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Debut publication by John Rodgers
No institutional or academic affiliation.
Built from lived experience and long-term writing.
John Rodgers is a writer, family man, and observer of human behavior and spiritual thought. His work is grounded in lived experience rather than academic theory or institutional authority, shaped by reflection and a lifelong effort to understand perception and reality.
He has written for local newspapers, maintained a blog on positive living, and shared ideas on intentional living, service, and spiritual awareness through community and online platforms.
His journey includes recovery and deep self-inquiry, leading to a shift from questioning the external world to examining internal belief systems.
To challenge how people interpret reality and encourage a shift from external blame to internal awareness, where individuals recognize the role of perception and belief in shaping their lives.
The book explores the relationship between thought, belief, and experience, combining personal reflection, recovery, and spiritual philosophy to question the idea that life happens to us rather than through us.
Human experience is not random or purely external. It is shaped by internal belief systems, perception, and emotional alignment. Real change begins when responsibility shifts inward.
★★★★★
Reviews (4.8)
First Things First: The Law of Attraction Basics is not a traditional self-help guide. It is a personal exploration of how perception, belief, and thought shape human experience.
Through reflection, recovery, and philosophical inquiry, John Rodgers challenges the idea that life is something happening to us. Instead, it presents a different possibility: that experience is deeply connected to what we believe and how we interpret reality.
This book does not ask for agreement. It asks for attention, reflection, and honest questioning of long-held assumptions about life, faith, and personal power.

Not written from theory or trends. Built from lived reflection, recovery, and long-term observation of how people interpret their lives. It reflects real psychological shifts, emotional patterns, and lived contradictions rather than abstract ideas or borrowed concepts. It comes from experience, not speculation.

This book does not offer steps, systems, or motivational shortcuts. It does not attempt to simplify complex human behavior into checklists or rigid methods. Instead, it challenges the underlying assumptions behind thought, belief, and perception, and how they continuously shape personal reality over time. It asks the reader to think differently, not act mechanically.

Written to interrupt automatic thinking and familiar interpretations of life. It pushes readers to slow down internal assumptions and reconsider ideas about control, responsibility, meaning, identity, and personal agency. The goal is not agreement. The goal is awareness.

Client
★★★★★
I didn’t expect a book like this. It doesn’t feel like advice or motivation, it feels like someone laying out thoughts I’ve had but never put into words. Some parts made me stop and rethink how I look at my own life.

Client
★★★★★
This book challenges many assumptions I didn’t even realize I had. It’s not an easy read in the sense of being simple, but it stays with you. It pushes you to think rather than just agree.

Client
★★★★★
What stood out for me was how personal it feels. It’s not trying to teach from above, it’s more like a reflection of someone working through their own understanding of life and belief. That made it more believable.
Not entertainment, but reflection. These blogs explore how belief structures influence behavior, and how awareness of thought patterns can change the way life is experienced.