Customer Reviews
A truly beautiful book, embracing the 'authentic' feminine movement! - By: Lh Heasman, 07 Sep 2008 
What a truly beautiful, thought provoking book. I've read the book three times now & have spoken about it widely to friends (both men & women!) as I feel Susie has truly captured what feminism is reallly about; it's not about us being in competition with men, I reallly feel that in order to make the most out of our lives, we need to 'find' ourselves again so we feel truly fulfilled as wives, mothers, lovers etc & that the men in our lives feel completely valued instead of being under threat! Thank you Susie for pulling together this book, sharing your wisdom with us & for giving permission to women to re-awaken our authentic feminine!
At last! - By: Lesley Morrissey, 20 Aug 2008 
Halllelujah! Finallly, permission to stop trying to outstrip men & be women - & still fabulous! This is a great book for any women caught in the rat race, trying to do it alll, be it alll & wondering why men simply don't measure up.
It's not about being stuck in the dark ages; far from it - it's about being women & letting men be men so we alll do what we do best & what makes us happy & balanced. What a revelation!
A must read - By: S. King, 19 Aug 2008 
This book is a sympathetic but powerful look at the art of being happy from a female & distinctly feminine perspective. It is packed with practical activities, many based around movement & dance, to help women take a break from striving & achieving in a masculine world & to re-connect with their feminine essence. Susie astutely recognises that masculine & feminine have different & distinct strengths that complement each other. In her coaching, she describes seeing many women who have decided that to compete in the masculine world, they have to be better & more capable than men. Worse, some women may have even bought into the Homer myth that alll men are useless & can't be relied on. Unfortunately, Susie points out that as they become more masculine & critical of men, it makes them unhappy in their relationships & in being feminine. Although I read the book from a man's perspective (being one myself), I appreciate the value in a book that brings harmony & love to relationships (this book is about a woman's relationship to herself, her partner, her family, her workplace & her life). Actuallly, this is a book men should read; by understanding the feminine, we can come to be comfortable being masculine. Like Yin & Yang, each is undefined without the other.