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I’M FINE!: A Practical Guide To Managing Your Emotions To Strengthen Relationships With Loved Ones And Yourself

I’m Fine! is a short and personal guide to emotional awareness written for men who grew up being told to toughen up, get on with it, and never cry. Rob Nugen walks through why that “I’m fine” script is often a lie, how emotions actually work as signals, what happens when we suppress them, and how men can start feeling and expressing them in healthier ways. The book moves from basic ideas about emotions, through stories of suppression, masking, and meltdown, into practical tools for working with anger, fear, sadness, happiness, guilt, shame, and gratitude, before landing in deeper topics like connection, loneliness, self-care, and living with an open heart.

I really enjoyed the way Rob writes. The tone is warm, plain, and direct, and he keeps it grounded in his own stories instead of hiding behind theory. The images he uses stick. The inbox full of unread emotional “emails,” the “Meeseeks” standing in for neglected feelings, the little boy trying to write “Jr.” on a Nerf football and then shredding it in shame, these landed for me much more than abstract advice ever could. I also liked the structure. Each chapter ends with simple reflection questions, so the book nudges you to actually do something with what you just read instead of nodding along and forgetting it ten minutes later. The style is conversational, but the content is serious, and that mix makes some heavy topics feel more approachable.

I found his core message both simple and powerful. Emotions are not defects. They are messengers that hang around until you listen, and when you finally let them move, they change. That shows up everywhere in the book, from his delayed grief over his grandfather’s death, to the fear sitting under his anger, to his description of “self-care” that quietly turns into avoidance and numbing. I appreciated how strongly he leans toward agency without sliding into blame. He honors the fact that childhood and culture shape us, then keeps coming back to the question, “What can I choose now.” Sometimes I wanted a bit more engagement with bigger social factors, like work, class, or culture outside his own experience, since most of the examples are straight, Western, and personal. That said, the honesty and humility soften that gap for me. He is not preaching from on high. He is saying, “Here is what I did wrong, here is what helped, try what fits.”

By the end of the book, I felt a steady mix of hope and practicality. The closing chapters on self-care, connection, and “practicing emotional awareness” do a good job of tying everything together into daily life, instead of leaving the reader with one big cathartic moment and no follow-through. Rob’s invitation to “pay it forward” by handing the book on to another man, with a written note, is a lovely touch that fits the whole spirit of the project. I finished the last pages with a real sense that the book is less a lecture and more a hand on the shoulder.

I would recommend this book to men over 30 who feel competent on the outside and quietly lost or numb on the inside, especially those who grew up with “men don’t cry” as a background rule. It would also be useful for partners of men like that, and for coaches or group leaders who work with men and want simple language and relatable stories to point to. If you want a straight-talking, very relatable guide that makes you feel less alone while giving you concrete ways to start feeling more, I think this one is worth your time.

Pages: 150 | ASIN : B0FYNH5WNC

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Too Strong For Your Own Good: Success With Soul

I read Too Strong For Your Own Good by Anette DeMattio straight through with very few pauses. The book is about what happens when strength turns into self-erasure. DeMattio shares her personal story of illness, burnout, trauma, and recovery while guiding the reader toward a softer and more embodied way of living and leading. The core idea is straightforward. Being strong for too long can disconnect you from your body, your needs, and your joy. The book blends memoir, reflection, and gentle exercises meant to help readers come back to themselves.

What struck me most was the voice. It feels intimate and unfiltered, like someone sitting across from you telling the truth without cleaning it up first. I felt seen more than once, and that surprised me. Some moments made my chest tighten. Others made me laugh in that tired recognition kind of way. The writing is emotional and direct. It repeats ideas on purpose, which at times felt comforting and at other times felt heavy. Still, I never doubted the author’s sincerity. Her lived experience gives the book weight, and I trusted her because she never pretended to have an easy fix.

The focus on listening to the body felt grounded and human, not preachy. I appreciated how often she reminded the reader that exhaustion is not failure. The spiritual language is rich and expressive, and the extended metaphors show how deeply the author wants the reader to fully feel and absorb the message. The heart of the message kept pulling me back. I felt encouraged, challenged, and oddly calmer by the end. It felt less like being taught and more like being invited.

I would recommend this book to people who are tired in a way sleep does not fix. It is especially good for caregivers, leaders, high achievers, and anyone who has built a life around holding it all together. If you are open to reflection, emotion, and slowing down, this book can feel like a deep exhale and a quiet companion when you need one most. Too Strong For Your Own Good: Success With Soul reminds you that real strength isn’t pushing harder. It’s finally listening to yourself.

Pages: 181 | ASIN : B0FZRWRTY7

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