
The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success
A Practical Guide to the Fulfillment of Your Dreams
by Deepak Chopra
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Recommended by 3 notable people, including Jen Sincero and Fedor Holz
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Reading Profile
Should I read this?
Short, aphoristic chapters lay out seven principles framed as spiritual 'laws' to reorient success toward inner alignment and ease. Best useful part: concise prompts and meditative language that make it easy to dip in and reframe priorities. Main limitation: ideas recur and stay at a high, metaphysical level with few concrete actions, so planners or skeptics may feel shortchanged. Tone mixes calm encouragement with a confident voice that some readers find overly dogmatic. Works better as a slow, reflective read than a how-to manual.
Read this if...
- •a mid-level manager reassessing work–life balance after burnout — short chapters offer language to justify stepping back and reprioritizing without a long read
- •a new parent juggling career and family who needs brief reminders to slow down — bite-size meditative passages fit between busy moments and shift perspective
- •a freelance creative under constant hustle pressure trying to cut hours — encourages intention and presence as alternatives to nonstop productivity and self-critique
Skip this if...
- •you'll likely put it down when the short chapters start repeating the same metaphysical claims without practical steps; that midpoint repetition is a common drop-off point
- •annoying if you prefer tactical, step-by-step, or data-oriented guidance rather than spiritual aphorisms and poetic assertions
- •lacks hands-on exercises or detailed action plans — frustrating if you wanted a clear implementation guide to change habits
This is a book you will cherish for a lifetime, for within is pages are the secrets of making all your dreams come true. Based on natural laws that govern all of creation, this book shatters the myth that success is the result of hard work, exacting plans, or driving ambition.Instead, Deepak Chopra offers a lifealtering perspective on the attainme...
Before You Buy
Reading Specifications
Difficulty:hard
Audience Fit
- a mid-level manager reassessing work–life balance after burnout — short chapters offer language to justify stepping back and reprioritizing without a long read
- a new parent juggling career and family who needs brief reminders to slow down — bite-size meditative passages fit between busy moments and shift perspective
- a freelance creative under constant hustle pressure trying to cut hours — encourages intention and presence as alternatives to nonstop productivity and self-critique
- you'll likely put it down when the short chapters start repeating the same metaphysical claims without practical steps; that midpoint repetition is a common drop-off point
- annoying if you prefer tactical, step-by-step, or data-oriented guidance rather than spiritual aphorisms and poetic assertions
- lacks hands-on exercises or detailed action plans — frustrating if you wanted a clear implementation guide to change habits
Check formats, pricing, and availability options for Kindle, physical print, or audiobooks directly.
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Why recommended
Recommended by 5 sources and appears in Enlightenment, Spiritual, and Most Recommended Books.
Recommended by notable people
People and public figures who have recommended this book.
Recommendation Signals
Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.
Fedor Holz
“Book #4 8.5/10 Enjoyed this one (slow) although quite spiritual, but great advice. Dissolve your ego, be positive and more conscious. | Will help you implement ways of applying successful traits to your life that will take you up.”
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Not sure if this is the right fit?
Consider The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy. Recommended by 8 sources.
“Soft-spoken, heavily illustrated fable built from short dialogues and watercolor sketches. Each spread pairs a spare line of text with a loose drawing, so the pleasure is visual and aphoristic rather than narrative; readers collect felt-true sentences more than plot. Most useful when you want quick consolations, a prompt for conversation with a child, or a pause during a rough day. Limiting if you want sustained argument, concrete advice, or tightly plotted storytelling: the repetition of gentleness can feel sentimental or thin after a while.”
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How recommendation signals are reviewed
Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.






