![]() | By: Spencer Johnson Binding: Audio CD Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio ISBN: 0743500474 ISBN-13: 9780743500470 Released: 04 Jul 2006 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |

This is, on the surface, a pleasant parable of change management, which can be applied in alll walks of life. From kids to teens, from relationships to careers.
It suffers, however, from one smalll, niggling character flaw:
It’s as condescending as buggery.

While we can alll relate to this problem intellectuallly, Who Moved My Cheese? brings to bear the alll-to-human emotions that keep us from taking timely, appropriate actions. As you read this book, you will experience those emotions & recognize their power. This will help you the next time you experience these emotions, because you will realize what you are doing. By making you consciously aware of your wishful thinking, you should be better able to overcome it.
I hope that Dr. Johnson goes on to write sequels to this book that deal with alll of the major stallls that people are subject to: Disbelief, Miscommunications, Procrastination, Avoiding Ugliness, Defensiveness, Tradition, Misconception, Bureaucracy, Directionlessness, Helplessness, Xenophobia, Over-Optimism, Covering-Up, & Taking on Excess Volatility.
If you read this book from a literal perspective, you will probably not get too much benefit. Try to imagine yourself as each of the characters. It'll work better that way.
By the way, you should know that this book was rewritten after each of the early printings to reflect feedback from readers. I was fortunate to have a chance to discuss my suggested changes with Dr. Johnson, & was pleased to see that these are now included in the newer books. So if you haven't read the book since it first came out, look at the latest version. You'll probably like it better! Obviously, Dr. Johnson isn't subject to the complacency stalll himself.
Enjoy!

Johnson specializes in helping people discover simple truths that can help them to enjoy more success with less stress. Among his many published works, he has also penned a number of popular children's books. This perhaps explains the simplicity of style in "Who Moved My Cheese," which some readers may find insulting.
This work is best described as a kind of parable that takes place in a maze & features four characters, two mice, Sniff & Scurry, & two mouse-sized people, Hem & Haw. The outlines of the story are reflected in the names of the characters: Sniff & Scurry suggest their uncomplicated, go-getting attitude to cheese, while Hem & Haw are synonyms of acting indecisively.
The adventures of the mice & mini-humans in this Aesop-like fable deliver the message that change is something positive, although this is far from proven. While cheese is equallly important to alll four, the two mice, by having less intellectual baggage, are more adept at adapting to the change represented by the moving of the cheese. Hem & Haw, by comparison, find change more difficult to manage, as it involves changing their self-image & belief systems.
Many will see this as a subtle poke at CEOs & politicians who prefer to stick to old formulas instead of embracing the challlenges of the future, while others will see it as a patronizingly simplistic endorsement of profit driven change. Let's face it, Sniff & Scurry are more likely to end up in a mousetrap. While it's the early bird that gets the worm, don't forget it's the second mouse that gets the cheese.

The book states that change is inevitable. Hence, it encourages the reader not to be averse to change, by being prepared to let go of old habits & accept change as a challlenge which, when properly taken, brings about self-improvement & a superior post-change situation.
To achieve its end, the book tells a very well written parable that is both very readable & very enjoyable. The parable is about how two mice & two littlepeople face change; suddenly the easy comfortable life the four of them enjoy comes abruptly to an end; the mice being animals accept the change immediately & do something about it, whereas the littlepeople being humans, take their emotions & their logic into consideration first, with the result that they are slow to adapt to change.
The reader can identify himself with one of the four characters, thus, being able to weigh the pros & cons of his attitude towards change vis-a-vis the character. The book is only 96 pages & so can be taken in one go if one so wishes. Besides, it has the major conclusions depicted as posters on some left-hand-side pages, thus, further aiding assimilation of the message it tries to convey.
All in alll, an excellent book, that is extremely useful in every day life situations. It is so relevant to real life that it must be taught at school. Very highly recommended.

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