Who Moved My Cheese Audiobook Free Download

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Who Moved My Cheese?
AuthorSpencer Johnson
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreSelf-help / motivational
PublisherPutnam Adult
September 7, 1998
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages32 pp.
ISBN0-399-14446-3
OCLC38752984
155.2/4
LC ClassBF637.C4 J64 1998

Who Moved My Cheese by Spencer Johnson Audiobook. The tale of who moved my cheese is a very good one. The way it is told makes it easy to read. It will help you put things in perspective and can have a big impact on your life.

Who Moved My Cheese? An Amazing Way to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life, published on September 8, 1998, is a motivationalbusiness fable. The text describes change in one's work and life, and four typical reactions to those changes by two mice and two 'little people', during their hunt for cheese. A New York Timesbusinessbestseller upon release, Who Moved My Cheese? remained on the list for almost five years and spent over 200 weeks on Publishers Weekly's hardcover nonfiction list.[1] It has sold more than 26 million copies worldwide in 37 languages and remains one of the best-selling business books.[2][3]

Story[edit]

Allegorically, Who Moved My Cheese? features four characters: two mice, 'Sniff' and 'Scurry,' and two little people, human metaphor, 'Hem' and 'Haw.' (The names of the little people are taken from the phrase 'hem and haw,' a term for indecisiveness.) They live in a maze, a representation of one's environment, and look for cheese, representative of happiness and success. Initially without cheese, each group, the mice and humans, paired off and traveled the lengthy corridors searching for cheese. One day both groups happen upon a cheese-filled corridor at 'Cheese Station C.' Content with their find, the humans establish routines around their daily intake of cheese, slowly becoming arrogant in the process.

Who Moved My Cheese Audiobook Free Download For Pc

One day Sniff and Scurry arrive at Cheese Station C to find no cheese left, but they are not surprised. Noticing the cheese supply dwindling, they have mentally prepared beforehand for the arduous but inevitable task of finding more cheese. Leaving Cheese Station C behind, they begin their hunt for new cheese together. Later that day, Hem and Haw arrive at Cheese Station C only to find the same thing, no cheese. Angered and annoyed, Hem demands, 'Who moved my cheese?' The humans have counted on the cheese supply to be constant, and so are unprepared for this eventuality. After deciding that the cheese is indeed gone they get angry at the unfairness of the situation. Haw suggests a search for new cheese, but Hem is dead-set in his disappointment and dismisses the proposal.

Meanwhile, Sniff and Scurry have found 'Cheese Station N,' and new cheese. But back at Cheese Station C, Hem and Haw are affected by their lack of cheese and blame each other for their problem. Hoping to change, Haw again proposes a search for new cheese. However, Hem is comforted by his old routine and is frightened about the unknown. He knocks the idea again. After a while of being in denial, the humans remain without cheese. One day, having discovered his debilitating fears, Haw begins to chuckle at the situation and stops taking himself so seriously. Realizing he should simply move on, Haw enters the maze, but not before chiseling 'If You Do Not Change, You Can Become Extinct' on the wall of Cheese Station C for his friend to ponder.

Still fearful of his trek, Haw jots 'What Would You Do If You Weren't Afraid?' on the wall and, after thinking about that, he begins his venture. Still plagued with worry (perhaps he has waited too long to begin his search...), Haw finds some bits of cheese that nourish him and he is able to continue his search. Haw realizes that the cheese has not suddenly vanished, but has dwindled from continual eating. After a stop at an empty cheese station, Haw begins worrying about the unknown again. Brushing aside his fears, Haw's new mindset allows him to again enjoy life. He has even begun to smile again! He is realizing that 'When you move beyond your fear, you feel free.' After another empty cheese station, Haw decides to go back for Hem with the few bits of new cheese he has managed to find.

Uncompromising, Hem refuses the new cheese, to his friend's disappointment. With knowledge learned along the way, Haw heads back into the maze. Getting deeper into the maze, inspired by bits of new cheese here and there, Haw leaves a trail of writings on the wall ('The Handwriting On the Wall'). These clarify his own thinking and give him hope that his friend will find aid in them during his search for new cheese. Still traveling, Haw one day comes across Cheese Station N, abundant with cheese, including some varieties that are strange to him, and he realizes he has found what he was looking for. After eating, Haw reflects on his experience. He ponders a return to see his old friend. But Haw decides to let Hem find his own way. Finding the largest wall in Cheese Station N, he writes:

Change Happens
They Keep Moving The Cheese
Anticipate Change
Get Ready For The Cheese To Move
Monitor Change
Smell The Cheese Often So You Know When It Is Getting Old
Adapt To Change Quickly
The Quicker You Let Go Of Old Cheese, The Sooner You Can Enjoy New Cheese
Change
Move With The Cheese
Enjoy Change!
Savor The Adventure And Enjoy The Taste Of New Cheese!
Be Ready To Change Quickly And Enjoy It Again
They Keep Moving The Cheese.
Who moved my cheese summary

Cautious from past experience, Haw now inspects Cheese Station N daily and explores different parts of the maze regularly to prevent any complacency from setting in. After hearing movement in the maze one day, Haw realizes someone is approaching the station. Unsure, Haw hopes that it is his friend Hem who has found the way.[4]

Who Moved My Cheese Inc.[edit]

In 1999, Who Moved My Cheese Inc was founded to handle the Who Moved My Cheese? book order demands from businesses. In 2005, the company was reorganized as Spencer Johnson Partners with the idea of bringing in partners and additional content from Dr. Spencer Johnson, the author. Spencer Johnson Partners focused on creating additional programs and services that would continue to help clients navigate change, including Gaining Change Skills. Then, in 2009, the company was purchased and renamed Red Tree Leadership.

Criticism[edit]

In the corporate environment, management has been known to distribute this book to employees during times of 'structural reorganization', or during cost-cutting measures, in an attempt to portray unfavorable or unfair changes in an optimistic or opportunistic way. This has been characterized by Barbara Ehrenreich in her book Bright-sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America as an attempt by organizational management to make employees quickly and unconditionally assimilate management ideals, even if they may prove detrimental to them professionally. Ehrenreich summarizes its message as 'the dangerous human tendencies to 'overanalyze' and complain must be overcome for a more rodentlike approach to life. When you lose a job, just shut up and scamper along to the next one.'[5]

Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams said that patronizing parables are one of the top 10 complaints he receives in his emails.[6] Scott Adams' retort to the message in the parable is that it is a 'patronizing message for the proletariat to acquiesce'.[7]

Three more criticisms can be phrased as:

  1. 'The cheese doesn't matter'. This view claims that the cheese is a means, not a cause. In the parable, there is a point in which Haw's new mindset allows him to enjoy life, even without cheese. This plot line could lead to Haw's understanding that the cheese is not the ultimate cause, but just some means to gain a deeper cause. However this plot line is quickly averted, without good enough inner-story justification.
  2. 'There is no cheese'. The former criticism can be developed further along in an existential/Buddhist manner to claim that we can always develop an infinite chain of causes and means, but ultimately, there is not any 'real cause'—'There is no (real) cheese'.
  3. 'You're being compared to a rat in a maze'. In this view the reader looks beyond the parable's immediate moral to see a larger analogy of employees in the role of mice (or, colloquially, rats) in a maze, while those outside the maze (corporate management) are manipulating the experiment (the work environment) to their own advantage, indifferent to the plight that the rodents faced with life-and-death choices inside the maze.
  4. The story tells adequate details about change, adaptation and success however the context example is materialistic and based on old survival and competitive philosophy depicts need of change in emergency situations.

Parodies[edit]

Free

There are multiple parody works called Who Cut the Cheese?.[8]

Andy Borowitz published a parody, Who Moved My Soap?: The CEO’s Guide to Surviving Prison, Simon & Schuster, c2003.[9]

Darrel Bristow-Bovey published a parody, I Moved Your Cheese, Penguin Random House South Africa, Apr 13, 2012.[10]

Cheese

Who Moved My Cheese Audio Book Free Download

The webcomic Abstruse Goose has a strip which is a parody of the book.[11]

Comedian/TV host/motivational speaker Ross Shafer wrote Nobody Moved Your Cheese![12]

References[edit]

  1. ^Maryles, Daisy and Dick Donahue. 'Behind the Bestsellers', Publishers Weekly 10 December 2001: 18.
  2. ^Guodong, Du. 'Moving his cheese up peaks and down valleys' (23 November 2009). The Global Times. Archived 2012-06-30 at Archive.today: 'Who Moved My Cheese has sold over 26 million copies, staying on the New York Times bestseller list since its release in 1998.'
  3. ^'Who Moved My Cheese?'. Time. December 4, 2008.
  4. ^Johnson, Spencer (1988). Who Moved My Cheese?. G.P. Putnam's Sons.
  5. ^Barbara Ehrenreich, Bright-sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America. Metropolitan, 2009. Ehrenreich called the book 'the classic of downsizing propaganda'.
  6. ^'What moves the 'Cheese' for books', Del Jones, USA Today, 26 December 2002.
  7. ^Kreissl, Brian (7 January 2014). 'Is Change Management patronizing to Employees?'. hrreporter.com. Canadian HR Reporter. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  8. ^Jim Dawson (2011), Blame It on the Dog, Potter/TenSpeed/Harmony, p. xi, ISBN9780307778772
  9. ^'Nonfiction Book Review: Who Moved My Soap?: The CEO's Guide to Surviving Prison: The Bernie Madoff Edition by Andy Borowitz'. PublishersWeekly.com. Retrieved 2016-02-20.
  10. ^'I Moved Your Cheese'. Google Books. Retrieved 2017-08-02.
  11. ^Abstruse GooseThe Story of the Cheese Maze
  12. ^'Nobody Moved Your Cheese!'. Ross Shafer. Retrieved 2018-07-02.

External links[edit]

Free Ebook Who Moved My Cheese

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About Who Moved My Cheese?

THE #1 INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER WITH OVER 28 MILLION COPIES IN PRINT!
A timeless business classic, Who Moved My Cheese? uses a simple parable to reveal profound truths about dealing with change so that you can enjoy less stress and more success in your work and in your life.
It would be all so easy if you had a map to the Maze.
If the same old routines worked.
If they’d just stop moving “The Cheese.”
But things keep changing…
Most people are fearful of change, both personal and professional, because they don’t have any control over how or when it happens to them. Since change happens either to the individual or by the individual, Dr. Spencer Johnson, the coauthor of the multimillion bestseller The One Minute Manager, uses a deceptively simple story to show that when it comes to living in a rapidly changing world, what matters most is your attitude.
Exploring a simple way to take the fear and anxiety out of managing the future, Who Moved My Cheese? can help you discover how to anticipate, acknowledge, and accept change in order to have a positive impact on your job, your relationships, and every aspect of your life.