Unfinished Business: One Man’s Extraordinary Year of Trying to Do the Right Things
July 17, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Investment Book

Lowest Used Price: USD 12.35
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Manufacturer: Bloomsbury USA
- ISBN13: 9781596916753
- Condition: New
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Number Of Pages: 224
Release Date: 2010-05-11
Unknown: English
Original Language: English
Published: English

Rebalancing and rebuilding a life - though a bit contrived
After losing his high pressure job workaholic Lee Kravitz takes advantage of his enforced layoff to reconnect with family and friends. Looking back at his life, he realizes there are key people he's lost contact with. He decides to take time to re-establish these connections and, in some cases, rebuild his broken bridges. In doing this he learns just how much he's changed and sacrificed because of his career. He learns to reconnect with important parts of himself and his family and former friends.
I couldn't get away from the feeling that this book was somewhat contrived. Most of us couldn't use a layoff in this way, much as we might like it. Lee's obviously had a blessed life and forgot to remember and to share these blessings. Here he travels the world, while not working, to meet with former friends. I'm not sure that many of us could afford this chance at introspection and recovery.
Perhaps the important thing to take away from this book, is that you should recognize and maintain connections with people who know the inner you. This way you can remain genuine to yourself, and keep a balance between work and the rest of your life.

great book
I first heard about the book on wpoc radio the author was on the show. after listening to him i had to get the book. i went straight to amazon. I saw the book it shipped right out and i had it in 2 days. perfect! I'm reading the book and so far i love it.

Although I Agree With The Premise, I Didn't Connect With This Book
Book Overview
Lee Kravitz was a self-described workaholic, who freely admits that he let his job dominate his life at the expense of his family. So when he loses his job as a magazine editor at the age of 54, it is a wake-up call to him. Stunned and shamed by the loss of the his job--the one thing that provided his identity for so long--Kravitz finds himself at loose ends.
His wife suggests he attend a yoga retreat to help him deal with his feelings of loss and hopelessness. At the retreat, he realizes that he can take a year to take stock of himself and become the type of person he would really like to be. He ends up realizing that to move forward, he needs to take care of unfinished business from his past. He then compiles a list of ten areas in his life where he has unfinished business to take care of. These tasks include things such as:
* finding a long-lost relative
* making a long-overdue condolence call
* reaching out to a distant friend
* letting go of a grudge
* healing a rift in the family.
Each chapter of the book details the story behind each item of unfinished business and how Kravitz goes about tying up these loose ends in his life.
My Thoughts
It is a shame that I read this book right after The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind. Both are inspirational memoirs, but the comparison really ends right there. Whereas I felt uplifted, inspired and awed by hearing about William Kamkwamba's life, I was not too inspired by Mr. Kravitz's story. For one, it was difficult to empathize with him. Although I can sympathize with the feelings of loss and shame that can accompany a job loss in middle age, Kravitz was not plunged into a difficult financial situation. He had money enough to live comfortably for a year--as well as maintain two residences (an apartment in New York City and a country house). Although he might have felt a loss of identity, he didn't want for something to eat or have to worry about providing for his family--a situation uncommon for most people who are victims of downsizing or layoffs.
Secondly, much of the unfinished business that Kravitz feels compelled to attend is a result of his own workholism and consistent choice to let his work take priority over everything else. By putting his work before people for years and years, Kravitz is really the architect of many of his own problems. He briefly talks about the impact that his long work hours had on his family and his wife Elizabeth, yet not one of the his unfinished business tasks directly involve spending more time with his family. Although some of his attempts to make peace with his past tangentially affect his relationships with his immediate family (for example, he coaches his son's baseball team as a way of reconnecting with his father and an old friend), much of his unfinished business involves taking trips to various locations to meet up with and make peace with long-lost friends and family members. Part of me kept thinking: "You admit that you ignored your family for years by putting work first and now you are traveling all over the country to visit people you haven't seen for 20 years in order to lay to rest some issues from your past?!? Seems to me like you should start with your wife and kids first." To me, it felt as if Kravitz chose to put this personal project of completing unfinished business before his wife and kids once again.
I also didn't get emotionally involved with Kravitz's story. His writing--while competent and clear--just didn't connect emotionally with me. It felt a bit dry and distant. Perhaps his journalism background is to blame. It could also be his emotional make-up is more "masculine" than "feminine," which tends result in a more "this is what happened" approach than "this is what I felt" approach. Although Kravitz is candid and open about his own shortcomings, I didn't feel a sense of connection with him. In a memoir, I think that is essential to truly enjoying the book.
I feel like I'm being very harsh on this book, and I'm not entirely sure why. The stories that Kravitz tells are somewhat interesting and filled with good advice and intentions. I suspect that many people will relate to the things that Kravtiz works on throughout the book. How many times have we put off making a condolence call because we felt awkward about it or didn't know what to say? How many of us made a promise that we never kept and then regretted for years afterward? How often do we really go back to thank our mentors and let them know the value of their guidance? I do think there is value in taking care of unfinished business before our time here on earth runs out. I'm sure most of us would benefit from taking some time to think through our own lives to identify our own areas of unfinished business and taking steps to resolve them. In thinking back on my own life, there are a few areas that I would like to tie up into neater packages. But I do think the key is to not let the truly important moments go by and to keep your priorities in focus every day.
My Final Recommendation
Although I like the idea of taking time to resolve any unfinished business in our lives and the book is competently written, I wasn't emotionally drawn into Kravitz's story. However, I could envision a certain type of reader benefiting from this book--for example, an emotionally distant professional male might relate to Kravitz's story and find more inspiration and value in it than I did. In addition, readers who have a lot of unfinished business of their own might find much of value in Kravtiz's journey and approach to tying up his own loose ends.

Thought provoking, tender and a lesson on unfinished business
Having also been laid off from a corporate job after 10 years of servitude, I found the premise of this book to be one that attracted me more, at the beginning, as a manual for using your time to complete whatever it was you started but couldn't finish because of work. I was thinking more about fixing this or that, finishing projects, reading that stack of books etc. I must say I was surprised that this was much more than what I'd expected and 1,000 times better than Eat Pray Love for many reasons. In the book, Lee Kravitz details a year in his life after layoff where, in sorting through the objects of his past, he begins to face the things he either left behind, buried deep inside or simply, was too darned scared of to deal with during other times in his life. Lee's list included relatively small matters like repaying a 0 loan to a friend he traveled with in youth but had lost track of to (emotionally) larger matters like expressing condolences to another friend whose daughter had been killed during an ambush in Iraq. In the process, he strengthens bonds with his children, wife and father (this was more of an understanding and acceptance of his father), rekindled dormant friendships and renewed relationships with extended family members through his efforts to bring some cheer into the life of a long-lost relative. I think what affected me most was his industriousness in completing his list (along the lines of completing the tasks at hand, one-by-one-by-one-by-one) without underestimating the therapeutic benefit of focusing on something other than yourself (which could get dicey when one loses a job). The reason I say I found this so much better than Eat Pray Love was because the writer began his journey from home base without the luxury of a new environment from which to regroup. He tackled each item bit by bit while coming to terms with and building upon the life he had already created. There was no running away with a few hundred thousand dollars and an assignment. It was Lee Kravitz surrounded by the past, his fears and lots of lost time to make up for.
There are a number of lessons which can be gleaned from reading this, but I find I have to comment on Mr. Kravitz's writing ability which I found refreshingly flawless.
I can't recommend this book highly enough. It really inspired me to take an accounting of my own life to see what may have been overlooked and what opportunities there are to make amends.
Please read this.

unfinished business
I enjoyed the concept behind this book, of fully living your life when a turn i lie happens without your planning for it, such as what happens in the book. Suddenly being without a job, and having to reevaluate life and your place in it is challenging. The author writes about the experience, and it sheds light on living life to its fullest, and to a person's fullest potential. I feel the author did a great job doing this, and reached out to me as I read. Great book with great life lessons.
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