
In "Thrive," Arianna Huffington redefines success beyond money and power after her own health collapse. Translated into 30+ languages and featured on Ellen DeGeneres, this Time-influential author asks: What if exhaustion isn't the price of achievement, but its greatest obstacle?
著者の声を通じて本を感じる
知識を魅力的で例が豊富な洞察に変換
キーアイデアを瞬時にキャプチャして素早く学習
楽しく魅力的な方法で本を楽しむ
We think, mistakenly, that success is the result of the amount of time we put in at work, instead of the quality of time we put in.
『Thrive』の核心的なアイデアを分かりやすいポイントに分解し、革新的なチームがどのように創造、協力、成長するかを理解します。
『Thrive』を素早い記憶のヒントに凝縮し、率直さ、チームワーク、創造的な回復力の主要原則を強調します。

鮮やかなストーリーテリングを通じて『Thrive』を体験し、イノベーションのレッスンを記憶に残り、応用できる瞬間に変えます。
何でも質問し、声を選び、本当にあなたに響く洞察を一緒に作り出しましょう。

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Thriveの要約をPDFまたはEPUBで無料でダウンロード。印刷やオフラインでいつでもお読みいただけます。
A successful media executive lies unconscious in a pool of her own blood, her cheekbone shattered after collapsing from exhaustion at her desk. This wasn't a random accident-it was the inevitable result of worshipping at the altar of conventional success. That executive was Arianna Huffington, and her 2007 collapse forced a reckoning with a brutal truth: our definition of success is fundamentally broken. We've built an entire culture around two metrics-money and power-while ignoring everything that makes life worth living. The wake-up call can arrive in many forms: a broken bone, a cancer diagnosis, a heart attack at forty-five. The only question is whether we'll listen before it's too late. We're literally working ourselves to death, and somehow we've convinced ourselves this is normal. Working women face 40% higher heart disease risk and 60% greater diabetes risk than their less-stressed peers. U.S. businesses hemorrhage $63 billion annually from insomnia-related productivity losses alone. Japan has a word for death by overwork-"karoshi"-with hundreds of documented cases yearly. Yet we continue celebrating the executive who emails at 3 AM and glorifying the 80-hour workweek as dedication rather than dysfunction. Young professionals compete to see who can survive on the least sleep, wearing exhaustion like a merit badge. We've normalized a perpetual state of fight-or-flight that our bodies were never designed to sustain. What if we measured success not by bank account size but by the depth of our well-being, the quality of our relationships, and our capacity to experience wonder in ordinary moments?