Bookshelf
Notes from what I read
Short notes from books I keep close.
- ใช้ความคิดเอาชนะโชคชะตา mindset by Carol S.Dweck: Mindset determines whether limits are destiny or a starting point for growth.
- The Asshole Survival Guide by Robert Sutton: You can become an asshole too, you know. Don’t end up becoming one yourself.
- Psychology of Money by Morgan House: After a long time, this is a book I didn’t want to end. I just wanted to keep reading. I’d give it the book of the year for me.
- What I Wish I Knew When I Was 20 by Tina Seelig: Make the most of every opportunity that comes your way, cherish every moment, and never let time go to waste, even for a single day.
- Money Summary by จักรพงษ์ เมษพันธุ์, วิฑูรย์ สูงกิจบูลย์: Wealth is a right for everyone.
- ทำไมคุยกับคนนี้แล้วรู้สึกดีจัง by โยะชิดะ ฮิซะโนะริ: If conversation is a game, as long as we feel good about the conversation, we've already won.
- Money Script วิธีคิดที่ทำให้ชีวิตสนิทกับเงิน by Mentalist Daigo: Money is essentially thinking about your life, and it is also about protecting the people who are important to you.
- The Art of Gathering by Priya Parker: Great gatherings don't start with who is coming, but with why they are coming. Clarity of purpose simplifies every other choice.
- Life Is Missing Manual by กษิดิศ สตางค์มงคล: The irony is that Al is trying to be human, while many humans live like robots repeating the same routine every day. Don't fear Al becoming human. Fear humans becoming machines without dreams or purpose, just a small cog in capitalism.
- The Comfort Crisis เพราะความสุขสบายทำลายศักยภาพคุณ by Michael Easter: We chase comfort so often that we forget growth usually lives on the other side of difficulty.
- The Black Book of MANIFEST by คิดมาก: I am the proof of my beliefs.
- The Wealth Money Can't Buy ความมั่งคั่งที่เงินซื้อไม่ได้ by Robin Sharma: Some books give you knowledge, but this one feels like a “companion.” It quietly reminds you, and asks are you really living the life you want? “Live fully, so you can leave empty.” — My No.1 book right now
- The Art of Spending Money: Simple Choices for a Richer Life by Morgan Housel: Money may make you visible, but it is taste, skill, and character that make you admirable. The Art of Spending reminds me that spending is not just about what we buy. it is about who we are becoming. That’s what I love about Morgan Housel. He writes about money, but somehow always ends up writing about life.