This 5-Minute Book Review is provided by guest reviewer Gloria DeGaetano.
Lift: Becoming a Positive Force in Any Situation
By Ryan W. Quinn and Robert E. Quinn 
Berrett-Koehler Publishers 2009
254 pages
Hardcover & Kindle versions
After reading Robert E. Quinn’s book, Change the World: How Ordinary People Can Achieve Extraordinary Results, I thought to myself, “This man wants us all to become saints!” Why? Because Change the World describes eight “seed principles” that if taken seriously and acted upon naturally leads to a course of compassionate action on behalf of others.
Robert Quinnn’s new book, Lift: Becoming a Positive Force in Any Situation, which he co-authored with his son Ryan Quinn, an assistant professor at the University of Virginia’s Darden’s School of Business, deepens that journey toward “sainthood.” Lift reports a way for us to become positive change agents immediately in any situation we encounter by asking ourselves four basic questions: 1) What result do I want to create? 2) What would my story be if I were living the values I expect of others? 3) How do others feel about this situation? 4) What are three (or four or five) strategies I could use to accomplish my purpose for this situation?
Robert Quinn, who holds the Margaret Tracy Collegiate Professorship at the University of Michigan and is professor of management and organization in the Ross School of Business, has authored sixteen books. Considered an innovative thinker and authority on positive change processes, he developed ACT-Advanced Change Theory-which the Parent Coaching Institute uses as integral to our successful parent coaching model. The four questions discussed and promoted in Lift, provide a foundational focus for applying ACT more thoroughly in daily activities when the business of life can often interfere with our good intentions to be kind, thoughtful, or proactive.
How do people change and how do they do it deeply and sustainably in order to catalyze transformative societal changes? is a question that captures our human longing to make a positive difference. Robert Quinn’s books can be counted on to address and effectively answer this question. Now in Lift, with his son Ryan, the two provide a practical framework for keeping that longing alive and fulfilled. Lift is defined as a “psychological state in which a person is purpose-centered, internally directed, other-focused, and externally open.” This dynamic internal state keeps us “lifted” thereby making us reliable lift-ers of others. And soon, as the authors demonstrate, our sphere of influence infuses with positivity and possibility-we natural become role models for others as we enthusiastically undertake the self-discipline necessary to monitor and adjust our psychological states. “As within, so without,” never seemed truer as I poured over the wisdom in this book.
The book begins with an informative overview of positive influence and the psychological state. Read More→


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