2021/04/25

希修 호흡 명상 + Guided Meditations


希修
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< 호흡 명상 >
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1. 불교 명상이 호흡을 중시하는 이유
(i) 의식을 '지금 여기'로 가져오기에.
(ii) 호흡이야말로 마음이 차분히 쉴 수 있는 장소라서.
(iii) 그러면서도 마음의 탐구 대상이 되어 의식 계발에 도움이 되기에. (의식 집중에 익숙해지면 나중에는 호흡 아닌 마음 자체가 탐구 대상이 됨. 즉, 마음이 마음을 들여다 보는 과정을 통해 지혜가 계발됨.)
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2. 명상 방법
아래는 타니사로 스님의 설명을 제 나름대로 적어 본 것입니다. 저도 명상은 유아 수준인데, 명상에 대해 좀더 자세히 알고 싶어 하시는 분들이 계신 듯 하여 그저 참고만 하시라는 의미로 올립니다. (^^;)
2.1. 마음을 온전히 호흡에만 집중함.
2.2. 호흡이 짧으면 짧다고, 길면 길다고, 불규칙하면 불규칙하다고 알아차림.
2.3. 들숨시, 날숨시, 몸 전체가 어떻게 느껴지는지를 관조. (처음에는 들 숨과 날 숨이 인중에서 어떻게 느껴지는지부터 시작하여 점차 몸 전체로 범위를 확대해 나갈 수도 있음.)
2.4. 호흡이 편안해지면 그 편안함이 몸 전체에 퍼지도록 이렇게 저렇게 시도해 봄.
2.5. 편안한 호흡을 통해 몸이 안정되면 호흡도 마음도 점차 고요해짐.
2.6. 손끝과 발끝의 말단 포함 몸 전체에서 일어나는 감각을 인지하면서도 그 몸 전체에 대한 감각/의식과 호흡이 완전히 하나가 되어 서로 분리되지 않는 듯 느껴짐.
2.7. 의식이 분산되면 몸에 대한 감각도 깨지며, 몸의 어느 부위에서 일어나는 신체적 감각이 내 의식에 접수되지 않는 '맹점'이 생김. 그러므로 호흡과 몸에 온전히 정신을 집중하고 있어야 잡념으로 인한 분산이 덜 됨.
2.8. 잡념이 일어날 경우엔, 그 때마다(a) 알아차리고서(b) 의식을 다시 호흡에 집중함. a와 b 사이의 시차가 몇 초일 수도, 몇 십분일 수도 있는데, a시점과 b시점 사이의 거리가 0초가 되는 것이 목표.
2.9. '희열'이라고 부를 수 있는 수준의 신체적 상쾌함 같은 것이 느껴짐.
2.10. 언제 어디서든 마음만 먹으면 곧장 희열에 도달할 수 있을 만큼 명상이 성숙해지면, 그 후에는 그 희열조차 가라앉히려고 해 봄.
2.11. 완벽한 고요함만 남음. 호흡조차 너무 고요해서 남이 내 코에 손을 갖다대어도 공기의 흐름이 거의 안 느껴질 정도가 된다고 함.
2.12. 의식이 호흡으로부터 다시 분리되어 나옴. 마음에서 어떤 작용이 일어나는지를 이제야 비로소 정확히 들여다 볼 수 있게 된 것. 각각의 perception이나 feeling이 어떻게 움직이고, 그것이 다시 마음에 어떤 영향을 주는지를 계속 관조.
2.13. 생각뿐 아니라 perception과 feeling까지 가라앉고 나면 'awareness'라는 것만 남음. 그러나 더 자세히 들여다 보면 이 awareness조차 잔잔하게 물결이 치고 있음.
2.14. 현재 내 마음에서 어떤 일이 일어나고 있는지에 대한 directed thought와 evaluation마저 가라앉힘.
2.15. '희열'이나 '기분 좋음' 등 마음에서 무엇이 발견되든 그조차 가라앉힘.
2.16. 모든 생각, 느낌, 노력마저도 가라앉히고 나면 완전한 자유/평화라는 것을 어렴풋이 느끼게 됨. (그 완전한 자유/평화가 바로 해탈 후의 상태.) 하나씩 버릴수록 점점 자유로와진다는 것에 대한 직접 경험.
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3. 주의할 점
3.1. 자신의 마음에서 무언가가 발견되고 그것을 가라앉힘으로써 좀더 고요하게 할 때마다 내 마음을 들여다보는 나의 위치가 점점 높아지는 것. 새가 높이 날을 수록 좀더 큰 그림을 조망할 수 있는 것과 같은 원리.
3.2. 내 마음에서 '추악한' 탐욕이나 위선이 발견된다 해도 그것을 '나'의 것이라 의식하지 않고 그저 관조자의 입장에서 있는 그대로 담담하게 바라보아야만, 대상을 정확히 파악할 수 있고 합리화의 유혹에도 빠지지 않을 수 있음.
3.3. 내 마음에서 발견되는 것을 어떻게 해야 가라앉힐 수 있는지를 시행착오를 통해 알아 가는 자체가 바로 원인-결과를 몸으로 익히는 것. 고와 고의 소멸은 원인-결과에 대한 이해와 실천임.
3.4. 매단계에서 충분한 시간을 보내야 함. 예를 들어, 내가 2.3번 단계에 이르렀다면, 언제 어디서든 곧장 2.3단계에 진입할 수 있을 때까지 몇 달, 몇 년이든 계속 훈련해야 함. 그렇게 2.3단계를 마스터하고 나면, 그러고 나서 2.4번 단계를 시도하는 것. 이런 식으로 2.16번까지 가면, 그 후에는 또 언제 어디서든 순식간에 2.16번으로 곧장 진입할 수 있도록 훈련해야 하며, 하루 중 가급적 많은 시간을 그 상태에서 보낼 수 있도록 노력해야 함.
3.5. 자신의 마음을 점점 더 깊이 들여다보게 되면서, 의식의 수면 아래로 억눌러 왔던 온갖 기억이나 감정이 올라올 수 있음. 이것이 바로 팔정도의 8요소를 순서대로 계발해야 하는 이유이며 명상은 맨마지막인 이유. 즉, right view가 없고 일상생활에서의 실천을 통해 탐진치의 큰 덩어리들을 다루는 연습이 불충분한 상태에서 갑자기 깊은 명상을 하게 되면, 대개는 그렇게 깊이 들어가지도 못 하지만 혹시 들어갈 수 있다 해도 그 깊은 의식에서 만나는 것들을 감당 못 해 정신적 불균형이나 혼란에 빠질 수도 있다고 함.
3.6. 혹시 명상 중 어떤 이미지가 보이거나 누군가의 음성이 들리거나 할 수 있는데, 이런 것들이 내 의식이 스스로 만들어낸 '가짜'인지 윤회계 내의 다른 차원에서부터 오는 혹은 내 의식이 다른 차원을 여행하면서 경험한 '진짜'인지 판단할 방법이 없으므로, 그냥 무시하는 것이 가장 안전. 이런 체험들을 혹자는 '영적 발달'의 증거로 생각하지만, 타니사로 스님은 '치료 대상'이라 말씀하심. (이런 것들에 의미 두기 시작하면 구제불능의 delusion에 빠짐.) 부처님도 진짜 ‘기적’은 오직 해탈뿐이라고 말씀하심. 인간의 의식의 힘이 강력함은 새삼스러울 것도 없는 얘기. 윤회도 결국 의식/욕망의 결과. 그러니 누군가가 동쪽의 산을 서쪽으로 옮기는 초능력을 가졌다 한들 해탈 이외의 다른 명상 효과들에 대해 신기해 할 필요가 없으며, 명상 효과에 대한 공부를 하는 시간을 명상 훈련 자체에 투자해야.
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http://buddhist-spirituality.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/MindfulnessOfBreathingMeditation4TetradsNotes.pdf?fbclid=IwAR2jSlslSq9YI1eQ90ZGndvmwkG5gRnrw1gAxQ_FYtXX3DrQWrMyp3LjbTk
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Mindfulness of Breathing Meditation – Four Tetrads (16 Aspects)

1st Tetrad – Mindfulness of the Body (focusing on the breath itself, as part of one's experience of the body) ▪ Breathe in long; breathe out long – discern the in-breathing and out-breathing.

▪ Breathe in short; breathe out short – be sensitive to other variations in the breath (e.g. deep/shallow, heavy/light) and so be more actively involved in the breathing process.

▪ Breathe in sensitive to the whole body; breathe out sensitive to the whole body – do a body scan; notice the breathing with respect to the entire body (no longer narrowly focused on the sensation of the breathing). Breathing is a whole-body process – an energy flow goes throughout the entire body.

▪ Breathe in calming the body; breathe out calming the body – calm the breathing for it to be gentle and soothing.

2nd Tetrad – Mindfulness of Feelings (focusing on the feelings created by the way one pays attention to the breath) ▪ Breathe in sensitive to rapture; breathe out sensitive to rapture – ask what kind of breathing would be refreshing?

▪ Breathe in sensitive to pleasure; breathe out sensitive to pleasure – breathe in a way that feels easeful and pleasant. ▪ Breathe in sensitive to mental fabrication; breathe out sensitive to mental fabrication – (1) remember that the mind helps fabricate feelings (they don't come and go on their own); perceptions have an effect on the mind; (2) see how feelings induced by the breath have an effect on the mind.

▪ Breathe in calming mental fabrication; breathe out calming mental fabrication – find the perception that is most calming to the mind.

3rd Tetrad – Mindfulness of the Mind (focusing on the state of the mind as it tries to stay with the breath)

▪ Breathe in sensitive to the mind; breathe out sensitive to the mind – notice if the mind is in balance or out of balance.

▪ Breathe in satisfying the mind; breathe out satisfying the mind – if the mind is depressed, sluggish, or stale: (1) see how you can breathe in and out to gladden the mind; or, (2) use other types of meditation to gladden the mind (e.g. Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha, generosity); then (3) go back to the breath and maintain the sense of gladness.

▪ Breathe in steadying the mind; breathe out steadying the mind – if the mind is restless or scattered: (1) see what kind of breathing could steady it; or, (2) see what other meditation topics could steady it (e.g. reflection on death or the five reflections of aging, illness, death, separation, karma); then when the mind is focused, (3) bring the focus back to the breath.

▪ Breathe in releasing the mind; breathe out releasing the mind – if the mind feels burdened, figure out how to release it from its burdens, especially from unskillful thinking: (1) focus on the object of the thinking (e.g. desire for something and seeing its not-sodesirable aspect; anger with its focus on the all negative aspects); (2) focus on the thinking itself.

4th Tetrad – Mindfulness of Dhammas (focusing on the mental qualities – the component factors that go into shaping the state of the mind – that are involved in developing dispassion for the whole process of fabrication)

▪ Breathe in dwelling on impermanence (inconstancy); breathe out dwelling on impermanence (inconstancy) – realize that things keep changing unreliably; therefore, keep this perception of inconstancy and also see what happiness is falsely pinned on it, thereby causing stress (this is the task of the first Noble Truth, to understand suffering); understand attachment (passion – its gratification and drawbacks).

▪ Breathe in dwelling on dispassion (fading of passion); breathe out dwelling on dispassion (fading of passion) – develop dispassion for stress and its causes (feelings and perceptions); abandon and let the stress go (this is the task of the second Noble Truth, to abandon the cause).

▪ Breathe in dwelling on cessation; breathe out dwelling on cessation – realize that when dispassion comes, fabrications begin to stop (passion keeps them going); focus on cessation.

▪ Breathe in dwelling on relinquishment; breathe out dwelling on relinquishment – stay focused on relinquishment as you breathe in and out; let go of everything.

Great Rewards of This Practice

All seven factors for awakening are developed through this practice: (1) mindfulness – keep the breath in mind; (2) analysis of qualities – see how the sense of the body and mind are being fabricated through the breath and the perceptions around the breath; (3) persistence/energy/effort – do the best to fabricate in skillful ways and abandon unskillful fabrications; (4) rapture – realize that refreshment will come through skillful action; (5) serenity – realize that ease will come through skillful action; (6) concentration – develop concentration; (7) equanimity – watch with equanimity all these aspects as they are happening.

Result

These seven factors lead to knowledge and release – the knowledge of awakening (understanding what the mind has been doing that is causing stress), and release (how the mind can let go of the cause). When one has completed all the duties with regard to the four noble truths (to understand suffering; to abandon its origin, to cultivate the path, and to realize cessation) the mind no longer creates any unnecessary burdens for itself. It tastes the deathless.

In this way you can begin to see things as they actually are – as they are actually happening and being fabricated, and seeing where habits of fabrication are causing unnecessary suffering and stress. You come to see that the stress is actually unnecessary. There are choices you are making as you fabricate your experience out of the raw materials that come from past actions and, through the path, you learn how to make these choices more and more skillful to the point where there is really nothing more to do. Everything is at perfect equilibrium.

So this is what breath meditation can do. It’s not just a preliminary exercise. It’s a path that can take you all the way. You can augment it with other practices. When the mind needs gladdening or steadying, when you find that you’re stuck with unskillful mental qualities, you can use other techniques to pry the mind free from them. But the breath is where you always come back. It’s your home because it’s right here, where the body and the mind meet. It’s the ideal place to watch both what’s going on in the body and what’s going on in the mind.

Source: Notes by Alexander Peck are based on the following transcript: Thanissaro Bhikkhu. "The Breath All the Way (16 Steps)" (October 2010, No. 3). http://www.dhammatalks.org/mp3_index.html (Dhamma talks and writings of Thanissaro Bhikkhu – http://www.dhammatalks.org/)

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希修 shared a link to the group: 초기불교 공부.

Admin · 9 tSJponsasntuaofrrooscemdmity ·

< Guided Meditations >
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들으면서 할 수 있는 가이드 명상 몇 개 소개하려고 합니다. (한국어로 된 것들 중에는 제 마음에 드는 것을 발견 못 해서 영어로 된 것들로 올립니다.) 1~3번은 초기불교 시각에서 살짝 벗어나는 지점들도 간간이 보이지만 명상 처음 하시는 분들이 따라 하시기에는 좋은 것 같아서요. 4번은 아날라요 스님이라고, 초기불교 연구하시는 분이셔요. 가이드 명상들 중에는 음악이나 듣기 좋은 구절들로 어필하는 것들도 많은데, 그런 것들은 그저 entertainment일 뿐 훈련으로서의 의의는 별로 없다고 저는 생각되거든요. 하지만 아래 명상들 정도면 눈감고 따라하시거나 천천히 산책하면서 들으셔도 좋을 것 같습니다.
崔明淑, Hyun Ju Kim and 4 others
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    希修

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    팔정도의 8요소들은 순서대로 계발해야 하고 명상은 맨 마지막의 8번째임을 늘 기억하시기 바랍니다. 초기경전 전체를 제대로 이해하는 것만으로도 아마 평생이 걸릴 텐데 그렇다고 right view 외의 다른 요소들은 완전히 무시하시라는 말씀은 물론 아니구요. 
  • (1) 호흡 가다듬어 심신 이완하기, 
  • (2) 잡념이나 욕망을 일시적이나마 잠시 pause하는 연습하기, 
  • (3) 내가 갖고 있는 감정/생각의 근거에 대해 스스로 하나 하나 캐물어 가기. 

  • 뭐 그냥 이런 정도 수준에서만 하시고, 이 수준 이상으로 하고 싶으신 분들은 분별력도 인격도 출중한 분을 찾아 스승으로 삼으시기 바랍니다. (근데 세상에 신통력 좀 있는 사람들은 오히려 찾기 쉬워도 분별력, 인격, 명상에서의 성취를 모두 갖춘 분 찾기는 지극히 어렵죠. 아주 오랜 세월동안 아주 가까이에서 일거수 일투족을 지켜 봐야만, 그리고 내게 이미 분별력이 있어야만 상대의 인격 수준을 정확히 알 수 있다고 부처님도 말씀하셨구요.)
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    인터넷으로 인해 접촉 가능해진 정보의 양은 비약적으로 증가했지만, 어떤 정보가 100% 사실/진실이고 어떤 정보에 정확히 얼만큼의 거짓이나 과장이 섞여 있는지 판단하기는 어렵죠. 정신 세계는 더욱 혼란스러운 것 같습니다. 1가닥의 진실과 999 가닥의 착각, 상상, 자기기만, 귀신들의 장난이 실타래처럼 엉켜 있는 현상을 만나 그 1가닥의 진실만 가려 내기란 참 어렵고, 여기에 실패하면 차라리 평생 명상 전혀 안 했던 것이 신체적으로나 정신적으로나 훨씬 나았을 경우들 (보통 '주화입마'라 부르죠)도 적지 않아서요..


2021/04/24

A Year in Paradise: Schmoe, Floyd: 9780898866537: Amazon.com: Books

A Year in Paradise: Schmoe, Floyd: 9780898866537: Amazon.com: Books






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A Year in Paradise Paperback – July 31, 1999
by Floyd Schmoe (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars 16 ratings

* An eloquently written story, laced with appreciations of the region's natural history

* Includes historic photographs



In midwinter 1920, Floyd Schmoe and his bride struggled up Mount Rainier on snowshoes on a long-delayed honeymoon. As the new caretakers at Paradise Inn, they would be alone in a towering world of snow and ice and incomparable beauty, until the plows arrived to free them on the fourth of July. So began a long love affair with Mount Rainier. 

And here is Floyd Schmoe's account of it; a delightful and informative portrait of a mountain through the seasons of the year.

Through his personal narrative, Schmoe writes of many things that combined to cast a spell on him: the shy mountain goat, the reproductive processes of trees and plants, techniques of climbing, the habits of glaciers and volcanoes, the curious fact of a mouse being found at very high altitude, the peculiarities of tourists-and much more. This is a book for anyone drawn to the mysteries of the high country.









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AUD 62.33
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AUD 19.83
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Print length

208 pages
Language

English
Publisher

Mountaineers Books
Publication date

July 31, 1999

AUD22.49
A Year In Paradise
Floyd Wilfred SchmoeFloyd Wilfred Schmoe
4.8 out of 5 stars 16
Hardcover
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Editorial Reviews

Review
Those who know the Pacific Northwest will love this book for the way in which it puts in new dimensions the life of the meadows, cliffs, and ice fields on Mount Rainier. (Justice William O. Douglas)
From the Publisher
In the centennial year of Mount Rainier National Park, The Mountaineers Books is pleased to bring this classic memoir back into print. Originally published in 1959, A Year in Paradise is author Floyd Schmoe's portrait of Mount Rainier through the seasons of 1920.

Schmoe's love affair with Rainier began during the winter he and his new bride spent caretaking Paradise Lodge, which was completely buried under the snow until the Fourth of July. His knowledge of natural history, his photographic talent, and his graceful writing combine to create a rich portrait of this beloved mountain.

With 20 b&w photos and 30 illustrations.

About the Author
Early in his working life Floyd Schmoe became the first naturalist assigned to Mount Rainier National Park and was a professor of Forestry at the University of Washington, Seattle, for most of his career. Later in life, Floyd was twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for work he had done in Japan following WWII.
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Product details

Publisher : Mountaineers Books; 1st edition (July 31, 1999)
Language : English
Paperback : 208 pages
ISBN-10 : 0898866537
ISBN-13 : 978-0898866537
Item Weight : 11.4 ounces
Dimensions : 6 x 0.48 x 9 inches
Best Sellers Rank: #946,448 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
#37 in Mount Rainier Washington Travel Books
#243 in Mountain Ecology
#1,427 in Mountaineering (Books)
Customer Reviews:
4.8 out of 5 stars 16 ratings




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Visit Amazon's Floyd Wilfred Schmoe Page
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars

Top reviews

Top reviews from the United States


Kathryn Stevens

5.0 out of 5 stars Mt. Rainier like your Grandpa would tell it...Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2007
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I wish I could have lived even a day of the life Floyd Schmoe describes in this colorful and humble account of life on Mt. Rainier. As a relatively new resident to Western Washington, I bought this book as an attempt to acquaint myself with one of the regions best-known and best-loved landmarks. I was not disappointed. In fact, I was intrigued.

In this four-seasons look at the life of a couple who lived year-round on an active volcano during the early 1900's (ie: 1920 and beyond), I was struck by how honestly every detail was described. This certainly is not a scientific book, nor is it an all-inclusive documentation of Mt. Rainer National Park, but it is a realistic one, one you might imagine your Grandfather sitting down to tell you over several weeks at the dinner table.

Schmoe uses all of his resources to describe life on the mountain; he tells it through his own eyes, his wife's eyes, and the eyes of the visitors who crowded into the Inn every summer. He retells suspenseful stories of lost climbers and park staff, close encounters with bears and cougars, firsthand accounts of hiking the mountain, and large-scale bouts of inclement weather.

But it's not all adventure and action. In fact, many of the most memorable parts of A Year in Paradise are those when Schmoe writes of being overcome by the beauty of wildflowers breaking through snow in spring or the determination of Rainier's smaller wildlife to survive over winter. He also writes about the sometimes-laughable domestic situations that can arise when humans try to play house on a real-life mountain.

When all is said and done, you'll feel not only like you've read a book about the great outdoors, but about the inhabitants (humans, animals, and plants alike) that make it worthy of the name Paradise. Oh yes- and some added bonuses are the home photos and nature sketches throughout.

9 people found this helpful

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gr8 gobbs

5.0 out of 5 stars Paradise blessingReviewed in the United States on May 17, 2016
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In the early '60s I was privileged to have spent 3 nights tent camping in the then existant camping ground at Paradise...and it truly was Paradise. My parents in one tent, my family (4 of us) in another and not another soul within sight or hearing. A year or so later I was transfered (U.S. Air Force) to Tacoma and spent spent four years viewing Mt. Rainier and spending many weekends in the Park. The book truly brought back a lot of memories.


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swampydave

5.0 out of 5 stars A Year in ParadiseReviewed in the United States on December 23, 2011
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Floyd Schmoe writes so well, you can feel the Chinook Wind in the spring and the aches in your legs snowshoeing from Longmire to Paradise Inn. He makes you feel like you are walking with him tramping along the Wonderland Trail or making a rock climb.
It is made up of short chapters so it is easy to fit into a busy schedule but is is also hard to put down.. It makes a nice gift for anyone who likes the outdoors, especially Mt. Rainier.

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Glenn Eriksen

5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful and evocative account of life at Mount Rainier as ...Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2017
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A wonderful and evocative account of life at Mount Rainier as a park ranger and naturalist in the 1920s.


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Jeff Lieurance

3.0 out of 5 stars Three StarsReviewed in the United States on March 7, 2016
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Descriptive, but very slow reading.


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robert higley

5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United States on October 29, 2015
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a great book with wonderful memories. Thanks to the book seller


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Samuel J.

5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in the United States on July 28, 2016
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A well written and interesting book


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Robert L. Anderson

5.0 out of 5 stars A Year in ParadiseReviewed in the United States on December 19, 2009
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This is a great book that I read years ago and enjoyed. I wanted a copy for my library to read again. It was just as good the second time through.


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