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The Subtle Art of Not Being a Total Disaster: You're the Problem Series
Coles
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The Subtle Art of Not Being a Total Disaster: You're the Problem Series in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $5.99

Coles
The Subtle Art of Not Being a Total Disaster: You're the Problem Series in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $5.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
What if "having it all together" was never the goal?
I was thirty-two years old, sitting in my car in a Target parking lot, crying into a bag of mini donuts I had purchased for "breakfast." It was 2 PM. And somewhere between the powdered sugar and the mascara tears, I realized something that changed everything:
I had been chasing the wrong goal my entire adult life.
We're sold this lie that success means achieving some perfect state of togetherness. Clean home. Thriving career. Healthy relationships. Toned body. Calm mind. Regular flossing. The whole package.
Here's the truth: Nobody has it all together. The people who look like they do are just better at hiding the mess. They're not more functional than you—they're just more strategic about what they show.
This book is about giving up the pursuit of that impossible ideal and replacing it with something actually achievable: not being a total disaster.
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN:
Why your impossible standards are sabotaging your life
The art of strategic mediocrity (being bad at things on purpose)
How to triage your chaos when everything feels urgent
The minimum viable life: doing enough without burning out
Why "good enough" is actually good enough
Systems that work for people who hate systems
How to ask for help without dying of shame
This isn't a book about giving up. It's about being strategic. It's about lowering the bar to a height you can actually clear—then clearing it. It's about becoming a functioning disaster instead of a total one.
WARNING: Contains realistic expectations, permission to be mediocre, and zero advice about manifesting your best life.
If you're exhausted from trying to have it all together and ready to settle for keeping it together—welcome home.
You were never supposed to be perfect. You were just supposed to keep going.
What if "having it all together" was never the goal?
I was thirty-two years old, sitting in my car in a Target parking lot, crying into a bag of mini donuts I had purchased for "breakfast." It was 2 PM. And somewhere between the powdered sugar and the mascara tears, I realized something that changed everything:
I had been chasing the wrong goal my entire adult life.
We're sold this lie that success means achieving some perfect state of togetherness. Clean home. Thriving career. Healthy relationships. Toned body. Calm mind. Regular flossing. The whole package.
Here's the truth: Nobody has it all together. The people who look like they do are just better at hiding the mess. They're not more functional than you—they're just more strategic about what they show.
This book is about giving up the pursuit of that impossible ideal and replacing it with something actually achievable: not being a total disaster.
WHAT YOU'LL LEARN:
Why your impossible standards are sabotaging your life
The art of strategic mediocrity (being bad at things on purpose)
How to triage your chaos when everything feels urgent
The minimum viable life: doing enough without burning out
Why "good enough" is actually good enough
Systems that work for people who hate systems
How to ask for help without dying of shame
This isn't a book about giving up. It's about being strategic. It's about lowering the bar to a height you can actually clear—then clearing it. It's about becoming a functioning disaster instead of a total one.
WARNING: Contains realistic expectations, permission to be mediocre, and zero advice about manifesting your best life.
If you're exhausted from trying to have it all together and ready to settle for keeping it together—welcome home.
You were never supposed to be perfect. You were just supposed to keep going.


















