Showing posts with label Thomas Merton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Merton. Show all posts

2020/12/19

God Speaks to Each of Us: The Poetry and Letters of Rainer Maria Rilke Audiobook | Thomas Merton | Audible.com.au

God Speaks to Each of Us: The Poetry and Letters of Rainer Maria Rilke Audiobook | Thomas Merton | Audible.com.au


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God Speaks to Each of Us: The Poetry and Letters of Rainer Maria Rilke
By: Thomas Merton
Narrated by: Thomas Merton
Length: 5 hrs and 32 mins
Lecture
Release date: 17-08-2017
Language: English
Publisher: Learn25
5.0 out of 5 stars5.0 (4 ratings)


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Publisher's Summary

Join Thomas Merton in exploring the timeless words of one of the world's greatest poets, Rainer Maria Rilke.

Before entering the monastery, Thomas Merton studied English at Columbia University and taught literature at St. Bonaventure University. His passion for literature never faded, and now you have the rare opportunity to take Thomas Merton as your guide in this set of outstanding remastered lectures on the writings of Rainer Maria Rilke.

Perhaps no poet had as great an influence on Merton as Rilke, who was arguably the greatest modern European poet. Born to a devout Catholic mother in 18th-century Bohemia, Rilke is cherished for his beautiful verse and his multifaceted views on faith. Deeply influenced by the spiritual figures of his time, Rilke sought to explore God through the imaginative possibilities of poetry.

A renowned poet himself, Merton saw poetry as one of the most fundamental and profound modes of human expression. In exploring the works of Rilke, Merton weaves his love of Catholic spirituality together with this passion for poetry, showing how they complement and shed light on each other. By looking at such works as Duino Elegies, The Book of Hours, and Letters to a Young Poet, you will discover how Rilke demonstrates holiness through imaginative possibilities. With Merton as your guide, you will come to understand the abiding power of poetry. Encounter God through the timeless poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke.

(Photograph of Thomas Merton by Sibylle Akers. Used with permission of the Merton Legacy Trust and the Thomas Merton Center at Bellarmine University.)
©2013 Now You Know Media Inc. (P)2013 Now You Know Media Inc.





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2020/11/21

The Leap: The Psychology of Spiritual Awakening Rev. Taylor, Steve, Tolle, Eckhart

The Leap: The Psychology of Spiritual Awakening (An Eckhart Tolle Edition): Taylor, Steve, Tolle, Eckhart: 9781608684472: Amazon.com: Books


The Leap: The Psychology of Spiritual Awakening (An Eckhart Tolle Edition) Paperback – February 15, 2017
by Steve Taylor  (Author), Eckhart Tolle (Foreword)
4.5 out of 5 stars    196 ratings
Part of: An Eckhart Tolle Edition (4 Books)
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What does it mean to be enlightened or spiritually awakened? 
In The Leap, Steve Taylor shows that this state is much more common than is generally believed. 
He shows that ordinary people ― from all walks of life ― can and do regularly “wake up” to a more intense reality, even if they know nothing about spiritual practices and paths. Wakefulness is a more expansive and harmonious state of being that can be cultivated or that can arise accidentally.

 It may also be a process we are undergoing collectively. Drawing on his years of research as a psychologist and on his own experiences, Taylor provides what is perhaps the clearest psychological study of the state of wakefulness ever published. Above all, he reminds us that it is our most natural state ― accessible to us all, anytime, anyplace.



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Editorial Reviews
Review

“Life always gives you what you need, and right now it has given you this book to use as a guide or companion through challenging times. It contains a great deal of precious wisdom, expressed in the straightforward, clear, and down-to-earth language that Steve Taylor is so good at.”
― from the foreword by Eckhart Tolle, author of The Power of Now and A New Earth

“A wonderful synthesis of modern research and timeless wisdom that makes the mysterious process of spiritual awakening more comprehensible than ever before.”
― Peter Russell, author of From Science to God

“This book is both insightful and inspiring. Building on the foundations of his previous books, Steve Taylor’s expertise and profound understanding of awakened states shine through and culminate in his proposition of an evolutionary leap that awaits humankind. For anyone who is interested in or has experienced an awakening, this book is not to be missed, as Taylor eloquently conveys an in-depth understanding of this fascinating phenomenon. It’s an excellent book that everyone should read.”
― Dr. Penny Sartori, author of The Wisdom of Near-Death Experiences

“It’s high time we got clearer on what enlightenment is and isn’t. The Leap is readable, important, and long overdue. It offers a thorough portrait of this long-mysterious state with care and love.”
― Dr. Robert K. C. Forman, author of Enlightenment Ain’t What It’s Cracked Up to Be and Mysticism, Mind, Consciousness

“In The Leap, Steve Taylor takes a radically new approach to spiritual awakening, suggesting that the experience is more common than one might suspect, is not bound to any religious or spiritual tradition, and may be playing an essential role in human evolution. The Leap is filled with provocative statements, some of which you may agree with and some you may disagree with ― but you can be sure that this is a book you will never forget. It establishes Steve Taylor as a major spiritual author and teacher, whose lucid and articulate writing will evoke wonder and wisdom among readers.”
― Stanley Krippner, PhD, Alan Watts Professor of Psychology, Saybrook University

“A wonderfully detailed demystification of awakening within and without traditions that is a pleasure to read and offers hope for our dangerous times.”
― Claudio Naranjo, author of Healing Civilization and designer of the SAT Programs for personal and professional development

About the Author
Steve Taylor, PhD, is the author of several books on spirituality and psychology, including The Fall and Waking from Sleep. He has also published two books of poetic spiritual reflections, including The Calm Center. He is a senior lecturer in psychology at Leeds Beckett University in the United Kingdom. Since 2011, he has appeared annually in Mind, Body, Spirit magazine’s list of the world’s “100 most spiritually influential living people.”

Product details
Item Weight : 1 pounds
Paperback : 320 pages
Publisher : New World Library (February 15, 2017)
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Customer reviews
4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5

Top reviews from the United States
George Ochsenfeld
5.0 out of 5 stars 
Explains Awakening and Enlightenment; You May be More Awake Than You Think!
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2017
Verified Purchase

If you’ve been wondering what ‘spiritually awakened’ or ‘enlightenment’ means, this book is a must read. If you’ve made progress on the path of awakening, this book will validate your journey. If you’re having intense spiritual experiences, confusion, and dark nights of the soul, this book could save your life.

Steve Taylor explores the awakened state of consciousness from a psychological perspective in simple, crystal clear language. The book is based on his scientific study of hundreds of people who had various awakening experiences, on his vast knowledge of ancient spiritual traditions, and on his own personal journey.

His approach is free from archaic terminology, dogma, and cultural baggage which sometimes obscure the spiritual brilliance of ancient teachings. His model of psychological awakening can be helpful to practitioners on any spiritual path as well as to fervent atheists who are having awakening experiences.

Taylor says that ordinary adult consciousness is a state of deep sleep characterized by a sense of separateness, discontent, anxiety, and constant mental chatter. To escape this discomfort, we pursue happiness through money, success, power, etc., or sedate ourselves with compulsive entertainment or mind altering substances. It doesn’t work.

The author distinguishes between awakening experiences and the awakened state. Awakening experiences are temporary episodes of spiritual uplift, which can range from mild awe, reverence, and harmony to full blown mystical ecstatic union with an all pervading spiritual force. Most people have had at least the mild versions, often from nature or artistic beauty. Taylor goes more deeply into temporary awakening experiences in his book, Waking From Sleep.

The Leap, however, focuses on the awakened state, which is permeant wakefulness. Taylor says that with permeant wakefulness, a new, higher-functioning self-system emerges, which often feels like rebirth.

The author provides a list of characteristics commonly seen in people who are spiritually awake. The intensity of these traits corresponds to the intensity of the person’s wakefulness. I’ll mention just a few: serenity, reduced mental chatter, ability to live primarily in the present moment, emotional wellbeing, pleasure in simple activities, empathy, compassion, altruism, and an enjoyable oneness with nature, other people, and a spiritual force. He describes these characteristic and many more in fascinating detail.

Of particular importance, this list of characteristics can be used to evaluate the authenticity of spiritual teachers who claim to be enlightened. Unfortunately, some ‘perfect masters’ are self-deluded, or simply fraudulent. As a result, followers get injured.

Awakened people are far more common than most people realize, says Taylor. Most live ordinary lives and are not spiritual teachers in any formal sense. Many do not comprehend what happened to them as they awakened from the normal adult sleep state. Taylor reports rare instances of people who are naturally awake, who never completely succumbed to adult drowsiness. He describes others who awakened gradually, often through spiritual practices. But the majority of people he studied had sudden, unexpected awakenings, triggered by extreme psychological turmoil and suffering. He gives brief case histories portraying a variety of awakening experiences.

One of my favorite chapters is The Natural Wakefulness of Children, which discusses similarities between the consciousness of young children and of spiritually awakened adults. They share such characteristics as spontaneity, curiosity, openness, present moment orientation, freedom from excessive mental chatter, joy in living, vitality, dynamic creativity, and felt connection to the external world. However, since children lack an adult self-system, their wakeful traits are often overridden by impulsive selfish desires.

In a great quote, Taylor says, “Sometimes, when I discuss childhood wakefulness in talks or lectures, I joke that children are a combination of enlightened beings and narcissistic monsters.” He then asks, “But isn’t that a good description of some spiritual teachers?”

Taylor then cracks open eleven myths about the awakened state or what some call enlightenment. His discussion as to why these commonly held beliefs are incorrect is based on his empirical research, his knowledge of ancient scriptures, and his extraordinarily powerful insight. In addressing these myths, he summarizes most of the important points in the text. This chapter is worth the price of the book!
Here are the eleven beliefs he demythologizes: Myth 1: Wakefulness is exceptional and extraordinary. Myth 2: It’s not possible to live in a continuous state of wakefulness. It would make it impossible to live in the world on a day-to-day basis. Myth 3: You are either enlightened or not. There is no middle ground. Myth 4: Wakefulness is the end point, the culmination, of our development. Myth 5: Awakened people live in a state of continuous bliss and ease, free from all suffering and difficulty. Myth 6: Awakened individuals are incapable of behaving improperly. Myth 7: Awakened Individuals are detached from the world. They become indifferent to worldly affairs and are content for the world to remain as it is, without interfering. Myth 8: Awakened individuals—or mystics—are passive or inactive. They just sit and meditate all day, immersed in their own blissfulness. Myth 9: In wakefulness, the world is revealed to be an illusion. Myth 10: In wakefulness, the self disappears. There’s literally “no one there.” Wakefulness is a state of selflessness. Myth 11: You can’t make an effort to wake up.

In the final chapter, The Evolutionary Leap: A Collective Awakening, Steve Taylor suggests that the evolutionary force that has been driving life on earth toward increasing complexity for billions of years, is nothing less than the universe seeking to become more fully awake and aware of itself. By aligning ourselves with that force, humanity may be able to leap into a new world of collective wakefulness. Planetary turmoil may hasten the process. Taylor makes the case that that is exactly what is happening worldwide as increasing numbers of people are awakening. He cautions, however, that there is no guarantee that we will successfully make the leap rather than self-destruct.

This book could easily become a classic on awakening with the staying power of Cosmic Consciousness (1901) by Richard Maurice Bucke, Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) by William James, and Mysticism (1911) by Evelyn Underhill. That’s assuming humankind awakens from the nightmare produced by the constricted consciousness currently driving us to annihilation. Again, this book gives abundant hope that we will.

Eckhart Tolle supplies an excellent forward to the Leap. To my mind, no one explains ‘be here now’—the essence of the awakened state—better than Eckhart. But when it comes to providing empirical data and explaining the psychological details of spiritual awakening, no one is better than Steve Taylor. And I am making these statements as someone who is not a newcomer to the spiritual rodeo.

Nearly 50 years ago, I had a powerful but fleeting awakening experience and since then have studied everyone from D.T. Suzuki to Suzuki Roshi; Ramakrishna to Krishnamuriti; Gopi Krishna to Muktananda; Ramana Maharshi to Maharishi Mahesh; Allan Watts to Allen Ginsberg; Chogyam Trungpa to Rajneesh (Osho); Timothy Leary to Ram Dass; Patanjali to Yogananda; Thich Nhat Hanh to Peace Pilgrim; Ken Wilbur to Michael Washburn; Aldous Huxley to Stan Grof; Houston Smith to Jean Houston; Meister Eckhart to Eckhart Tolle; Carl Jung to Joseph Campbell; Jack Schwarz to Jack Kornfield; St. Teresa of Avila to St. John of the Cross; Walt Whitman to Gary Snyder; Annie Besant to Charlotte-Joko Beck; St. Hildegard to Thomas Merton; Evelyn Underhill to June Singer; Matsuo Basho to William Blake.

And again, to my mind, no one describes the psychological details of spiritual awakening better than Steve Taylor. Take The Leap home and enjoy.
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140 people found this helpful
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M. Scorelle
5.0 out of 5 stars Review of "The Leap" by Steve Taylor
Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2017
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Review of "The Leap" by Steve Taylor
I enjoyed this book. It is about Non-Duality but written in a rational style rather than revelatory or inspirational. It's an easy read. I like the theory that Waking Up is a part of the scheme of evolution. He offers a good definition of awakening: "an experience of clarity, revelation, and joy in which we become aware of a deeper or higher level of reality, perceive a sense of harmony and meaning, and transcend our normal sense of separateness from the world." He outlines some of the typical conditions with which awakening occurs, and differentiates between temporary glimpse and permanent awakening. He has a nice section on wakeful states in various world spiritual traditions. He aligns the permanent wakefulness with sahaja samadhi which I think is correct. He gives some beautiful examples of awakened artists, Walt Whitman, D.H.Lawrence. He surprised me on Lawrence. Also Peace Pilgrim and some other average folk culled from Taylor's own research and work. There are some really interesting case histories. He also covers the aftermath of awakening with examples and stories, always fun to read. This book has something of the style of the Near Death Experience literature, some case histories, some theory, something of a social topological map. He has a helpful summary of the characteristics of wakefulness and the awakened personality in life. One of my favorite parts is listing the common misunderstandings about waking up. I liked Satyam Nadeen's list also in "From Seekers to Finders." I found it helpful when just starting out. If you are used to shocking counter-intuitive pointers to enlightenment, the world is an illusion, there is no self, "there's just what's happening to no one," "There is no teacher, no student," this book does not take that approach. It is rational, comforting and down to earth. A good read.
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21 people found this helpful
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Atman
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Overview and Summary of the Experience of Awakening and Enlightenment
Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2017
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An excellent overview and summary of the teachings and experience of awakening (aka enlightenment). The book gets to the core of mystical teachings from many traditions, religions, and ideologies, and then simple explains the information in a format the is very clear and accessible to the reader. Often the book is more easy to understand than the great religious texts from which these very ideas are expressed and drawn from. An great companion book to all inquiry into the basic experience of spirituality as opposed to the ideology of spirituality. I would call it an overview of the perennial experience of spirituality found at the core of all mystic teachings. There is a catch 22 in that to understand some of the concepts you must have had at least a little direct experience with them yourself. The good news is that most people have had touched on this experience even if only briefly. This book may help reinforce the taste of awakening that some people have experienced and help it grow and expand into a higher, deeper experience of awakening.
12 people found this helpful
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Anna
5.0 out of 5 stars So good...
Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2017
Verified Purchase
Just finished The Leap and have to say, "Thank you, Thank you, Thank you!" to Steve Taylor for giving this to the world. Everyone pulled by that mysterious something inside that keeps insisting that "something greater exists, and it's powerful and wonderful," should read this.
I'd assumed the really "important" trans-personal experiences were "given by a guru," but he made me realize that my own experiences earlier in life were just as valid...indeed, PART of the path of awakening toward the greater level of human expression that WE ALL are intended to embody, guru or not. "Awakening" isn't confined to religion at all, it's a human race-consciousness-evolution. This book covers every question I had, and in every chapter I learned things. If anything, it's made me realize the importance of my relationship with the Universe as ONE of its very beloved expressions. This was one great book that should find a wide and grateful audience.
7 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries
Banjoman
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 stars.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 9, 2018
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I would recommend this book to anyone interested in spirituality. The book describes what awakening is, and gives anecdotal accounts and stories from people who have experienced some kind of awakening. Previously I've read books by Eckhart Tolle and the Dalai Lama. It has greatly complemented my own understanding of awakening, and as I find myself with a terminal illness, the book gave me some guidance and comfort. I am not too hard on myself now.....
5 people found this helpful
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P. Brisk
5.0 out of 5 stars A fresh and important contribution to the subject of consciousness and spiritual awakening
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 31, 2017
Verified Purchase
This is the first of Steve's books that I have read but it certainly will not be the last. Very well researched and very well reasoned - and also engagingly personal at times. Steve is a gifted writer as well as an insightful psychologist and philosopher of consciousness, making this an enjoyable as much as an extremely informative read. I can see I will now need to work my way through all his other books. I urge others with an interest in this field of study to do so too!
11 people found this helpful
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Mark Kawecki
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is amazing
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 2, 2018
Verified Purchase
Ordered this book after a chance noticing of it whilst casually browsing in Waterstones, was drawn in by the ‘Ekhart Tolle edition’ written on the cover.
Took this book with me on a month long hiking & camping trip in the back country of the US Pacific Northwest and Canada. Excellent location of solitude and nature to be able to absorb into the content fully, align with the writers ideas & intent and meditate/reflect on the meanings.
Simply reading this book took my awareness and consciousness to a higher level.
The fact the the author teaches at my hometown university, (I discovered this after purchase), added an extra connection. The empirical stories could really be felt deeply, understood and subsequently integrated into my own being.
5 people found this helpful
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Shikasta
3.0 out of 5 stars Only half the story
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 1, 2017
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If I'd had this book in 1985 it would have explained what happened to my mind during my awakening and saved me a lot of confusion. An excellent book for those people who have experienced an awakening and want a psycho-spiritual explanation. However, only 3 stars because Steve reckons that the physical brain has nothing to do with the awakening experience, an attitude that I feel seriously limits his understanding of the process.

This book is an interesting starting place, but in my view, incomplete.
6 people found this helpful
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Anon101
4.0 out of 5 stars Valuable overview, till it veers to the speculative
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 29, 2020
Verified Purchase
This publication offers a comprehensive framework for identifying what constitutes ‘awakening’ (often termed ‘enlightenment’), the means and circumstances through which it is attained, who attains it, and to what degree of intensity and duration. In this, it offers considerable value to those simply curious about what ‘awakening’ is really about, and to those who, whereby deliberately or inadvertently, are already engaged in a process of waking. Due to these elements, this work is indeed ‘enlightening’ and a strong recommendation to read it can be made.
Of course, some of the author’s contentions on the key characteristics of ‘awakening’ are open to debate. But that is a not a great problem. It is well established that one of the characteristics of ‘awakening’ is indeed the commitment to investigation. (For example, classical Buddhism offers a list of seven ‘awakening factors’ of which #2 is ‘investigation’.)
What is a problem is that an author with a background in scientific research, and who makes claims to ‘demythologise’ (notably in chapter 15), should be so prone to ‘mythologise’. He perpetuates the myth of a ‘golden age’, purportedly occurring in two periods. One was in the past, with a ‘Fall’ from the awakened state, some 10,000 years ago. The other, predicted for an indeterminate future, is an ‘evolution’ to a higher consciousness for the human species as a whole. Thus the ‘Leap’ in the book’s title has at least two aspects, individual awakening and collective awakening. Whilst the book documents the former very ably, its treatment of the latter involves a leap into speculation. There is no proof of a golden age in the very distant past – we simply have no records. Likewise, we can know very little about what the future holds – the human species will probably ‘evolve’, but whether forwards or backwards is uncertain, and it may disappear altogether.
Further, in espousing the ‘New Age’ idiom, the author seems to be overlooking – or at least underestimating in this publication – two invaluable lines of inquiry. One is to ask what ‘evolution’ has actually occurred over the past 5,000 years or so of relatively well-recorded history. (Of course, this topic is usually treated under the term not of ‘evolution’ but ‘civilisation’ in a copious literature to which the author may be disinclined to add, for understandable reasons.) The other is to document whether, going forwards, the propensity to awaken is increasing, decreasing or static. In other words, does the proportion of the population that is awake or awakening change over time? And if so, to what degree and for what reasons? Are some factors and methods stronger - more effective and/or more reliable - than others? Can the best methods be further refined, and just how do we do that? At the moment, all we do is to guess and proceed on the basis of (often individual) trial and error, because we do not have a historical baseline for comparison. Indeed, perhaps all our generation can do, through the good offices of researchers such as Steve Taylor is to establish a baseline in relation to the present day which can be utilised over the longer term to discover in what direction we are going, individually and collectively, and why. That research project is a lot more modest than New Age myth-making, but it is potentially a greater gift and legacy to future generations. Though it calls for significant resources, it does seem within reach.
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The Leap: The Psychology of Spiritual Awakening

The Leap: The Psychology of Spiritual Awakening
by Steve Taylor, Eckhart Tolle (Foreword)
 4.16  ·   Rating details ·  268 ratings  ·  35 reviews
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Many assume that enlightenment is the result of arduous effort — self-denial such as fasting, travel to far-flung places, encounters with teachers thought to be enlightened themselves. But here, Steve Taylor shows that ordinary people — from all walks of life and every age and place — can and do regularly experience the kind of life-changing moments many of us seek. Taylor ...more

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Janet
May 16, 2017Janet rated it liked it
Shelves: self-help-spiritual
Great overview of what it means to be awakened. I don't know exactly how awakened I truly am, but this is certainly accurate: "Awakened individuals love doing nothing. They love solitude, quietness, and inactivity." "We can rest contentedly within our own being because there is no turbulence or discord inside us. We don't need to constantly do things just for the sake of it or constantly supply ourselves with distractions. Rather than fear quietness and inactivity, we enjoy them deeply because they allow us to touch into the radiance of our own well-being." (less)
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Jennifer
Sep 03, 2018Jennifer rated it really liked it
This was a really informative and fascinating read. Only a couple things held me back from giving it five stars: one of the earlier chapters on religions and spiritual practices was major information-overload and could turn some people off early (it's the only chapter that feels really dense and could easily be skipped), and often the book reads like a dissertation which may be unexpected for some. I personally enjoy reading research material so the style was fine for me. Overall, a really great explanation of our spiritual awakening as a species, particularly due to its layout and the order in which concepts are presented to the reader. (less)
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انتصار فضل
Dec 26, 2019انتصار فضل rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
" القفزة " / ستيف تايلور.

ما الذي يعنيه أن تكون مستنيراً أو مستيقظاً روحياً؟ في “القفزة” يبيّن “ستيف تايلور” أن هذه الحالة أكثر شيوعاً مما يعتقد عموماً. كما يبيّن أن الناس العاديين من جميع مناحي الحياة، يستطيعون ويطبقون “الاستيقاظ” بانتظام إلى واقع أكثر كثافة، حتى لو كانوا لا يعرفون شيئاً عن الممارسات والمسارات الروحية. إن اليقظة التامة هي حالة أكثر توسعاً وتناغماً كونها حالة يمكن أن تغرس أو تنشأ عن طريق الخطأ. قد تكون أيضاً عملية نخضع لها على نحو جماعي. بالاستناد إلى السنوات التي قضاها في أبحاث ...more
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Sonia
Mar 31, 2017Sonia rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
This book answered my many questions about awakening. I was curious ever since learning about Eckhart Tolle. I assumed it was a rare occurrence but have since learned differently. This is also the first book that I've read that adequately addresses kundalini awakening. We as a species are on the leading edge of another evolutionary moment and it's astounding.
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سارّه ..
Aug 25, 2019سارّه .. rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
يتحدث هذا الكتاب عن علم نفس الإستيقاظ الروحي كما هو مكتوب في غلافه. يصف كل نوع/ حالة من اليقظة ويحللها مستعيناً بتجارب أشخاص مرّوا بها.
يصف كل حالة، وخصائصها، وأسبابها، وكيف تحدث.
أعجبني من حيث استعانته بتجارب الآخرين واضعاً صورة واضحة لمن يمر بتجربة الإستيقاظ لتعزيز وفهم تجربته.
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Lyn
May 25, 2017Lyn rated it it was ok
I expected it to be easier to read. It got bogged down after the first couple chapters
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Dyana Sahiouni
Mar 13, 2020Dyana Sahiouni rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
الاقتباس:
عندما نستخدم مصطلحات مثل اليقظة التامة والاستيقاظ، يكون من المهم أن نفهم ماهو الشيء
الذي نستيقظ منه.
فإن ما نستيقظ منه هو في الأساس حالة من الغفلة، حالة من التعقيد، الوعي المحدد، التناقض، والمعاناة.
إن السبب الرئيسي وراء هذه الحاجة إلى الهوية والانتماء هو شعور الضعف والهشاشة الناتج عن انفصالنا،
انفصالنا عن الطبيعة، نشعر أننا مهددون ونحتاج إلى بعض الدعم، كي نشعر أننا جزء من شيء أكبر منا، يوفر لنا الملاذ والأمن والحماية.
فإنه يخلق بالتوازي حاجة قوية للقبول.
إنه يجعلنا حريصين على أن نكون ملائمي ...more
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Johnny Stork, MSc
May 13, 2017Johnny Stork, MSc rated it it was amazing
We are all on a similar path in life. Regardless of our professional, personal or relationship goals, ultimately we all strive to be happy and "successful" in our lives, however we define it. Most of us also strive to become the "best" we can become as a person, a spouse or excel through some sort of creative or athletic activity. The psychologist Abraham Maslow proposed a hierarchy of human needs which determine what motivates us through our lives starting from basic food and shelter needs at the bottom all the way to "Self Actualisation" as the final pursuit or motivation in one's life. Self Actualisation is basically the pursuit of realising our highest potential, our greatest talent, our ultimate meaning or experience of life. In many religious traditions there is also a similar notion or pursuit of some ideal state of existence or state of mind. Some optimal state of consciousness and experience of life which transcends our "normal" day-to-day lives. This state of mind has many names in different religious traditions ranging from "Nirvana", "Enlightenment", "Buddha Mind", "Moksha", "Liberation" and of course "Awakening". Although it is not uncommon to associate these transcendent and "awakening" experiences with a religious practice, Steve's extensive research (and multiple books) into the 'awakening" state has reinforced similar research which demonstrates that these awakened states are NOT uncommon and are NOT always associated with a religious or spiritual practice of any kind. In other words, the joyful, exhilarating, compassionate and grateful state of mind and acceptance which also contributes to feelings of purpose and meaning in life, is available to EVERYONE.

"I define an awakening experience as “an experience of clarity, revelation, and joy in which we become aware of a deeper (or higher) level of reality, perceive a sense of harmony and meaning, and transcend our normal sense of separateness from the world.”" (Steve Taylor)

Steve Taylor in The Leap, does an exceptional job of outlining his theory that human civilisation was once in a more "awakened" state due to our direct connection to, and dependence upon, our natural environment. At some point in our evolutionary history we had a "Fall" into the "sleep state" we find ourselves in now. However, once we understand this "awakened" state is actually our normal and foundational state, we can re-awaken this dormant and transcendent state of existence. The Leap also covers a great deal of ground describing real-world examples of ordinary non-religious persons who have clearly gone through an awakening experience which transformed their lives in deep and meaningful ways.

I can highly recommend The Leap for every person on any spiritual or religious path, or none at all and who are simply seeking a better way of living and some direction as to how to find happiness and meaning in their own lives. A renewed motivation to pursue activities and ideas which will re-awaken your dormant and awakened self.

"In many ways, awakened individuals experience a higher-functioning state that makes life more fulfilling, exhilarating, and meaningful than it may appear in a normal state of being. As a result of this internal shift, they often make major changes to their lives. They begin new careers, hobbies, and relationships. They feel a strong impulse to make positive contributions to the world, to live in meaningful and purposeful ways, rather than simply trying to satisfy their own desires, enjoy themselves, or pass the time." (Steve Taylor)

"Awakened individuals have little or no sense of group identity. They see distinctions of religion or ethnicity or nationality as superficial and meaningless. They see themselves purely as human beings, without any external identities, who are no different from anyone else. As a result, they don’t put members of their own group before others, but rather treat all people equally. They don’t feel any pride in their nationality or ethnicity; they feel just as connected to “foreigners” as they do to their own “people.” (Steve Taylor) (less)
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Tristy at New World Library



Feb 06, 2017Tristy at New World Library rated it it was amazing
Shelves: spirituality, philosophy
Endorsements:

“Life always gives you what you need, and right now it has given you this book to use as a guide or companion through challenging times. It contains a great deal of precious wisdom, expressed in the straightforward, clear, and down-to-earth language that Steve Taylor is so good at.”— from the foreword by Eckhart Tolle, author of The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment and A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose

“The Leap establishes Steve Taylor as a major spiritua ...more
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Jennifer Precious
Oct 28, 2017Jennifer Precious rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Essential spiritual reading

This book was above all, encouraging. He describes wakefulness (enlightenment) in terms that are more humanly recognizable than the traditional view of an enlightened person being somehow super human and magical. In fact, it is an evolutionary impulse that we are headed for as a species and that we can all cultivate through stillness, mindfulness, appreciation of the natural and artistic world around us and through practicing empathy and altruism. I won't say where I a ...more
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Heidi Nobantu
Oct 25, 2017Heidi Nobantu rated it really liked it
Shelves: psychology, non-fiction, spiritual-mystical
Demythologizing Wakefulness - A book to read if you have been on a 'path' in life ~ explored a variety of ways to go in terms of religion or spiritual quest... or not. Or if you simply have not been able to buy that there is only 'one right way' to be 'saved' and get to heaven, so to speak. This is a thoughtful and a scientific look at what it means to 'wake up,' from the ways it can look and feel to a comparison/exploration of common traits across religions and in wakeful individuals themselves ...more
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Donnell
Apr 11, 2017Donnell rated it it was ok
The number of stars are NOT an indication of the value of this book, which I consider quite high. It offers valuable info on the awakening process and gaining this info could actually move the process along for the reader.

To sit down and read the book through, though, is a bit tough. I had to stop, actually, about mid way through and then jump to a skim of the "myths" about awakening and a read of the "Appendix: An Inventory of Spiritual/ Secular Wakefulness", which is particularly valuable."

On ...more
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Timbrel
Nov 03, 2017Timbrel rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Validated my experiences

This book is an unbiased collection of data presented in an intelligent and efficient fashion that anyone can read and understand it. I am grateful it was available to read because it was nice to finally see that my experience was normal (lol well, normal for someone awakening anyway). It would be a good read for everyone, from seeker to someone who has already found.
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Karen Kerrigan
Jun 19, 2017Karen Kerrigan rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Excellent

A very detailed account of awakening as well as the different religious groups perception of wakefulness. Deep and thorough but ultimately a great read. It gave me insight into some things that I didn't know and validated many of the feelings that I've been having over the past few months. How wonderful it is to be awake with peace and wholeness!!! Thank you Steve for your inspired research and genuine effort.
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Trudy
Apr 05, 2017Trudy rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
I was only a few pages into this when the left wing political lecturing started. I should've known better, but I'd somehow overlooked the name, Eckhart Tolle on the cover. Then I remembered he's Oprah's approved arbiter of spirituality. Oh, well. It was an interesting concept. Maybe someday somebody will write this book without politics, that would REALLY be something!
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lucho
Feb 03, 2018lucho rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Good Book

Nice detailed review of the types of Spiritual Awakenings posible in humans, why, how and when they occur. The overall need at a personal and for the overall evolution of our specie. Nicely Done !! Loved the way you explained why all this is happening, not as a personal as a much as it is related to our evolution.
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Alis Anagnostakis
Jun 27, 2018Alis Anagnostakis rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Must-read for those on a path of self-transformation

Beautiful perspective on what living an “awakened” life means, on why the crises of pur lives might actually be triggers of deeply transformaritve processes. A great read on your journey of personal growth.
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Nsns2hotmail.com
Feb 04, 2019Nsns2hotmail.com rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
كتاب عجيب .. عبارة عن بحث لحالات الاستيقاظ الروحي ..
يصف الكاتب عملية الاستيقاظ الروحي كتجربة
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Teren  Hanz
Jan 17, 2020Teren Hanz rated it it was amazing
This book is a mind opener. We think, keeping our eyes open is enough but I think keeping your mind open teaches you the art of being conscious, consciously. But what does that mean? It simply means - inner growth. We may think, it is not easy but it is not as difficult as one may think. This book provides answers to somethings that you may have been pondering over decades. Its an easy read if the subject is of interest but only if you keep your mind open. I think, as human beings we tend to chase our life goals and relationships without knowing ourselves. Unfortunately, neither of the two can be achieved to an A level without a spiritual path. Some do, but, at some point, one will come around to explore the real meaning of life. When you read some of the stories with examples in this book, one will understand what I mean. At some point, it may not make sense and you might find it too much but don't give up. I skipped a few pages which were heavy and then came back to them later. Just read bits that you easily understand, reflect and read again and then it will start making sense and provide you innner growth and precious wisdom. This is what makes us realise our ulitmate potential which in other words is 'self actualisation'. Its a book that must be in every home to be read, whenever you get a few minutes, which will remind you of your unexplored inner potential. (less)
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Riccardo Scafati
Mar 03, 2020Riccardo Scafati rated it really liked it
Veramente ammirevole l'impegno di Taylor nello strutturare in maniera completa e chiara quel processo a tratti misterioso, a tratti assolutamente naturale, del risveglio e della crescita interiore (anche se probabilmente quest'ultimo termine non piacerebbe all'autore).
Ho apprezzato in particolar modo le continue analogie tra le religioni e discipline tradizionali nel loro volgersi ad aspetti di risveglio: Taylor traccia i punti in comune tra induismo, buddismo e scuole mistiche delle religioni tradizionali e li mette in rapporto con gli aspetti pratici ed esistenziali di casi studio reali. (less)
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T Love
Jun 14, 2017T Love rated it it was amazing
Easy to read and simple to understand. While the psychology of spirituality is not new, the way in which Dr. Taylor uses simple explanations, through stories and examples, is. This work provides the reader fully clarity on not only how to get to an awakened state but what life is like along the way. I found this work fascinating and comprehensive. Whether just starting out on the path to awakening, or well into the journey, I believe this book will prove greater expansion and growth to one’s awakening experience. (less)
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Mahdikhazaee
Dec 11, 2019Mahdikhazaee rated it it was amazing
Excellent book, useful for those who are awakened and don't know exactly what has happened to them.\
the best thing about this book, is its simplicity in lexicon usage and nice subtle simply used grammatical structure that has made this book really easy to understand.
Characteristics of awakened people are described in this book, and important ways to being awakened and present are listed. easy to understand for foreign readers.
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Rebecca
Jul 30, 2020Rebecca added it
Shelves: read-in-2020, spirituality
really interesting and illuminating book. i'm not sure if it's the nature of the topic, but after the first 40% or so, it felt like the same points were being repeated in different words. but either way, it was really helpful.
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Nsns2hotmail.com
Jul 17, 2017Nsns2hotmail.com rated it it was amazing
I started reading this book 2 weeks ago .. I'm surprised and affected by the truth that Steve had mentioned it in the book through stories of real awakening happened for human being .. I feel enthusiastic to read his other books.
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Peter Gyulay
Jul 22, 2019Peter Gyulay rated it it was amazing
A very thorough study of the phenomenon of spiritual enlightenment. This book gives the spiritual seeker a framework with which to understand their journey and also a mirror to reflect their experiences.
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Eric
Mar 22, 2018Eric rated it it was amazing
Wonderful book taking a factual look at enlightenment/awakening and pulling it out of the mists of religion and gurus. Establishes that, in fact, enlightenment is a real process and much more common than one would think. One of the best books on spirituality I have read.
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Meagan
May 02, 2018Meagan rated it liked it
By reading only the last chapter, you can get all the value of this book. Worth a read, if only for the ending.
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Jim Ewing
Jul 19, 2017Jim Ewing rated it it was amazing
An absolute belter of a book, just what I needed.
A MUST READ for anyone with an interest in the evolution/raising of consciousness.
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Anna Baran
Jan 19, 2018Anna Baran rated it it was amazing
Beautifully written book about spiritual emergence
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Dusica
Feb 09, 2019Dusica rated it it was amazing
A book I have been looking for for a long time to explain ‘consciousness shift’ occurring in daily existence. Indeed, a must read for anyone on a spiritual path.



2020/10/11

Are You Spiritual But Not Religious? 10 Reasons Why Buddhism Works

Are You Spiritual But Not Religious? 10 Reasons Why Buddhism Works

Are You Spiritual But Not Religious?

BY MELVIN MCLEOD| JULY 6, 2017

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Buddhism is about us, our minds, and our suffering — it’s about being human. Melvin McLeod shares 10 reasons why Buddhism has something to offer everyone.

Spiritual But Not Religious. Painting.

Painting by Michael Newhall.



It wasn’t so long ago that most Americans took their religion for granted. You were born into a religion, you lived in it, and you died in it.



Except for a few daring freethinkers, that’s the way it was as recently as the 1950s, and that’s still the way it is in most of the world today. It’s the way we’ve related to religion for thousands of years. Until now. Today, a significant and growing number of Americans do not identify themselves as members of any religion.



According to a Pew Research Report, 20 percent of Americans — one-fifth of the adult population — describe themselves as religiously unaffiliated. That’s up from 15 percent just five years ago, and the percentage goes higher the younger you are — up to 72 percent for Generation Y.



There are many different reasons why people become disenchanted with organized religion — the litany is long and depressing — but most continue to yearn for something more than a life of materialism, for something that gives deeper meaning and happiness, for something they describe as “spiritual.”



Are You “Spiritual But Not Religious”?

About a third of the religiously unaffiliated describe themselves as atheists. But the rest — some thirty million Americans — maintain some type of spiritual belief and practice, even though they no longer feel at home in a church, synagogue, or mosque. These are the famous “spiritual but not religious,” philosophically the fastest-growing demographic in the U.S. Generally, they’re educated, liberal, and open-minded, with a deep sense of connection to the Earth and a belief that there’s more to life than what appears on the surface.



Buddhism is about realization and experience, not institutions or divine authority. This makes it especially suited to those who consider themselves spiritual but not religious.

Perhaps this describes you. Perhaps, as a reader of Lion’s Roar, you’re one of the many people who has discovered that Buddhism has a lot to offer your life and spiritual practice, without some of the downsides of institutionalized religion.



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To put it another way: Is Buddhism the religion for people who don’t like religion?



Buddhism is unique among the world’s major world religions. (Some people debate whether Buddhism is in fact a religion, but for now let’s assume it is.) Buddhism is the one world religion that has no God. It is the nontheistic religion.



That changes everything. Yes, like other religions Buddhism describes a nonmaterial, spiritual reality (perhaps the realer reality) and addresses what happens after we die. But at the same time, it is down-to-earth and practical: it is about us, our minds, and our suffering. It’s about being fully and deeply human, and it has something to offer everyone: Buddhists of course; but also the spiritual but not religious, members of other religions, and even those who don’t think they’re spiritual at all. Because who doesn’t know the value of being present and aware?



See also: Is Buddhism a Religion?



First, a couple of cautions. Like other religions, Buddhism is practiced at different levels of subtlety, and sometimes it can be just as theistic as any other religion. Buddhism is practiced by people, so there’s good and bad. We come to Buddhism as we are, so there’s definitely going to be ego involved. That’s no problem — it’s the working basis of the path. The key is where we go from there.



Also, much of what I’m saying about Buddhism also applies to the contemplative traditions of other religions. In fact, contemplatives of different faiths often have more in common with each other than they do with practitioners of their own religion. It comes down to how much we personify or solidify the absolute —whether it’s a supreme being who passes judgment on us or an open expanse of love and awareness. In their experience of God, Thomas Merton, Rumi, and Martin Buber had more in common with the Buddha (and each other) than with most practitioners of their own faith.



This is not an attempt to convert anyone to Buddhism. There is no need for that. But those who think of themselves as spiritual but not religious can find a lot in Buddhism to help them on their personal path, however they define it.

The difference is that meditation is the very essence of Buddhism, not just the practice of a rarified elite of mystics. It’s fair to say that Buddhism is the most contemplative of the world’s major religions, which is a reflection of its basic nontheism.



Buddhism is about realization and experience, not institutions or divine authority. This makes it especially suited to those who consider themselves spiritual but not religious. Here are ten reasons why:



1. There is no Buddhist God.

Different schools of Buddhism have different views about who the Buddha was. Some say he was an ordinary human being who discovered the path to awakening; others say he was already enlightened but followed the path to show us how it’s done. But one thing is certain: he was not a God, deity, or divine being. His faculties were purely human, any of us can follow his path, and our enlightenment will be exactly the same as his. Ultimately, we are no different from him, and vice versa.



Admittedly, there are lots of Buddhist images that look like gods and deities, all kinds of colorful and exotic beings. The Buddhist cosmos is a vast one, containing infinite beings of different minds, bodies, faculties, and realms. Some are more subtle and awakened, and others are grosser and more confused. Yet these are just the endless variations on the reality we experience right now. It may be infinitely vast and profoundly deep, it may be mysterious beyond concept, it may be far different than we think it is, but whatever reality is, this is it. There is nothing and nobody fundamentally different from or outside of it.



2. It’s about your basic goodness.

Buddhism is not about salvation or original sin. It’s not about becoming somebody different or going somewhere else. Because both you and your world are basically good. With all its ups and downs, this world of ours works. It warms us; it feeds us; it offers us color, sound, and touch. We don’t have to struggle against our world. It is neither for us nor against us. It is a simple, vivid world of direct experience we can investigate, care for, enjoy, make love to.



We are basically good as well, confused as we may be. In Buddhism, our true nature has many names, such as buddhanature, ordinary mind, sugatagarbha, Vajradhara, or just plain buddha —  fundamental awakeness. The thing is, we can’t solidify, identify, or conceptualize it in any way. Then it’s just the same old game we’re stuck in now. We do not own this basic goodness. It is not inside of us, it is not outside of us, it is beyond the reach of conventional mind. It is empty of all form, yet everything we experience is its manifestation. It is nothing and the source of everything — how do you wrap your mind around that? All you can do is look directly, relax, and let go.



3. The problem is suffering. The answer is waking up.

Buddhism exists to address one problem: suffering. The Buddha called the truth of suffering “noble,” because recognizing our suffering is the starting place and inspiration of the spiritual path.



His second noble truth was the cause of suffering. In the West, Buddhists call this “ego.” It’s a small word that encompasses pretty much everything that’s wrong with the world. Because according to the Buddha, all suffering, large and small, starts with our false belief in a solid, separate, and continuous “I,” whose survival we devote our lives to.



It feels like we’re hopelessly caught in this bad dream of “me and them” we’ve created, but we can wake up from it. This is the third noble truth, the cessation of suffering. We do this by recognizing our ignorance, the falseness of our belief in this “I.” Finally, the Buddha told us that there is a concrete way we can get there, which basically consists of discipline, effort, meditation, and wisdom. This is the fourth noble truth, the truth of the path.



4. The way to do that is by working with your mind.

So, according to the Buddha, the problem is suffering, the cause is ignorance, the remedy is waking up, and the path is living mindfully, meditating, and cultivating our wisdom. There’s really only one place all that happens: in our minds. The mind is the source of both our suffering and our joy. Meditation — taming the mind — is what gets us from one to the other. Meditation is Buddhism’s basic remedy for the human condition, and its special genius.



The Buddhist path of meditation begins with practices to calm our wild mind. Once the mind is focused enough to look undistractedly into reality, we develop insight into the nature of our experience, which is marked by impermanence, suffering, nonego, and emptiness. We naturally develop compassion for ourselves and all beings who suffer, and our insight allows us to help them skillfully. Finally, we experience ourselves and our world for what they have been since beginningless time, are right now, and always will be — nothing but enlightenment itself, great perfection in every way.



5. No one can do it for you. But you can do it.

In Buddhism, there is no savior. There’s no one who’s going to do it for us, no place we can hide out for safety. We have to face reality squarely, and we have to do it alone. Even when Buddhists take refuge in the Buddha, what they’re really taking refuge in is the truth that there’s no refuge. Not seeking protection is the only real protection.



So that’s the bad news — we have to do it alone. The good news is, we can do it. As human beings, we have the resources we need: intelligence, strength, loving hearts, and proven, effective methods. Because of that, we can rouse our confidence and renounce our depression and resentment.



But while no one can do that for us, help and guidance is available. There are teachers — women and men who are further along the path — who offer us instruction and inspiration. They prove to us it can be done. Our fellow practitioners support our path, while never allowing us to use them as crutches. The Buddhist teachings offer us wisdom that goes back 2,600 years to the Buddha himself. We can go right to the source, because the lineage that started with Gautama Buddha is unbroken to this day.



6. There is a spiritual, nonmaterial reality.

Some people describe Buddhism as the rational, “scientific” religion, helping us lead better and more caring lives without contradicting our modern worldview. It is certainly true that many Buddhist practices work very nicely in the modern world, don’t require any exotic beliefs, and bring demonstrable benefit to people’s lives. But that’s only part of the story.



Buddhism definitely asserts there is a reality that is not material. Other religions say that too; the difference is that in Buddhism this spiritual reality is not God. It is mind.



This is something you can investigate for yourself:



Is my mind made of matter or is it something else?



Does my mind have characteristics, like thoughts, feelings, and identity, or is it the space within which these things arise?



Does my mind change constantly or is it continuous? Is it one thing or many?



Where is the boundary of my mind? Is it large or small? Is it inside me looking at the material world outside? Or are my perceptions and my experience of them both mind? (And if so, perhaps it’s the material world we should be questioning the reality of.)



7. But you don’t have to take anything on faith.

There is no received wisdom in Buddhism, nothing we must accept purely on the basis of somebody else’s spiritual authority. The Dalai Lama has said that Buddhism must give up any belief that modern science disproves. The Buddha himself famously said, “Be a lamp unto yourselves,” and told his students they must test everything he said against their own experience. But it is easy to misinterpret this advice. Our modern egos are keen to take advantage of it. While we shouldn’t accept what others say at face value, this doesn’t mean we should just accept what we tell ourselves. We have to test the teachings of Buddhism against our direct life experience, not against our opinions.



And while modern science can prove or disprove old beliefs about astronomy or human physiology, it cannot measure or test the nonmaterial. Buddhism values the rational mind and seeks not to contradict it in its own sphere. But it doesn’t tell the whole story.



Finally, it is the rare person who can navigate the spiritual path alone. While retaining our self-respect and judgment, we must be willing to accept the guidance, even leadership, of those who are further along the path. In a society that exalts the individual and questions the hierarchy of the teacher-student relationship, it is a challenge to find a middle way between too much self and not enough.



8. Buddhism offers a wealth of skillful means for different people’s needs.

Buddhism is not a one-path-fits-all religion. It’s highly pragmatic, because it’s about whatever helps reduce suffering.



Beings are infinite. So are their problems and states of mind. Buddhism offers a wealth of skillful means to meet their different needs. If people are not ready for the final truth, but a partial truth will help, that’s no problem — as long as it actually helps. The problem is that things that feel helpful — like going along with our usual tricks — can sometimes make things worse. So the Buddhist teachings are gentle, but they can also be tough. We need to face the ways we cause ourselves and others suffering.



Buddhist meditators have been studying the mind for thousand of years. In that time, they’ve tested and proven many techniques to tame the mind, lessen our suffering, and discover who we are and what is real (and not). There are meditations to calm and focus the mind, contemplations to open the heart, and ways to bring ease and grace to the body. It’s fair to say, as many people have, that Buddhism is the world’s most developed science of mind.



Today, people who want to explore Buddhism have many resources at their disposal. For the first time in history, all the schools and traditions of Buddhism are gathered in one place. There are fine books, excellent teachers (many of them now American), practice centers, communities, and indeed, magazines.



These are all available for you to explore according to your own needs and path. You can practice meditation at home or go to a local center and practice with others. You can read a book, attend classes, or hear a lecture by a Buddhist teacher. Whatever works for you — no pressure.



9. It’s open, progressive, and not institutional.

While Buddhism in its Asian homelands can be conservative, convert Buddhists in the West are generally liberal, both socially and politically. Whether this is an accident of history or a natural reflection of the Buddhist teachings, Buddhist communities embrace diversity and work against sexism and racism.



Identities of all sorts, including gender, nationality, ethnicity, and even religion, are not seen as fixed and ultimately true. Yet they are not denied; differences are acknowledged, celebrated, and enjoyed. Of course, Buddhists are still people and still part of a society, so it’s a work in progress. But they’re trying.



Many Americans have turned away from organized religion because it feels like just another bureaucracy, rigid and self-serving. Buddhism has been described as disorganized religion. There’s no Buddhist pope. (No, the Dalai Lama is not the head of world Buddhism. He’s not even the head of all Tibetan Buddhism, just of one sect.) There is no overarching church, just a loose collection of different schools and communities. As you’ll quickly discover if you go to your local Buddhist center, things may run smoothly (or not), but the atmosphere is likely to be open and relaxed. It probably won’t feel institutional.



10. And it works.

We can’t see or measure subjective experience, so we can’t judge directly the effect Buddhism is having on someone else’s mind and heart. But we can see how they act and treat other people. We can hear what they say about what they’re experiencing inside.



What we find is that Buddhism works. For millennia, Buddhism has been making people more aware, caring, and skillful. All you have to do is meet someone who’s been practicing meditation a lot to know that. In our own time, hundreds of thousands of Americans are reporting that even a modest Buddhist practice has made their life better — they’re calmer, happier, and not as carried away when strong emotions arise. They’re kinder to themselves and others.



But it’s really important not to burden ourselves with unrealistic expectations. Change comes very slowly. You’ll also see that when you meet a Buddhist meditator, even one who’s been at it for a long time. Don’t expect perfection. We’re working with patterns of ignorance, greed, and anger that have developed over a lifetime — if not much longer. Change comes slowly for most of us. But it does come. If you stick with it, that’s guaranteed. Buddhism works.



This is not an attempt to convert anyone to Buddhism. There is no need for that. But those who think of themselves as spiritual but not religious can find a lot in Buddhism to help them on their personal path, however they define it.



When I first encountered Buddhism, what struck me was its absolute integrity. I saw that it was not trying to manipulate me by telling me what I wanted to hear. It always tells the truth. Sometimes that truth is gentle, softening our hearts and bringing tears to our eyes. Sometimes it is tough, forcing us to face our problems and cutting through our comfortable illusions. But always it is skillful. Always it offers us what we need. We are free to take what we wish.



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Belonging to the Universe: Explorations on the Frontiers of Science and Spirituality by Fritjof Capra | Goodreads

Belonging to the Universe: Explorations on the Frontiers of Science and Spirituality by Fritjof Capra | Goodreads



by Fritjof Capra

 3.69  ·   Rating details ·  67 ratings  ·  5 reviews

Now in paperback--a remarkably compatible new view of the universe offered by the trailblazer of new science and a contemporary of Thomas Merton. "An entertaining, thought-provoking book filled with conversations, quotations, and colorful stories that make science and theology come alive".--San Francisco Chronicle. Winner of the American Book Award.

---

Andrew

May 02, 2019Andrew rated it liked it

I think I understood roughly seven of the concepts used in this book and maybe 14 of the words used.



Two super smart dudes talk about science and religion. But they don't do a swell job of making it accessible like my boy Alan Watts.



There were times I was interested in what the dudes had to say about life and shit. At other times, (most of the time if I'm being honest with myself) I was like..."what?"



Maybe someday I'll pick it back up, slow down, wrap my head around this thing and "get" "it."



If you're smarter than me, then go read this book! But I got second place in the spelling bee in 6th grade, so I know a thing or two about stuff.



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William Crosby

Feb 24, 2015William Crosby rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition

This book is the result of discussions at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur. It focuses on parallel shifts in thinking (paradigm) within science and religion (they focus primarily on Christian and Buddhism; others are mentioned, but not dealt with as in-depth as those two).



This is put in the format of a dialogue between the authors. Often there is agreement (and it often seemed they were trying too hard to find similarities and conjunctions between science and religion); sometimes there is questioning of each other and teasing out certain points.



The format was too scattershot and not structured enough for me. I'd get interested in a line of thought and then suddenly they'd digress to something else. I sometimes felt I was walking in a fast moving muddy river trying to see the constantly varying bottom.



They also would sometimes use judgmental words such as "reactionary" and "outmoded."



While this book did give me some new ideas, I did not like the format. (less)

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Daniel Facchini

Jun 30, 2014Daniel Facchini rated it it was amazing

Recommends it for: People interested in science, spirituality and paradigm discussions

I thought this was an amazing book. As it was published 23 years ago, some of the very few debates including "current issues" are outdated. Nevertheless, everything else is still up to date, even though the paradigm shift in science and theology is what is beeing discussed.



I always find it impressive when highly educated people from different backgrounds work together towards an integrative approach. The discussions the authors make brings a lot of information and calls for an inner reflexion on the way every aspect of life can be influenced by science and spirituality. (less)

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Vicki

Jul 09, 2008Vicki rated it liked it

Shelves: always-reading

This is a wonderful book so far - I haven't finished it yet. It is a great hybrid of scientific systems theory and Christian spirituality. I wish I had read it sooner.

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Peggy Lo

Dec 03, 2010Peggy Lo rated it it was amazing

Shelves: religion, science

Great discussion of paradigm shifts in science and theology and historical as well as ongoing changes

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From other countries
Sam
2.0 out of 5 stars Unstructured
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 December 2013
Verified Purchase
There are some interesting ideas in a book, but the conversational structure of the book means that they are never properly defined, explained or explored in any real detail, leaving one ultimately unsatisfied. The conversational structure also means that the topic under consideration tends to vary back and forth, which makes it difficult to properly consider any of the ideas presented.
One person found this helpful
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J B Quinlan
3.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed in Catra
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 10 February 2016
Verified Purchase
Capra is a great writer and scientific intellectual .. but this is NOT one of his best.
One person found this helpful
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Ashen Breese
4.0 out of 5 stars More on spirituality, less on science
Reviewed in the United States on 16 June 2009
Verified Purchase
If you are looking to hear more on the "new paradigm" in science, this is probably not the book for you. While the book touches on the scientific side of "new thinking", it is largly about new perspectives in Christian theology. Personally I have always had major issues with conventional Christian theology. This is the first source I have ever read that presents a more open and "inclusive" take what I had always considered a very "exclusive" and closed religion. The book is particularly interesting, but the last chapter (social implications on "new paradigm" thinking) starts to lose momentum, becoming less significant rambling.
9 people found this helpful
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Rabe'
5.0 out of 5 stars I am speechless :)
Reviewed in the United States on 26 January 2014
Verified Purchase
I am now reading page 71 and I am very thankful for the writers as they organize the history of our development as humanity in a very simple rational way. I am already in love with this book. I advise everyone who is looking for true wisdom to read this book.
5 people found this helpful
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poet1
5.0 out of 5 stars Belonging to the Universe
Reviewed in the United States on 8 November 2012
Verified Purchase
What I liked about Belonging to the Universe is the connection of spirituality with the physical parts of the universe. Belonging to the Unverse assists me in how I ask and reflect on the question... 'Who am I?'.
3 people found this helpful
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WILLIAM OCONNOR
4.0 out of 5 stars Great minds in a great discussion
Reviewed in the United States on 3 June 2013
Verified Purchase
Reminds me of some of the opportunities
I had in college to hear dialogues
by some of the best minds of the '60s.
Always enlightening.

Well worth the read,
and this volume will stay on my shelf for reference.
2 people found this helpful
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Smrrain

2020/10/02

The extraordinary life of Thich Nhat Hanh - Earshot - ABC Radio National

The extraordinary life of Thich Nhat Hanh - Earshot - ABC Radio National



The extraordinary life of Thich Nhat Hanh
Kerry Stewart
Posted Mon 30 Mar 2015, 5:03pm
Updated Tue 14 Apr 2015, 3:39pm

Nuns and girls singing at Plum Village 2014
Image:
Courtesy Plum Village Mindfulness Practice Centre
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Zen Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh.
Image:
Courtesy Plum Village Mindfulness Practice Centre
Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh is one of the most influential religious leaders of the last 100 years. A friend and contemporary of Martin Luther King, he had a huge impact on the anti-war movement of the 1960s and ‘70s and continues to speak out against violence in all its forms, as Kerry Stewart writes.

Vietnamese Zen monk Thich Nhat Hanh is one of the most important spiritual leaders of the last 100 years, drawing thousands of people to his talks and retreats in the US, Asia and Europe. His message of being peace rather than looking for it outside oneself is as relevant today was it was in the Vietnam of the 1960s and 1970s.
At a recent retreat at Plum Village, his monastery in France, he spoke with young Israelis and Palestinians about how they can help to stop the cycle of hatred and retribution by looking deeply and addressing the anger within.



Real change will only happen when we fall in love with our planet.
Thich Nhat Hanh was born in 1926 and became a monk when he was 16. From a young age he believed that the way Buddhism was practised in Vietnam had lost touch with the people. He set his mind to renewing Buddhism, which he did by introducing mindfulness practice to his students, updating contorted translations of the sutras and chants, and engaging in social work.
In 1963, while the Vietnam War was raging he coined the term ‘engaged Buddhism’, which encouraged people to get off their meditation cushions and help others. He founded the School of Youth for Social Service, a group of 10,000 volunteers who worked in villages teaching young children, rebuilding bombed houses and helping farmers feed their families.
The group helped both communists and anti-communists, which didn’t sit well with either side. Thich Nhat Hanh’s life was threatened on many occasions and many monks, nuns and laypeople were killed.
Nuns and girls singing at Plum Village 2014
Image:
Courtesy Plum Village Mindfulness Practice Centre
Thich Nhat Hanh left Vietnam for the United States in 1966 to talk to political and religious leaders about stopping the war. However when the Paris Peace Accords were signed in 1973, he was barred from returning to his homeland. While in the US he met and became friends with three of the most important Christians of the time: Martin Luther King, Trappist monk Thomas Merton and Catholic priest and peace activist Daniel Berrigan.
King called him an Apostle of Peace, and nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1967. That year no one was awarded the prize. Shantum Seth, a teacher in the tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh, says that Martin Luther King was convinced to speak out about the Vietnam War after meeting Thich Nhat Hanh, even though King was criticised for combining civil rights issues with international politics.
Seth feels Thich Nhat Hanh has shifted the consciousness of this age, a bit like Gandhi did. ‘As the Nobel committee often say, “We regret not giving the prize to Mahatma Gandhi,” ... I think they will also say, “We regret not giving it to Thich Nhat Hanh.”’
Thomas Merton once said that the only way to be a good Christian now is to practise Buddhism. Others agree.
‘We have lost the teachings about mindfulness, the present moment, universal compassion which are all right there in the Sermon on the Mount,’ says friend, long-time peace activist and Catholic priest John Dear. ‘Thich Nhat Hanh has taken that in so many deep ways and we Christians haven’t.'
Father Daniel Berrigan was a founding member of the Plowshares Movement which famously trespassed onto a General Electric nuclear missile facility in Pennsylvania, damaged warheads and poured blood over files and documents.
Berrigan spent time with Thich Nhat Hanh at his monastery in France, and the pair had many long conversations about Jesus and Buddha, life and death, war and peace. These conversations are compiled in a book called The Raft is not the Shore.
Over the last 70 years, Thich Nhat Hanh has led events for US congressmen and women and parliamentarians in the UK, Ireland, and Thailand, as well as mindfulness workshops for the World Bank, the Harvard School of Medicine and Google.
2012 Day of Mindfulness at the European Institute of Applied Buddhism
Image:
Courtesy Plum Village Mindfulness Practice Centre
The executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, Christiana Figueres, has been on retreat with Thich Nhat Hanh and keeps his book Love Letter to the Earth close at hand. ‘Real change will only happen when we fall in love with our planet,’ writes Thich Nhat Hanh, a message Figueres has taken to heart.
‘While on one level of our experience this is a complex problem, I see in my daily life that it is our awareness of this love that can actually be transformational,’ she says. ‘It can be the strength and power that transforms a conversation, a decision taken, and the awareness why we have to take these decisions.’
Father John Dear was talking to Thich Nhat Hanh one day about how many Christians are involved in, and believe in, war.
Thich Nhat Hanh revealed his despair that many Buddhists are also engaged in violent conflict. ‘He is very practical, and trying to engage all Buddhists around the world, saying, “If you’re Buddhist you really have to be non-violent. You cannot take up the gun when push comes to shove.”
‘That’s not necessarily happening in Asia.’
Dear says that US Buddhists have the opposite problem; they are bourgeois and comfortable to the point of being disengaged.
‘You can say you’re practising mindfulness and being peace, but if you’re not involved in the struggle, that’s not engaged Buddhism.’




Thich Nhat Hanh
Listen to the full episode of Earshot to hear more about Zen Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh.
Earshot is about people, places, stories and ideas, in all their diversity.