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Scary Close: Dropping the Act and Finding True Intimacy Hardcover – February 10, 2015

4.6 out of 5 stars 3,328 ratings

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When it comes to authenticity, is being fully yourself always worth the risk? From the author of Blue Like Jazz comes New York Times bestseller Scary Close, Donald Miller's journey of uncovering the keys to a healthy relationship and discovering that they're also at the heart of building a healthy family, a successful career, and a trusted community of friends.

After decades of failed relationships and painful drama, Miller decided that he'd had enough. Trying to impress people wasn't helping him truly connect with anyone--and neither was pretending to be someone he wasn't. He'd built himself a life of public isolation, but he dreamed of having a life defined by meaningful relationships instead. At 40-years-old, he made a scary decision: he was going to be his true self no matter what it might cost.

Scary Close tells the story of Miller's difficult choice to impress fewer people and connect with even more. It's about the importance of knocking down old walls to finally experience the freedom that comes when we stop playing a part and start being fully ourselves.

In Scary Close, Miller shares everything he's learned firsthand about how to:

  • Deconstruct the old habits that no longer serve us
  • Overcome the desire to please the people around us
  • Always tell the truth, even when it's hard
  • Find satisfaction in a daily portion of real love
  • Risk being fully known in order to deeply love and be loved
  • Apply these lessons to your everyday life

If you're ready to drop the act and find true, life-changing intimacy, it's time to get Scary Close.

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About the Author

Donald Miller is the author of several books, including the bestsellers Blue Like Jazz and A Million Miles in a Thousand Years. He helps people live a better story at storylineblog.com and helps leaders grow their businesses at storybrand.com. He lives in Nashville, Tennessee, with his wife, Betsy, and their chocolate lab, Lucy.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Scary Close

Dropping the Act and Finding True Intimacy

By Donald Miller

Thomas Nelson

Copyright © 2014 Donald Miller
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7852-1318-5

Contents

Foreword by Bob Goff, xi,
Author's Note, xv,
1. The Distracting Noises of Insecurity, 1,
2. You Are Good at Relationships, 9,
3. Everybody's Got a Story and It's Not the One They're Telling, 15,
4. Why Some Animals Make Themselves Look Bigger Than They Are, 23,
5. Three Things I Learned About Relationships From Swimming in a Pond, 37,
6. Performance Anxiety in Real Life, 53,
7. The People We Choose to Love, 69,
8. Control Freak, 81,
9. Five Kinds of Manipulators, 99,
10. Lucy in the Kitchen, 115,
11. The Risk of Being Careful, 133,
12. Great Parents Do This Well, 155,
13. The Stuff of a Meaningful Life, 173,
14. Do Men Do Intimacy Differently?, 187,
15. You Will Not Complete Me, 205,
16. The Place We Left Our Ghosts, 217,
Acknowledgments, 227,
About the Author, 231,


CHAPTER 1

The Distracting Noises of Insecurity


I DIDN' T START THINKING ABOUT MY HANG-UPS regarding intimacy until my fiancée met me in Asheville for a long weekend. I'd rented a cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains, where I was trying to finish a book before we got married. I'd spent more than a year pursuing her, even relocating to Washington, DC to date her, but once the ring was on her finger I went back into the woods. I wanted to finish the book so she wouldn't have to marry a temperamental writer. No woman should spend her first year of marriage watching her new husband pace the floor in his boxers, mumbling to himself. The writing life is only romantic on paper. The reality is, what writers write and the way they live can be as different as a lump of coal and a diamond. The written life is shined to a deceptive gloss.

That's one of the problems with the way I'm wired. I don't trust people to accept who I am in process. I'm the kind of person who wants to present my most honest, authentic self to the world—so I hide backstage and rehearse honest and authentic lines until the curtain opens.

I only say this because the same personality trait that made me a good writer also made me terrible at relationships. You can only hide backstage for so long. To have an intimate relationship, you have to show people who you really are. I'd gotten good at reeling in a woman and then bowing to say, "Thanks, you've been a great audience," right about the time I had to let her know who I really was. I hardly knew who I really was myself, much less how to be fully known.


WHEN BETSY ARRIVED IN ASHEVILLE, I 'D HARDLY talked to another human being in weeks. I felt like a scuba diver having to come to the surface when she asked a question.

We were sitting by the pond in front of the cabin when she asked how I could spend so much time alone. She said her friends admired my ability to isolate for a book's sake but wondered whether it was healthy. I don't think she was worried. She just found the ability foreign.

I thought about it and told her something I'd learned about myself in the year I spent pursuing her. I'd learned my default mode was to perform. Even in small groups I feel like I have to be "on." But when I'm alone my energy comes back. When I'm alone I don't have to perform for anybody.

She said I didn't have to perform for her. She didn't have to say that. I knew it was true. Who else do you marry but the person who pulls you off the stage?


BETSY' S EYES WERE AS GREEN AS THE REFLECTION of the trees on the pond. And as deep, I suppose. She was slow to trust, and even with a ring on her finger I knew part of her heart was being held back.

If I'm wired to impress people with an act, then Betsy is wired to withhold trust until it's been earned. She doesn't do it consciously. It's just that beneath her strong exterior there's fragility, so she doesn't offer her heart to just anybody.

Betsy told me when we met that in order to connect she needed quantity time. By that she meant we'd have to spend countless hours together doing nothing for her to feel safe. She believed anybody could come and go with a song and dance, but only the committed would last the seasons. And her community reflected this. While I'd spent my life getting people to clap for me, Betsy had laid a foundation with trusted friends, cousins, and siblings. And to those friends she was ferociously loyal.

In our year of dating, we'd only had one argument that was truly frightening. It happened after I insulted one of her friends. Actually, I rather objectively pointed out that one of her friends could be rude and might have a better chance with men if she'd stop emasculating them. I said I'd rather not spend any more time with that one, if she didn't mind. It turns out she did.

That single comment almost cost me our relationship. Betsy folded the napkin in her lap and set it on the table. She sat silently with murder in her eyes. When the waiter came to fill our glasses with water, I swear he backed away from the table without turning around.

And it wasn't even my comment that did it. It was the idea I could see a person as disposable. To Betsy, relationships were a life's work, the sum of countless conversations and shared experiences. She'd no sooner end a relationship than she'd cut down an old-growth tree. In the heat of that argument I realized I was only a sapling in the forest of this woman's life. I never spoke an ill word about one of her friends again. If I was going to win her heart, I'd have to plant myself in the forest and slowly grow the rings that earn loyalty, just as she and her friends had done with each other.

I knew then, this relationship would have to be different. I knew I'd have to know myself and be known. These weren't only terrifying prospects, they were foreign. I didn't know how to do either. And the stakes were high. I was going to have to either learn to be healthy or I'd spend the rest of my life pretending. It was either intimacy or public isolation.


ONE OF THE MANY GOOD THINGS GOD GAVE ME IN Betsy was the motivation to change. I'd spent years isolated and alone, working up words to tell people who I was—or more accurately, who I wanted to be. But in many ways that was a dark and lonely life. I'm not saying it didn't have its perks, because people clapping for you will always be a nice thing. But it's better when you have somebody to go home to and talk about it with, somebody who is more in love with you than impressed by you.


THAT'S THE GIST OF THIS STORY, I SUPPOSE. THESE are snapshots of the year I spent learning to perform less, be myself more, and overcome a complicated fear of being known. This book is about how I realized I could have a happy life without splitting an atom or making a splash. It's true our lives can pass small and unnoticed by the masses, and we are no less dignified for having lived quietly. In fact, I've come to believe there's something noble about doing little with your life save offering love to a person who is offering it back.

Here's a thought that haunts me: What if we are designed as sensitive antennas, receptors to receive love, a longing we often mistake as a need to be impressive? What if some of the most successful people in the world got that way because their success was fueled by a misappropriated need for love? What if the people we consider to be great are actually the most broken? And what if the whole time they're seeking applause they are missing out on true intimacy because they've never learned how to receive it?

Years ago, I remember seeing an interview with the son of a former president, who, after a sigh and a long silence admitted he'd spent countless hours with the most powerful man in the world but had no idea who he really was. "I never knew my father," the son said. "Nobody knew my father."


ONLY A FEW TIMES IN OUR LIVES DO WE GET TO know, in the moment, the impact of the moment itself. Robert Frost didn't tell us the fork in the road is easier seen in hindsight. But sitting there by the pond with Betsy I knew I could either let her really get to know me, or I could dance a jig and burn out like so much false love. And the decision would affect not only our relationship, but our future children's mental health, the lives of our friends, and perhaps, in some mysterious way, all of eternity.

I don't mean to overstate what is yet unknown, but part of me believes when the story of earth is told, all that will be remembered is the truth we exchanged. The vulnerable moments. The terrifying risk of love and the care we took to cultivate it. And all the rest, the distracting noises of insecurity and the flattery and the flashbulbs will flicker out like a turned-off television.

CHAPTER 2

You Are Good at Relationships


THE FACT BETSY AND I WERE ENGAGED AT ALL WAS a miracle. Only a couple of years before we started dating I was convinced the only thing I had to offer in a relationship was pain. I'd broken off an engagement. I caused an enormous amount of damage, and the only positive was that the pain, both hers and mine, finally disrupted my pattern. I couldn't live this way anymore.

My pattern was this: I'd meet a girl who seemed out of my league. I'd ask her out, spend time with her, start dating her, and then become obsessive. I needed her approval. It's not that I wanted it, I needed it. I'd wonder why she hadn't responded to my texts or my calls or why she didn't seem to like me the way I liked her. In my younger days, this killed any chance at a relationship, but as I got older I learned to hide it. I'd mark how many days on a calendar it had been since I made contact. I'd wait as many as ten before contacting her again so as not to look needy. I had a system and the system worked.

That's when phase two would kick in. Suddenly, after all that obsessing, I'd lose interest. I was drawn to girls who played the victim because girls who play the victim make you feel like a hero. Until you resent them. And after I couldn't stand them, I'd get mean. I'd say mean things. Then I'd feel bad and make up and then resent them again. My dating life was a death spiral of codependency and resentment.

And the last relationship was the most painful.

It was my friend Bob who finally convinced me to end it. Bob is a high-powered lawyer in San Diego, and he's skilled in mediating conflict. He sensed there was trouble from the beginning. He'd call every week or so to check in, to see how the engagement was going. And it was never going well. We'd be fighting again. Or I hadn't slept in days. She'd taken off the ring and stored it in a box. We'd canceled the wedding invitations.

"Don," Bob said, "I think this is over."

I had an office above a Thai restaurant on 23rd at the time. I leaned back in my chair with my feet on the windowsill. I thumbed through a pile of mail I hadn't looked at in weeks. He said it again. He said he thought the relationship was over and I needed to acknowledge the fact. I knew he was right. It had been over for months.

"Do you want me to get on a plane and help you tell her?" he asked sadly.

"No," I said. "I can do it."

So I did. It sounds trivial now. Millions of couples break off engagements and nearly all of them are better off because of it. But when you're in it, when you say all those words and don't mean them a couple months later, you feel like a fool. You wonder if your words have power anymore, and what is a man if his words are weakened?

Add to this the sadness, the confusing grief involved in hurting somebody and the forced realization there's something in you so unhealthy and careless it could level a heart.

My season of sadness lasted nearly a year. And once again, it was Bob who helped me through it. One afternoon when I was back in my office, trying to write, Bob called again. He asked how I was and I told him I would be fine. He asked how I was healing and I told him I was healing fine. Of course none of that was true. I wasn't fine at all. I was numb. I kept a bottle of whiskey behind a Bible on the bookshelf and when everybody went home I'd have three drinks and listen to music as a way of trying to feel something.

"You don't sound fine," Bob said.

I'd have argued with him, but I was afraid he'd notice I was slurring my words.

"You know what I've noticed about you, Don?" Bob said.

"What's that, Bob?"

"I've noticed you're good at relationships."

I said nothing. I wasn't sure I understood him correctly. Then he said it again, right into the silence of the phone.

"You're good at relationships, Don," he repeated.

The truth is I hadn't cried since I'd broken off the engagement. Like I said, I'd gone numb. But as he said those absurd words, something in me began to feel again and all the pain of the season swelled up. I pulled the phone from my ear, dropped my head on the desk, and wept. And as I cried, Bob kept repeating, "Don, you're good at relationships. You're still good at them. You've always been good at them."

For the next few months there was a yawning chasm between Bob's affirmation and the way I felt about myself. But he kept calling, and every time he'd call he'd say it again. "You know, Don, you're terrific at relationships. Remember that time you encouraged me? Remember that kid you and I met in Uganda and how much he loved you? Remember that girl you dated years ago who still thinks of you as a brother? We can't let our failures define us, Don. You're good at relationships, and you're only getting better." Like a trial lawyer he argued his case into my soul, week after week, until the chasm began to close and I started thinking about dating again.

When I say I started to think about dating again, I'm not saying I was ready for a serious relationship. Betsy didn't come around for another year, and God knows she'd have smelled my issues anyway. I only mean the pain subsided enough that I began to obsess again about girls. It was my same old pattern. But this time I recognized something was wrong. And I decided to get help.

CHAPTER 3

Everybody's Got a Story and It's Not The One They're Telling


FOR YEARS I 'D BEEN HEARING ABOUT THI S PLACE outside Nashville called Onsite. I'd heard it described as therapy camp for adults. I'd had several singer/songwriter friends who'd been stuck in their creative work and attended one of Onsite's programs and came back ready to write again. One friend, Jake, told me the program helped him figure out why he had so many screwed-up relationships. He said their workshops dealt a great deal with codependency and shame.

I signed up, but I really didn't want to go. I was mostly going because the breakup had been a bit public and I wanted people to know I was working on my issues. It's that old performer side of me, you know. Part of me believed that with time I could solve my own problems. I'd written best-selling books helping people resolve their issues, after all. Why couldn't I solve my own?

At the time, I was doing research on story structure, on the kinds of plots that make movies compelling. One day I realized something obvious: In all these movies, there was a similar plot. The hero is always weak at the beginning and strong at the end, or a jerk at the beginning and kind at the end, or cowardly at the beginning and brave at the end. In other words, heroes are almost always screwups. But it hardly mattered. All the hero has to do to make the story great is struggle with doubt, face their demons, and muster enough strength to destroy the Death Star.

That said, I noticed another thing. The strongest character in a story isn't the hero, it's the guide. Yoda. Haymitch. It's the guide who gets the hero back on track. The guide gives the hero a plan and enough confidence to enter the fight. The guide has walked the path of the hero and has the advice and wisdom to get the hero through their troubles so they can beat the resistance.

The more I studied story, the more I realized I needed a guide.


THE BUS RIDE FROM THE AIRPORT TO ONSITE WAS terrible. We'd flown in from all over, about forty of us, and we sat uncomfortably close to each other without talking. Even in my late thirties I felt like a teenager being sent to rehab. I looked around, wondering what the other inmates were in for. I tried to categorize them: pervs, cling-ons, pill poppers, conspiracy theorists. SkyMall must have made a fortune off these people during their flights.

When we arrived, I was surprised at the serenity of the place. Onsite is housed in an old mansion on a hill. Almost no other houses or farms are visible from the large front porch. Horses roam behind the mansion and a creek runs between the pasture and the neighboring hill. The staff is friendly, as though pretending they don't have a closet somewhere filled with tranquilizer guns.

Some of us had roommates at Onsite. When I asked the guy on the bed next to me what he was in for, he told me he came to Onsite because he'd destroyed his marriage and his company by telling lies. He said he didn't know why he lied, except he wanted to impress people. But he lied his way into bankruptcy and signed up for Onsite when his ex-wife told him about the place. Interestingly, I found the guy trustworthy after that. I felt like I could tell him anything. I didn't, but I felt like I could.


(Continues...)Excerpted from Scary Close by Donald Miller. Copyright © 2014 Donald Miller. Excerpted by permission of Thomas Nelson.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Harper Horizon
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ February 10, 2015
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 078521318X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0785213185
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.88 x 1 x 8.75 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 3,328 ratings

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Donald Miller
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Donald Miller is the CEO of StoryBrand and Business Made Simple. He is the host of the Coach Builder YouTube channel and is the author of several books including bestsellers Building a StoryBrand, Marketing Made Simple, and How to Grow Your Small Business. He lives in Nashville, Tennessee with his wife, Elizabeth and their daughter, Emmeline.

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Customers find the book thought-provoking and relatable, with one noting how the author bares his soul in telling his story. Moreover, the book provides a great glimpse into meaningful relationships and encourages readers to live more meaningfully, while challenging them to be authentic. Customers appreciate the author's vulnerability, with one noting how it helps understand the concept of vulnerability, and find the book easy to understand and helpful.

300 customers mention "Thought provoking"292 positive8 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking and meaningful, with one customer noting how the author bares his soul in sharing his story, while others appreciate how it makes the content very relatable.

"...I loved "Scary Close" for many reasons. Don is a very readable author who doesn't try to impress the reader with his brilliant intelligence..." Read more

"...What Scary Close does for me is that it opens my eyes in a way that I have needed for a long time...." Read more

"...I could go on and on. This book is FULL of insights but not from a "giving advice" standpoint but more as a 1st person narrative of Don's..." Read more

"...This book offers you the opportunity to draw your own conclusions versus telling you what to do and how; thus actually being able to say and teach..." Read more

196 customers mention "Insight into relationships"191 positive5 negative

Customers appreciate the book's insights into relationships, describing it as one of the best books on the subject and providing a great glimpse into meaningful connections, with principles that are relevant for all types of relationships.

"...If you think you'd like to begin the journey to intimate, authentic relationships (getting "Scary Close"), you'll probably want to take..." Read more

"...: I love Donald Miller’s book, but while this is likely his most personal book, it fails to be the most engaging...." Read more

"...However, this book within the first chapter was so brave, authentic and honest I had to keep reading...." Read more

"...fresh perspective on the discrepancies between healthy and unhealthy relationships. I want to read Safe People now by Cloud/Townsend...." Read more

96 customers mention "Encouragement"96 positive0 negative

Customers find the book inspirational and heartwarming, with one customer noting it provides life-changing advice.

"...This book is brave and courageous, it encourages us to risk being vulnerable in order to ultimately connect with other human beings...." Read more

"...Being close with others is hard and often painful. It is also joyful and hopeful and worth the time to connect and be authentic...." Read more

"...It is a story of growth and change and maturity...." Read more

"...in the Christian community for greater transparency, service, honesty, grace and forgiveness. That's all true...." Read more

96 customers mention "Honesty"96 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's unique honesty, encouraging readers to be authentic and look at themselves honestly.

"...You may not agree with every single concept he presents, but most felt true to me and this book has challenged me to become a more authentic friend..." Read more

"...process on relationships and will bring you closer to being a raw, true human, flaws and all...." Read more

"...However, this book within the first chapter was so brave, authentic and honest I had to keep reading...." Read more

"...I am grateful for the raw honestly that leads to simple, take-away truths that are certainly very applicable to life...." Read more

81 customers mention "Storytelling"73 positive8 negative

Customers enjoy the storytelling in the book, with many praising the great points and anecdotes, and one customer noting how the spiritual challenges deepen with each chapter.

"...The book is very insightful and interesting. He tells wonderful stories, and it seems much deeper than what you would expect from a popular level..." Read more

"The book is a very easy read because it is well written and contains a lot of stories...." Read more

"...It is a story of growth and change and maturity...." Read more

"...There are plenty of anecdotes and personal experiences that the reader is intended to relate with...." Read more

59 customers mention "Vulnerability"59 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the author's vulnerability in the book, with several noting how it helps them understand the concept, and one mentioning how it builds a solid foundation for lasting relationships.

"...process of peeling back the layers and becoming authentic and vulnerable to his fiance, friends and mentors...." Read more

"...This book is brave and courageous, it encourages us to risk being vulnerable in order to ultimately connect with other human beings...." Read more

"...It is raw and vulnerable, something I cannot remember reading in another book, article, or blog...." Read more

"As it turns out, vulnerability is not weakness, but avoiding it is one of humanity's strongest motivations...." Read more

47 customers mention "Relevance"47 positive0 negative

Customers find the book helpful and impactful, with one customer noting it is very applicable to life.

"I didn’t realize it at first, but this is a marriage book. Not a book about marriage, but more about preparing yourself for marriage...." Read more

"...that leads to simple, take-away truths that are certainly very applicable to life...." Read more

"...There are some good points, such as the need in the Christian community for greater transparency, service, honesty, grace and forgiveness...." Read more

"...It helped me to see that I am special and important and I have a lot to offer...and not just what I think other want from me, but who I really am...." Read more

40 customers mention "Ease of use"40 positive0 negative

Customers find the book easy to use and appreciate its simplicity, with one customer noting how readily applicable the principles are.

"...In his typically easy-going, conversational style Don walks us through his journey from realization of who he is and the layers of emotional..." Read more

"...This book is somewhat self-help, but it is perhaps more of a book of reflection...." Read more

"...It was well written and the author's writing style makes the book easy to get through but it fell flat for me." Read more

"...I read this book in a day and a half. It's that good and that difficult to put down. Get a copy for yourself and one for someone you love." Read more

Scary Close: Dropping the Act
3 out of 5 stars
Scary Close: Dropping the Act
Donald Miller is on a search again for deepening human value and connection. In his newest read, he readily admitted he had issues within himself that were preventing him from connecting with others in a beneficial way. This book expounds on the journey he took to answer some deep questions about his struggle, and how he came to process his need to just live instead of pleasing everyone. Through counseling with trusted friends, observing interactions between other friends and their home lives, and a program through Onsite (http://www.onsiteworkshops.com/), he was able to identify some clear reasons with his inability to connect. One thing he said that really hit me, was "Grace only sticks to our imperfections. Those who can't accept their imperfections can't accept grace either." To me, it was pretty clear-cut and profound, but I'm not sure even Donald realized how close to his sharing of the gospel he came! Donald made a remark that should simply point us to the cross, and then to the saving grace of Jesus and why we extend that same grace to others. Prior to this revelation, he was unable to receive love from his new fiance, Betsy, and his rejection of her attempts was proof of him wearing a mask that was shown for the purpose of keeping his true self safe. He couldn't be vulnerable. I can't say why, as that would be a breach of your reason to read the book. But what I can say is that there is a part of us all that can identify with wearing masks to stay safe in front of people we think have expectations for us. And instead of outward approval, we just need grace. This book reads as a philosophical memoir, as Donald shares personal conversations, interactions and revelations. He admits to some insights coming from his faith and the Bible, but predominantly he comes to conclusions based on books he's read that describe theories from other men in the same emotional mature state. It left me wanting to sit down with Donald myself. I would love to share that while I appreciated his growth stages, and I loved that he was finally able to take off the mask to be exposed for the man he really is, I want to share with him who Jesus really is. It seems like some of the roadblocks he was encountering could simply be changed by deepening his reading of the Word, and trusting in God instead of feeling like he has to have a plan for everything. Then again, maybe Donald hasn't had his light bulb a-ha moment yet. Maybe he's wading into the water with this book, which ends on his wedding day, and now, God will be tugging on his heart as he seeks to serve his wife in a godly manner. Maybe Donald will begin to seek God differently and realize that worldly wisdom, though helpful at times, will always leave us wanting something even deeper than counseling sessions and ninety-day business plans. Overall, I appreciate his honesty, simple insights, basic truths and his ability to be transparent in his journey. Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through the BookLook Bloggers (http://booklookbloggers.com) book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 (http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx_03/16cfr255_03.html): “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2015
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    First, let me say I did NOT get a free copy of this book for review - I bought it (pre-ordered it from his Storyline site). And I loved it!

    My interest in Don's work might be a little different from most. I have yet to read "Blue Like Jazz" (although I'm sure I will eventually). I found out about Don through an organization he was involved in founding, The Mentoring Project, which recently came to my city. I read his book on fatherhood (and lack thereof), "Father Fiction", which like "Scary Close" is a very intimate and readable walk through "life with Don".

    I loved "Scary Close" for many reasons. Don is a very readable author who doesn't try to impress the reader with his brilliant intelligence and profound insights, but he does have a way of presenting very profound concepts in an easily digestible way. He is a Christian and makes no attempt to hide the fact, but neither does it beat you over the head with it. The ideas and experiences he shares are just...human. He sounds very human to me, like a guy you'd love to hang out with and discuss Deep Thoughts and The Meaning of Life, and you know it wouldn't be boring and he wouldn't monopolize the conversation. His books are pretty much like conversations with a friend, someone who isn't afraid to share the not-so-flattering moments in his life.

    Which leads me to this book about his journey from what I would characterize as "regular guy" (albeit a little more successful than average) to someone who is struggling to "get" relationships and how to make them *really* work and not just *seem* to. Although it's told in the context of his courtship of his fiance (and eventually wife) Betsy, it includes other relationships with mentors and friends. The concepts and revelations he presents are universal. If I were to boil it down, it would be: Be real, because avoiding pain isn't worth being alone.

    Whether we will admit it or not, we all have our defense mechanisms that hold people at arm's length until we decide whether or not they are safe to reveal our "real self" to. Some people (like Don), go through life holding everyone at arm's length to a greater or lesser extent (even intimate partners and close friends) and thereby miss out on the joy of true, intimate relationship. In his typically easy-going, conversational style Don walks us through his journey from realization of who he is and the layers of emotional protection he has built up, through the discovery of why he felt he needed that protection and what from and into the painful yet freeing process of peeling back the layers and becoming authentic and vulnerable to his fiance, friends and mentors. As you walk through the process with him, you can almost feel the weight coming off his shoulders and the growing freedom that comes with being real and authentic without the dysfunctional tics and defense mechanisms.

    I read this book rather slowly, because each chapter presents another step or two in his journey and provides ample room for thought. If you think you'd like to begin the journey to intimate, authentic relationships (getting "Scary Close"), you'll probably want to take time to mull over each step and revelation. You may not agree with every single concept he presents, but most felt true to me and this book has challenged me to become a more authentic friend, father and husband. I have a feeling I will be reading it again and again.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2015
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    I am good at relationships. But I am also bad at them.

    After reading Donald Millers Scary Close I am willing to admit that fact. But I can only begin to imagine the gut wrenching days and nights that Don spent writing this book. Having this in mind, I would sum up this book with a single word, "honesty" and this is the key to the whole book, and the entire message that Don is trying to get across to his readers.

    In Scary Close, Don spends a good majority of the book looking at his own personal "demon" as I would call it. His demon is that of himself, and without giving away the book, a demon that tries to cover up and shield himself from the world. And when you think about it, don't all of us have our own demons that some of us try to cover up?

    Don points out key aspects throughout Scary Close that look at the inner demons keeping us from having true relationships with those around us. Some of those talking points in the book include, but are not limited to: Everyone's Got a Story and it's Not the One They're Telling, Performance Anxiety in Real Life, Five Kinds of Manipulators, The Stuff of a Meaningful Life and more.

    Don does an amazing job of showing the reader his inner most fears, desires, and regrets in life. My only wish is that Don would do a better job of explaining how he mentally overcame these fears. It's all great as we hear that he has these problems, fears, regrets and desires, and it's great that Don overcame them. The problem is that he overcame them through certain activities or friends that we may not have access to. If we understood deeper about what it takes to overcome our shortcomings that make us bad at relationships, we may be able to overcome them in our life. BUT Scary Close is not a self-help book, at least I don't think so.

    What Scary Close does for me is that it opens my eyes in a way that I have needed for a long time. As I was reading the book there were countless moments where I felt that Don was speaking directly to me. In moments of fear that I didn't want to turn into someone that didn't have meaningful relationships with friends, coworkers, and loved ones I realized that I needed to pay closer attention to Scary Close as I was reading. It reminds me that I am not alone, that there is always going to be someone just like me, having the same issues and fears as I do. Scary Close has opened my eyes to honesty, and being honest in a way that will change how I approach and maintain my relationships for the rest of my life.

    This book is for those of us that are pure human, those of us that make mistakes, those of us that are vulnerable. Scary Close will change how you approach your thought process on relationships and will bring you closer to being a raw, true human, flaws and all. Because of this, it will remain on the bookshelf in a location that I will easily be able to reach. You're good at relationships, and Don will help you see this.

    My review can also be found on my website - www.edswebb.com
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  • Bruce Ratzlaff
    5.0 out of 5 stars Full of insight.
    Reviewed in Canada on February 13, 2022
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    I liked this a lot. Really practical, vulnerable, real-world stuff. It’s non-clinical which I enjoyed, just a guy with the skills to express vital learnings about intimacy in relationships. Really worthwhile.
  • Andy
    5.0 out of 5 stars A lighthouse on a stormy night
    Reviewed in Australia on November 20, 2021
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    A blend of Daring Greatly and Models that I related to a lot. Easy reading with some punch in the gut messages.
  • Amanda Guimi
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
    Reviewed in Brazil on April 25, 2019
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    Me ajudou a encontrar cura emocional da forma menos óbvia possível. Incrível! Gostaria de ler mais obras do autor!
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  • A Person
    5.0 out of 5 stars Worth reading.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 19, 2015
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    The author makes himself vulnerable to the reader in a way that's relatable. The book is full of valuable insights. I intend to go back and re-read it.
  • Joseph Raymund
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing!
    Reviewed in Australia on February 26, 2019
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Knowledge, and perhaps moreso an awareness of self is half the battle and Don did a great job of facilitating this journey of discovery through his book. Definitely a must read!