An Arsenal of Gratitude

Waging War on Mediocrity and Regret

An Arsenal of Gratitude is an unapologetic assault on mediocrity and taking life for granted. These are the lessons from heartbreaking and miraculous stories growing alongside childhood cancer survivors, life-or-death scenarios as a big-game horseback guide, wrestling with addiction, and so much more. Remmy spares no vulnerable, gritty detail to stress gratitude as the all-powerful foundation to build our lives upon.

This book is a no-nonsense crash-course on improving our holistic well-being. It will tear down victim mentality, entitlement, and comfort abuse to help us redefine ourselves through gratitude, intentionality, authenticity, and anti-fragile mindsets.

The bitter cliche that we all know in our own story, “You don’t know what you have until it’s gone” dies with this book.

AUTHOR Q&A

What inspired you to write your book?

This book is my way of honouring the young cancer survivor community I was privileged to grow up in. It is in honour of both the miracles and tragedies of young friends lost too soon to their battle with cancer. It is a war cry to return the lifestyle of gratitude to our lives and eradicate mediocrity and regret one bold choice at a time. It is a calling for people to rise to their own self-mastery and make a masterpiece of our one run at this life.

What part of the book am I most fond of?

Besides sharing miracle stories from Kids Cancer Camp, the process of this book’s creation helped me transform and draw the victory out of my life’s shortcomings and insecurities. It’s now a living accountability measure that magic can be made of misery and survival guides out of our sorrows. Gratitude is not fluffy or for the faint of heart. If you want a true adventure, I dare you to get grateful about your life’s journey.

What do you want readers to take away from your book?

I want readers to massively take ownership and control of their own well-being. I want readers to never take their health or loved ones for granted. I want readers to understand the difference between true problems and abuse-of-abundance problems. Lastly, I want readers to unapologetically live each moment on purpose and see what story-worthy life can arise from living like you’re dying.