
Ben Feder’s book, Take Off Your Shoes, is a story of self-rediscovery. He details his journeying from revelation that his soul had been subtly taken over to the new normal he gains from a year-long career sabbatical. Along the way, he shares observations about brain science and growth, leading readers into wondering if Feder is knowingly or perhaps unwittingly finding an answer to the question: “Can you think yourself happy?”
A Subtle Takeover of the Soul
The book begins with key insights into who Feder WAS. A highly intelligent and cunning business professional who is setting all the dominoes in place for the hostile takeover of an under performing company. His success in that attempt becomes an interesting pivot of sorts. He foreshadows what would unfold when he explains that the successful takeover was a moment of both power and empathy. On the job much later than expected, Feder observes the strain on his relationships at home and has grown numb while mired in the grind of business life. There’s physical and emotional tolls. All in the pursuit of more, he’s in a “mindless trap” of goal chasing.The Aha Moment and The Man in the Mirror
"This is where it happens. When husbands and fathers turn into men they never intended to be. They follow their ambitions, their careers, and their deluded views of what it means to succeed… eventually realize that they have neglected key relationships that feed them, relationships that are critical to their well-being” (17).That’s how Feder describes his aha moment. It’s the moment he realizes he’s in need of some self-rediscovery. A passerby is a virtual mirror of who Feder had become. It stirred him. And it provoked a desire to reconnect with those relationships while exposing his kids to a world of greater diversity and engaging their senses of personal identity. Lost in the relentless pursuit, he makes a decision to disconnect from who he’d become and reconnect with what and who most matters.




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