Describe some of the most enjoyable and even “aha” moments you experienced while reading COLOR UP. What three words best describe COLOR UP to Create the Life You Want to Live?
Do you think COLOR UP is original and unique? If so, what makes this book different from other personal-development books you have read? Which of the five steps do you like the best?
What do you feel is the central idea discussed in COLOR UP? What about this idea do you find most surprising, intriguing, or difficult to understand?
What cultural observations do the authors make in COLOR UP? What ideas resonate with you in terms of economics and politics, family traditions, or worldviews?
What implications for your future are presented in COLOR UP that affect your life on a daily basis or more generally?
Talk about a specific passage from COLOR UP that you find particularly significant, profound, amusing, illuminating, or disturbing. What makes this passage memorable for you?
Reflect on the authors’ claim that the default mode in this culture is the black and white. Do you agree or disagree? What examples from your life can you offer to support your view?
The authors propose possibilities rather than solutions. Does this approach resonate with you? Help you understand how black-and-white opposites are two sides to the same story?
Consider the theme of personal agency in COLOR UP, and discuss some ways you relate the discussion to your life experiences. What other ways do you connect with the subject matter?
How controversial are the issues raised in COLOR UP for you? Has reading COLOR UP broadened your perspective or changed your views about a difficult issue, personal or societal?
What did you learn or take away from COLOR UP that you didn’t know before reading it?
If you were writing a second edition to COLOR UP, what would you include to make it better? What questions do you still have about the ideas or steps described in COLOR UP?
If you got the chance to ask the authors of COLOR UP one question, what would it be?
Do you feel ready to Ripple—to inspire others to see life more colorfully beyond binaries?
Do you think COLOR UP is original and unique? If so, what makes this book different from other personal-development books you have read? Which of the five steps do you like the best?
What do you feel is the central idea discussed in COLOR UP? What about this idea do you find most surprising, intriguing, or difficult to understand?
What cultural observations do the authors make in COLOR UP? What ideas resonate with you in terms of economics and politics, family traditions, or worldviews?
What implications for your future are presented in COLOR UP that affect your life on a daily basis or more generally?
Talk about a specific passage from COLOR UP that you find particularly significant, profound, amusing, illuminating, or disturbing. What makes this passage memorable for you?
Reflect on the authors’ claim that the default mode in this culture is the black and white. Do you agree or disagree? What examples from your life can you offer to support your view?
The authors propose possibilities rather than solutions. Does this approach resonate with you? Help you understand how black-and-white opposites are two sides to the same story?
Consider the theme of personal agency in COLOR UP, and discuss some ways you relate the discussion to your life experiences. What other ways do you connect with the subject matter?
How controversial are the issues raised in COLOR UP for you? Has reading COLOR UP broadened your perspective or changed your views about a difficult issue, personal or societal?
What did you learn or take away from COLOR UP that you didn’t know before reading it?
If you were writing a second edition to COLOR UP, what would you include to make it better? What questions do you still have about the ideas or steps described in COLOR UP?
If you got the chance to ask the authors of COLOR UP one question, what would it be?
Do you feel ready to Ripple—to inspire others to see life more colorfully beyond binaries?