- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Non-Fiction Books/Guidebooks
- > Guide Books
Description
A year feels long enough to delay. Twelve weeks feels honest enough to begin. Most people spend twelve months planning, yet arrive at December wondering where their intentions went. This book explores the quiet tension between long-horizon thinking and the human tendency to delay-and examines how compressing time can shift the way we relate to our own ambitions.The 12-Week Year explores patterns in how we set goals, lose momentum, and quietly renegotiate with ourselves when deadlines feel distant. It examines the dynamics of urgency, focus, and execution-not as productivity hacks, but as genuine shifts in how we structure meaningful effort.Rather than prescribing a rigid system, this book offers insight into why shorter cycles can create clarity, and how working within constraints often reveals what we truly value. It reframes assumptions about ambition, discipline, and what "a good year" actually means-one focused season at a time. Author of English-language books spanning personal evolution, business innovation, and historical perspectives. Adrian synthesizes lessons across time to spark breakthroughs in readers' lives.



