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Loading... The Fear Bubble: Harness Fear and Live Without Limits (edition 2019)by Ant Middleton (Author)
Work InformationThe Fear Bubble: Harness Fear and Live Without Limits by Ant Middleton
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The brilliant, inspirational next book by the author of the incredible No. 1 bestseller FIRST MAN IN. Without fear, there's no challenge. Without challenge, there's no growth. Without growth, there's no life. Ant Middleton is no stranger to fear: as a point man in the Special Forces, he confronted fear on a daily basis, never knowing what lay behind the next corner, or the next closed door. In prison, he was thrust into the unknown, cut off from friends and family, isolated with thoughts of failure and dread for his future. And at the top of Everest, in desperate, life-threatening conditions, he was forced to face up to his greatest fear, of leaving his wife and children without a husband and father. But fear is not his enemy. It is the energy that propels him. Thanks to the revolutionary concept of the Fear Bubble, Ant has learned to harness the power of fear and understands the positive force that it can become. Fear gives Ant his edge, allowing him to seek out life's challenges, whether that is at home, pushing himself every day to be the best father he can be, or stuck in the death zone on top of the world in a 90mph blizzard. In his groundbreaking new book, Ant Middleton thrillingly retells the story of his death-defying climb of Everest and reveals the concept of the Fear Bubble, showing how it can be used in our lives to help us break through our limits. Powerful, unflinching and an inspirational call to action, The Fear Bubble is essential reading for anyone who wants to push themselves further, harness their fears and conquer their own personal Everests. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)158.1092Philosophy and Psychology Psychology Applied Psychology Personal improvement and analysis Biography; By Place BiographyRatingAverage:![]()
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This book is half a recounting of his time climbing Everest and half his strategy on how to overcome your fears. If you'd like to overcome your fears but don't fancy wading through this type of book I can save you the cash and tell you his theory boils down to (a) opening those doors you've been too scared to open before and (b) visualising stepping in and out of a "fear" bubble when you are about to do something terrifying, like throwing yourself off the side of a cliff.
The recounting of his Everest climb amused me greatly as all irony was entirely lost on him. Middleton allegedly 'prepares' for this epic climb doing nothing but sitting on his arse eating chicken wings as he was too busy on his speaking tour around the UK, and halfway through the altitude acclimatisation spends 4 days hitting the bottle in a pub, but yet spends pages berating the 'Everest tourists' who are there for the wrong reasons, i.e. spending a shed load of cash just so they can say they've climbed it. Somewhere along the way Middleton completely loses sight of the fact that he's there for precisely the same reason (no, worse - he's getting his fees paid in return for bringing a TV cameraman up with him). He chastises people who 'shouldn't be up there' as they're risking other people's lives, and then in the same breath goes on to ignore the advice of his sherpa and experienced climbing colleague, insisting that they skip out doing the altitude rotational climbs recommended and forcing them to start their ascent in a storm none of them think is safe to go out into. Everyone else is up there because of their egos, but Middleton? Oh, most definitely not, apparently. He's just in a different league to everyone else, so he keeps telling us.
Needless to say he's super human and the mountain bows down to his utter physical superiority and lets him go up and down safely (which was slightly annoying).
Despite my cynicism, Middleton's ghost writer did a good job with this book and it was an interesting read. Love him or loathe him, whilst I don't overly respect him as a person I do respect his SBS training, so whilst he often comes across as a complete penis he does have some good insights to share on the self mind control techniques they're taught, which are interesting to learn from.
4 stars - he's an idiot, but it's an interesting read nonetheless. (