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Oct
25
2008

The Search – The Dream – The Alchemist

7 Comments

In the last few years I haven’t been that interested in reading fiction. I guess I had lost my interest in fairy tales and things which simply are not real or actual. But for some reason I recently picked up a book called The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. I was compelled to read this book out of nowhere, can’t really explain it, but the story within The Alchemist explained the reason to me.

The Alchemist is a story about living your dreams, searching out your destiny and believing in what you can’t always see.  It’s faith really, faith in yourself and that your purpose for living has meaning. “When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve your dream” is, in my opinion, the central message within The Alchemist.

If one believes in the Law of Attraction and therefore, the things you want and have faith in will be attracted to you, then The Alchemist is part of the manifestation of what I attracted to me. In the last few years I have stepped more and more away from the boundaries I had placed around me – I have achieved things of which I had only imagined or ‘dreamed’ of, but never really truly considered that I would do them. When I was diagnosed with ADHD and understood my lifelong struggles for what they actually were, the chains of mediocrity and unfaithfulness started to loosen from around my heart. Day by day those chains disintegrate even further.

In The Alchemist, Paulo advises that everyone has their very own personal legend, a dream for which they will follow, which, in fact, is the reason you and I were born. Paulo uses the story to demonstrate, in the form of a fable, how the signs (omens) are around us all the time; we simply have to have faith in our dreams so that we can ‘see’ them.  Paulo doesn’t attempt to promise us anything, he simply seems to be seeking to open our minds to the possibilities of something more.

It is clear to me that my book “One Boy’s Struggle: A Memoir – Surviving Life with Undiagnosed ADD” is much more than I had considered and that I was writing about my very own personal legend and how I have always been in search of my destiny. Paulo illustrates in The Alchemist how tragedy and struggles play a part in our search, that without those struggles we would never truly find ‘our way’. This, I believe, is the reason I decided to write not only my story, but also write what could have helped and the ‘how’ of how I improved and overcame my struggles. The story of my life growing up with undiagnosed ADD, and the repercussions thereof, is the memoir part of it; however, I use the story to illustrate a roadmap for positive outcomes, and warnings, which others can follow to avoid many of the mistakes which were either made by me or by others due to the confusions of misunderstanding the core reality of my struggles.

In my book I talk about certain people I have met and how they helped me indirectly throughout my life – I wrote about “when the student is ready, the master appears” – Once again, the master has appeared and this time in the form of a fable, The Alchemist. There has been something I have wanted to do for a very long time, let me stress this: very, very long time, and only now, at this point in my life, is it time to achieve yet another dream. By reading The Alchemist, my mind has been awakened to the ‘how’, even though I understood the ‘why’ already and I have found The Alchemist to be an omen in of itself to me. The right things, at the right times, have always happened in my life and somehow I already knew that, even if I didn’t ‘understand’ that.

“When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you to achieve your dream.”
Paulo Coelho – The Alchemist

~Bryan

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  1. ron sorenson posted the following on October 26, 2008 at 3:40 pm.

    So true dream it and DO IT, and most important BE IT, thank you Bryan.
    I am on a mission for us all to get everyone to be in it if only for a few seconds, LOVE RON

    Reply to ron sorenson
  2. ron sorenson posted the following on October 26, 2008 at 5:19 pm.

    dream big be in it, thank you bryan

    Reply to ron sorenson
  3. Tara Colquitt posted the following on October 26, 2008 at 8:15 pm.

    A friend gave me this book a month ago. I guess it is time to read it.

    Thank you, Bryan.

    Reply to Tara Colquitt
  4. Michael Teske posted the following on October 26, 2008 at 8:36 pm.

    Great book, Bryan. I read it 13 years ago. A friend gave it to me when I was starting a new adventure–I went to work at the Baha’i World Centre in Haifa, Israel.

    Timeless message! I highly recommend it as well!

    Reply to Michael Teske
  5. Lyz posted the following on October 26, 2008 at 10:16 pm.

    I love this book…it one of my favorites.

    Reply to Lyz
  6. Bryan posted the following on October 27, 2008 at 8:58 am.

    I am halfway through Brida, also by Paulo Coelho. The man is touched I tell you! Profound is a word that comes to mind…

    Bryan

    Reply to Bryan
  7. French Canadian posted the following on November 1, 2008 at 5:21 pm.

    I already read this book and it completely changed my way to see life. After my reading, I always was searching these famous signs that Coelho talks about in his book and… found it ! Badly, I rarely folloed them because of fear. Fear of what others will say, will think of my decisions…

    But some months ago, I felt the call from God, this particular call that we only can hear in moments of pure silence… And this call was about creative writing ! Since that, I chose to write to earn my life and I have plenty of ideas !

    Thank you to recall us this wonderful book that all ADDers must to read !

    Reply to French Canadian

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One Boy’s Struggle

"One Boy’s Struggle is a real eye-opener. It should be read by all parents struggling to understand how best to support their ADHD children. Adults with ADHD will likely find validation and new hope from reading Bryan’s story.” ~Dr. Edward Hallowell

CHADD Educator of the Year for 2010, Dr. Katherine Nell Mcneil, "Highly recommends" One Boy’s Struggle

“A very brave and moving memoir.” Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, Katherine Ellison, author of 'Buzz'.

"Gripping account of both the struggles and positive polarities of ADD written beautifully in a honest, open and courageous manner." David A. Crenshaw, Ph.D.

"Anyone with ADD or with friends, loved ones or colleagues with ADD will be informed and touched by Bryan’s book." Bryan Robinson Ph.D. author of 'The Art of Confident Living'

Thank you!

It is an honor to have written a book that is meaning so much and benefiting so many. It is my hope that one day ‘One Boy’s Struggle: A Memoir’ will be read by every teacher and parent, as well as read by every adult with ADHD. If you own a copy and have read it, please consider passing it on, loan it out to friends, a support group or donating it to your local library.

Thank you!

~Bryan

 
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