Description If you didn\'t grow up speaking Greek, you wouldn\'t expect to leave home and instantly be fluent in it, would you? So why is it that we expect to suddenly be "fluent" in Happiness if Happiness wasn\'t practiced in our homes? Happiness as a Second Language teaches Happiness the same way you would learn any language that wasn\'t spoken in your home.
Not satisfied writing scripts that.
As a screenwriter, Valerie has worked with Joel Schumacher, Catherine Zeta Jones, Ice Cube and others.
From 2000 to 2001, she returned to Indiana to care for her mother, and in her absence the Internet bubble burst, leaving her no choice but to move to Los Angeles to write and direct movies.
About the Author Valerie Alexander started her career in the Silicon Valley during the Dot-Com gold rush of the late 1990s, where she worked on some of the most high-profile transactions of the decade as a securities lawyer, an investment banker and an Internet executive.
Start now, and you will be fluent in Happiness before you know it.
The writing is simple and straightforward, the instructions easy to follow, and the sample situations familiar, touching, often heartbreaking and sometimes hysterical.
This book is the ultimate textbook.
The true value of Happiness as a Second Language is that everyone who diligently works to achieve the Happiness promised in the premise will find positive results from the very first page.
The writing is simple and straightforward, the instructions easy to follow, and the sample situations familiar, touching, often heartbreaking and sometimes hysterical.
The lessons then turn to more complicated techniques - happy days and weeks, happy colors, happy nouns, verbs and adjectives, and ultimately to advanced concepts, including overcoming the negative form and understanding the past, present, future, and "future uncertain" tense.
It starts with the most basic concepts of being happy - learning how to say you\'re happy and how to count the things that make you happy.
Description If you didn\'t grow up speaking Greek, you wouldn\'t expect to leave home and instantly be fluent in it, would you? So why is it that we expect to suddenly be "fluent" in Happiness if Happiness wasn\'t practiced in our homes? Happiness as a Second Language teaches Happiness the same way you would learn any language that wasn\'t spoken in your home