What I’m Crunching — December 31, 2023

What I’m Crunching — December 31, 2023

Here’s another great book I read this year as part of my development at SonSet Solutions. See last week’s post for an explanation of how SonSet invests in our people.

Fadell worked at Apple and was on the teams that designed the iPod and the iPhone. He later built Nest and sold it to Google. His book is full of hard-learned lessons about building incredible products, teams, and companies.

What I’m Crunching — December 17, 2023

What I’m Crunching — December 17, 2023

I’ve read little about Winston Churchill over the years and I thought it was time to fix that. Churchill was a remarkable leader who was placed in his position sovereignly by God (as all leaders are, Romans 13:1). He was exactly who England needed at the helm to hold back the Nazis.

Interesting tidbit: he hated whistling! He didn’t do it himself and couldn’t stand for anyone around him to whistle. I do not share that trait.

What I’m Crunching — December 10, 2023

What I’m Crunching — December 10, 2023

I’m a chronic mouth-breather and have been since I can remember. It’s always been difficult to breathe through my nose; it feels as if there’s a blockage that won’t ever come out. Imagine breathing through a straw…that’s what it feels like for me, 24/7.

Mouth-breathing isn’t healthy and I’m working to correct it. I picked up this book at the library because Nestor did 10 years of research, travel, and personal experiments (on himself!) to uncover why breathing correctly is so important. I was blown away by the historical research and the physiological implications of breathing correctly.

What I’m Crunching — December 3, 2023

What I’m Crunching — December 3, 2023

In light of the war between Israel and Hamas, I went looking for an account of the holocaust that I’d not seen before. Night by Elie Wiesel is an “unmistakably autobiographical account of the author’s own gruesome experiences in Nazi Germany’s death camps.”

From the Goodreads summary, “Told through the eyes of 14-year-old Eliezer, the tragic fate of the Jews from the little town of Sighet unfolds with a heart-wrenching inevitability.” I was moved to tears more than once while listening to this book.