A serious, personal account of change in later life—presented without miracle claims, without exaggeration, and without hiding difficulty.
This is not a generic health pitch. It is a book built on lived experience, disciplined reflection, and unusual honesty. It invites the reader to evaluate credibility first, then decide whether the book is worth owning.
The preface matters because it moves the story beyond self-description. The visible changes were not only felt by the author. They were observed by the people closest to him over a multi-year period. That makes the narrative more credible.
By openly stating that he received three heart stents in December 2025, the author rejects image management. He does not present himself as a perfect case. He presents himself honestly. That deepens trust and differentiates the book from exaggerated transformation stories.
Luis Fernando Canal brings broad international experience built across senior executive, presidency, directorship, and consulting roles. His professional background adds weight to the disciplined tone of this book: it is written by someone accustomed to responsibility, judgment, and long-term consequences.
His career includes leadership experience in high-level positions connected to the financial and mining sectors, where seriousness, credibility, and decision quality matter.
This background does not turn the book into a technical manual, and it does not replace the autobiographical nature of the story. What it does add is authority of character: a reader encounters an author shaped by demanding professional environments, not by internet hype or superficial self-promotion.
That professional maturity reinforces the core value of the book: a serious human account of change in later life, presented with restraint, honesty, and dignity.
Because the book does not try to look flawless. It openly includes family testimony and it openly includes the fact that the author received three heart stents in December 2025.
That combination of external observation and personal transparency makes the tone more credible than a typical self-improvement sales page.
If you value dignity, clarity, restraint, and a truthful account of change in later life, this book justifies its price. It does not ask you to believe in miracles. It asks you to examine an honest human story.