and and understanding the advantages of getting a $75 wrist tattoo of an $18,000 Rolex instead of the real thing. Like a box of crayons, we are all born with an astounding range of color options. This creative guidebook combines instinctual DNA with a healthy dose of optimism with the hopes of teaching others how to make every day as vivacious as the brightest crayon in the box.

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From the Author

This book doesn't promise to make you happy, but it'll make you more fun and more interesting - more colorful. A healthy and aware happiness is bound to ensue. Happy people, you see, aren't necessarily colorful, but colorful people are universally happy.  People resent happy people. They invite colorful people to all the coolest parties.I've never had a lot of money. In fact, for many, many years my idea of a splurge has been to order a pizza with pepperoni and sausage. But since kindergarten, I've never lacked for friends, laughs, or love. I'm no smarter than most, less ambitious than all but a handful, and I'm freighted with a god-given laziness that has stifled any natural abilities others would have successfully exploited to their prosperous advantage. About five ago, just as America began hitting an historic rough patch, it began to dawn on me things weren't working out so well for me either. I was constantly broke. Anticipated breakthroughs never materialized. I'd once been considered a promising young writer. With my forty-fifth birthday behind me, I was no longer young and any promise seemed to have vanished.
That was all a bit surprising to an optimist like me. But what was even more surprising was how pleased I was with my joyful little life. I was happy. I had a lovely wife and two beautiful daughters. We had a host of dedicated friends and seemed to attract squads of lively new ones with carefree frequency. Each day was filled with laughter and fun.
As a freelance writer, I'd awoken unemployed for the past twenty years with a natural obligation to find something fun or lucrative to do. I was paid meager sums to write scattered features and occasional essays for magazines like Esquire, Sports Illustrated, Men's Health, Golf and other top magazines. It sounded prestigious but the reality is I haven't earned more than $21,700 during the last four years and just a bit more than half that in the lampblack days of 2009. With professional prospects dim, I turned to blogging, the last refuge of the under-employed writer who still believes he has something to say. I called my blog EightDaysToAmish.com, a grim nod to the fact that I always seemed like I was a little over a week away from having to do things like churn my own butter and try raising two sassy daughters without things like electricity or gas-powered transportation.
On some days I'd work. 
Many days I did not. Neither did my darling wife. She did part-time editing jobs and became one of those maniacal coupon clippers, the tearing din of scissors snipping paper becoming the soundtrack of our evenings.
Like America, we were broke. We'd pilfered most of our savings. We cut back on insurance and health care. Every gauge we've been conditioned to check said we should have been unhappy, distraught, angry. Yet we were not. For anyone raised to equate income with self-worth, it was a little disorienting.
Money wasn't buying our happiness.
What was?
I decided to make a little list. I jotted down the things that made me laugh or feel soulful. For instance, I'd play precocious little pranks on my unsuspecting wife. She'd recruit our daughters in score-evening schemes. I daydreamed about how the world could be a better place -- fax leftovers to the starving (see no. 334)! -- and I wrote down what I thought. The little list began to grow.
You're holding the result in your hands.
We as a nation remain mired in the midst of an historically difficult time. Many of us are out of work or underemployed. Yet, some of us continue to steadfastly confound the pollsters by saying we've never felt more optimistic about our shared futures. We believe we've survived the worst and our best days still lie ahead.
Maybe we're simultaneously discovering that the excesses of the past decades weren't what mattered. It's all the little moments of mortar between the big ones that do. Here are five hundred tips that will give your day a little jolt of joy. Feel free to work the suggestions into your world and add your own.
Rich or poor, it's up to each of us to color our lives as we see fit. We can sketch them out in uniformly dark colors or we can use all the crayons. 
It's up to you.
I hope to see you at the party.

From the Back Cover

A note from "Crayons!" endorser and golf legend Arnold Palmer . . ."One of my neighbors in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, Chris Rodell, has dropped into my office from time to time over the last decade or so to conduct a variety of friendly interviews and, once a year, to drop off some copies of his golf desk calendar with its daily gems that I often find informative and frequently amusing.  Many of his interviews have wound up on our ArnoldPalmer.com website or in our publication, Kingdom Magazine
I thought I had gotten to know Chris fairly well from those many visits, but I really hadn't realized the true extent of his literary talents until I had a chance to see a draft of his latest book.  Use All the Crayons! is an interesting and amusing trip through precisely 501 wide-ranging tips on life surrounding 33 short essays that are thoughtful and insightful, whether or not you agree with every bit of his thinking.
Who would have thought to wonder what would happen to a traveling knight in shining armor when he showed up at airport security?  Or suggest that, while standing on a busy street corner, you scream into your cell phone:  "No!  No!  No!  The incision should be made behind the left ear!"
That's the sort of fun reading you will find in these pages, taking you to Tip No. 501 - Learn the fine art of knowing precisely when to quit.  I think you will enjoy what appears on all the pages that lead to that fitting conclusion."

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Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9781938908507: Use All the Crayons!: The Colorful Guide to Simple Human Happiness

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  1938908503 ISBN 13:  9781938908507
Publisher: iUniverse, 2013
Softcover