2023/07/04

The Wisdom of Yoga: A Seeker's Guide to Extraordinary Living by Stephen Cope | Goodreads

The Wisdom of Yoga: A Seeker's Guide to Extraordinary Living by Stephen Cope | Goodreads







The Wisdom of Yoga: A Seeker's Guide to Extraordinary Living

Stephen Cope
4.26
1,816 ratings131 reviews

For modern spiritual seekers and yoga students alike, here is an irreverent yet profound guide to the most sophisticated teachings of the yoga wisdom tradition–now brought to contemporary life by a celebrated author, psychotherapist, and leading American yoga instructor.

While many Westerners still think of yoga as an invigorating series of postures and breathing exercises, these physical practices are only part of a vast and ancient spiritual science. For more than three millennia, yoga sages systematically explored the essential questions of our human existence: 
  • What are the root causes of suffering, and how can we achieve freedom and happiness? 
  • What would it be like to function at the maximum potential of our minds, bodies, and spirits? 
  • What is an optimal human life?

Nowhere have their discoveries been more brilliantly distilled than in a short–but famously difficult–treatise called the Yogasutra. This revered text lays out the entire path of inner development in remarkable detail–ranging from practices that build character and mental power to the highest reaches of spiritual realization.

Now Stephen Cope unlocks the teachings of the Yogasutra by showing them at work in the lives of a group of friends and fellow yoga students who are confronting the full modern catastrophe of careers, relationships, and dysfunctional family dynamics. Interweaving their daily dilemmas with insights from modern psychology, neuroscience, religion, and philosophy, he shows the astonishing relevance and practicality of this timeless psychology of awakening.

Leavened with wit and passion, The Wisdom of Yoga is a superb companion and guide for anyone seeking enhanced creativity, better relationships, and a more ethical and graceful way of living in the world.
Genres
Spirituality
Nonfiction
Philosophy
Health
Self Help
Psychology
Buddhism
 
...more
352 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2006


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About the author
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Stephen Cope
34 books129 followers

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Stephen Cope is the director of the Kripalu Institute for Extraordinary Living, the largest yoga research institute in the Western world—with a team of scientists affiliated with major medical schools on the East coast, primarily Harvard Medical School. He has been for many years the senior scholar in residence at Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in Lenox, Massachusetts, and is the author of four best-selling books.

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Ula
249 reviews
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September 26, 2011
This is the 1st book i've read about yoga and its deeper purpose. As an atheist, I am intrinsically weary of self-help and spiritual books but I am also deeply in love with yoga so I thought I'd give this book a go since I've heard great things about it. There was a lot of amazing insight in it for me, and I really like how he talks about the fact that scientists have studied what happens in our brains when we meditate and practice yogic physical and mental movements. That part of it speaks to me. Though I've done yoga on and off for probably 15 years, it never really did much for me until I needed it and in the last 2 years it really changed the way I think and live. Cope talks a lot about some of the initial changes that occur when you start practicing yoga and I can relate. I didn't connect with the latter half of the book because the whole idea of living in a yoga retreat for months on end just screams of a certain type of privilege that again, I am just intrinsically weary of. How does that apply to real peoples' lives when the insights in the book from its characters come from months (and sometimes years) of living in a cabin out in the woods? Who can really do that? Maybe some day in the future I will relate with those sections of the book as well but now, not so much.

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Phillip Moffitt
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November 9, 2010
Stephen Cope is a psychotherapist and a longtime Kripalu Yoga teacher. In this book he integrates the Buddha’s insight of suffering into the daily lives of a series of friends who are fellow yoga practitioners. He provides a thorough teaching on the overlap of Patanjali’s yoga sutras with Theravada Buddhism, while respecting both traditions. The book provides a feel for how you might start to incorporate mindfulness in your own daily life.
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Clif Brittain
132 reviews
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January 27, 2010
There was a lot of meat on this bone. I have been practicing yoga for about eight months, and as I become more familiar with the physical aspects of yoga, I find myself more interested in the mental side as well. So there is a pull factor involved in exploring the wisdom of yoga. There is also a push factor, in that I am increasingly uneasy about my relationship with my church. There have been a lot of changes within the Catholic Church - new pope, new archbishop, new pastor - none of which resonate with me, so my needs for community are changing.

Pope's book fits into this niche very well. There is almost nothing on the physical aspects of yoga here. There is more about meditation, which I found very useful. The device Pope uses to reveal the wisdom of yoga is a group of yogis that he was a part of during a two year period. This group came together at Kripalu Yoga Center, where Cope has a position.

These people are a composite of people that Cope has met through Kripalu. This method is useful, but sometimes annoying. They are very different, and I found myself becoming very interested in the people and how yoga has helped their growth. In many ways they are archetypes, the Beautiful Woman, the Wizened Old Lady, the Accomplished Guru, the Powerful Lawyer, the Fat Lady and of course, the Conflicted Scholar (the author). Two things are annoying about this convention, first that I found myself caring about them. They are fictional characters, for goodness sake. The other is the detail that Cope burdens us with. I don't think it is necessary for me to know what type of tea they were drinking as they had a particular conversation.

But the device works. Cope explains a lot about the yoga sutras within this context, applying his knowledge and experience with these people to their specific problems, many of which I identify with. For instance, craving and aversion. Most of us are drawn to certain things, food, comfort, sex, money, excitement. We also have aversion to other things, conflict, physical work, cold, etc. Cope tells us how these people have used the guidance of the yoga sutras to resolve their problems.

This book has given me a further push down the yoga path. It contains a lot of solid information and inspiration.

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Deidra
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February 14, 2016
I felt this book made a lot of wisdom clear and accessible. Unfortunately, the author quotes Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh/Osho a couple times toward the end and that put a damper on things for me. No matter how insightful BSR/Osho's pull quotes seem, he was a deeply corrupt person who deeply corrupted his followers and did great harm. His ideas and words do not deserve the esteem they are given.

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Liz
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January 6, 2013
Fantastic book. Patanjali's Yoga Sutras can be very hard to read as they are written in short and sometimes cryptic messages of wisdom. However, this book will take you through the lives of people and their struggles and apply the sutras (and more) to their life trials and tribulations. It's a great read for anyone whether you're in to practicing yoga or not.

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Katerina
356 reviews
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November 14, 2019
4/5 Stars
Library Loan

For some reason, as of lately, I have been struggling with reading spiritually awakening books, yoga books, self-help books, etc. It might have to be because of the low scoring on the last two reads. Who knows. What I do know is that something happened when I read this book. All the other books were factual and gave me clarity on yoga, meditation, and finding your own path. The Wisdom of Yoga, however, touched a part of me and opened it up.

I had been struggling in my yoga practice, as well as the grind of daily life. My control was slipping and I decided to finally bite the bullet and pick this book up...hoping that it could give me an enlightenment that I have not already read.

My heart connected to each of the stories that Cope presents of his friends. You have Susan the compulsive eater, Kate the self-centered, Jacob the overly aggressive romantic, Maggie the story-teller, and Rudi the enlightened. In each of Cope's interactions with his friends, I found myself opening up piece by piece. I found a connection with Susan and her disordered eating due to my own years of anorexia. I found myself entering Jacob's body when it came to the lack of love, and believing I will never find anyone. Each of their struggles became my own and each of their enlightenment's brought clarity to my own situation.

I can't explain this feeling that washed over me once I finished the book, but for the first time in months I was....calm. I haven't been calm or clear-headed in quite a few months and I could finally breathe. It was like the teachings that each of these individuals had including Stephen Cope resonated inside myself. To some this might be hocus-pocus, but to someone like me who has been trying to find a book to finally make some ground with my own practice and healing. This book is truly a blessing.

I did find a few things that I did not like. All the science and backstory given about yoga. He would switch between stories and the yoga science that connected to those stories. Or connect to other spiritual yogi's that have gone down the same path. While I did like some of the insight given, once again you got that taste of medical writing from a doctor and it, at times, would throw the entire experience and story off. While I did find that some of the insights were pertinent to what Cope is teaching us. I could have done without some of the beginner yoga explanations. Especially since this book is more advanced than a beginner's guide, actually this is not a guide at all.

While I can't explain my own experience with the book, I do recommend that others pick up the book to finally find clarity in their own lives and their own paths that they take. This book has done wonders at opening up something inside me that I didn't even know existed. A calm state. Which most of us can agree that we feel very little of these days.

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Colleen
84 reviews
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March 25, 2011
I read this book for my Yoga Book Club here in Portland. As a yoga teacher, I really enjoyed how author Stephen Cope wove the Yoga Sutras throughout the book, making them less esoteric and more accessible than I've experienced in the past. He touches on psychology, neurology, and Buddhist philosophy as well as dozens of years of yoga scholarship to describe the yogic path to wisdom.

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Eevee
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August 14, 2022
Not bad for a bunch of privileged folks finding enlightenment.

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Sandrine
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December 14, 2022
Another step further down the exploration of the yogic wisdom. On the one hand one wanted to know what will happen to the characters encountered serving as „real life“ examples on the other that is an exercise in the witnessing practice. On the other hand it was a valiant effort in bringing the Yoga Sūtras to a mainstream mind challenging the neurones to come to grips with the what is what and the when is when of the manyfolded path.

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Mahay
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April 3, 2020
At first, I was intimidated by this book. I almost took it right back to the library to find a fluffy little novel that I could rip through. However, I felt drawn to finish it and knew I could learn something from its pages. After reading it, I am grateful I chose to stick it out. It is a book that you will be thinking about weeks after you’ve put the jacket back on, and you may even find yourself returning to it in the future.

Cope’s stories of his friends at the yoga center help keep the book accessible to those with very little knowledge of ancient Yoga like myself. While each character has a distinct set of issues that they have to work through, they find commonality in their quest to finding peace within themselves. Even the more technical side of the book was very interesting to me. While I know I won’t be enlightened anytime soon, the teachings of traditional Yoga can be applicable to anyone. Patanjali teaches that “the causes of suffering are not seeing things as they are.” For example, if you fixate on that which you don’t possess, i.e. a new car, a dream job, a plot of land, or worldly travels, you will be unhappy. However, if you can recognize the gifts in your life and simply be grateful, you will find happiness that you didn’t know you possessed. I think this is a very simple lesson that everyone can use.

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Jen
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April 28, 2012
This book helps explain the yoga-sutra to a layperson such as myself. By using personal stories of people he's known the author shows how the concepts or sutras are manifested and/or can be put into practice. Part Five of the book (the last part) was the only part I found too existentialist, but perhaps I'm just not ready for that yet. I liked how he provided a comparative of raja-yoga and Buddhism- having read some works of lama surya das i was thinking I was seeing similarities...but wasn't sure. The author also provides a translation of the complete yoga-sutra for reference.

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Devon Blakely
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January 14, 2013
Beautiful work!!! Cope has brought Patanjali's yoga sutras to life for me more than anything else i have read to date! Although he occasionally lost my interest with his foray into theoretical psychology, by framing the book around personal experience he has created a very modern day identification and the opportunity for personal application of this ancient wisdom.

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Lucy Ambs
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March 2, 2017
Okay so i only give 5 stars if the books changed my life.THIS BOOK CHANGED MY LIFE! 1. I have been mistaken my entire life on the most fundamental factors of being human. 2. I am now convinced Jesus was a Yogi. 3. Erratidating Duhka from my life will be but a byproduct of the life upon which i am embracing as of today. 4. WOW!

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Nancy B
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July 1, 2017
This is the first yoga book that I have read and found it very interesting and inspirational. I want to read Stephen's other book next....love the practice of yoga and want to continue reading more about the philosophy and practical applications.

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Charissa
26 reviews
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August 2, 2011
Love this book so much! 10 outta 5!
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Josh
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November 18, 2016
I like the combining aspects of Western Psychology with the inner mind working of yoga practice and meditation. Very inspiring to deepening my own practice.

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Veena
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March 13, 2021
Stephen Cope is a psychotherapist and a Yoga teacher at the Kripalu centre. In this book, Stephen takes the reader through Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, integrating them with western psychology and aspects of Buddhism. Stephen keeps it real by weaving the Yoga Sutras into the lives of real people. How the practice of Yoga helps and can be used as a tool for transformation and finding the peace within, is what this book talks about. It is an interesting read and takes one into a mode of reflection by looking into oneself and asking some fundamental questions. The story of each yogi mentioned in the book is very relatable and also gives one the hope that we all can reach the state they reached if we practice what they practiced. Highly recommended for psychotherapists and yogis alike.

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Jack
27 reviews
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July 15, 2021
Preface: have only read about 60% of the book

An enjoyable read as it is written more as an autobiography than a guide, but Unless you are unfamiliar with some of the basic concepts of Vedic philosophy or you don't quite understand them and you think reading about them in real-life situations would help, then this is more of an autobiography with a philosophical bent than it is a guide to moksha.
I do however think it would be a great introduction to some of the concepts of Vedic philosophy and the importance of some of its teachings to our lives for those that have not explored it deeply on their own and could lead to some profound realisations for some as to their perspectives on their lives and belief systems.

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Dan Bimrose
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April 13, 2018
This is an excellent book and enjoyable to read. It goes deep into meditation and provides some insight into what the possible actually is. It takes time for most of us to realize that “self” is a great deal more than what we see in the mirror. In a world full of meds to relieve depression and anxiety,any would be well served to take charge of their own healing and one does that by trying to figure out what’s going on in our head. I love speculating that many of the people that bought this book after attending a few yoga sessions at their local community center expecting tips on and a discussion on what goes on when they are on the yoga mat and discover this book is about so much more.

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Jeremiah
62 reviews
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March 14, 2022
This was a little woo woo for my taste, and I am
skeptical of the Western privileged perspectives. Most of the characters in this book are unrelatably successful, which is off-putting and adds a tension of expectation on the “less successful” listener, which I won’t further analyze here.

Nonetheless, I found some useful methods for thinking through anxiety, and I’m glad to have read this. What I keep reading in Chatter, Body Keeps the Score, Come As You Are, and this book is: try to take an outside perspective, and embrace undesired feelings and sides of yourself with non judgment. Life goals, right?

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Alistar
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July 24, 2018
Muy recomendable si te interesa la filosofía del yoga y la meditación. Se basa en hacer digerible para occidentales el tratado del Yoga-Sütra de Patañjali. Te permite ver que el Yoga es algo más que una colección de posturas. Me sorprendió comprobar las profundas relaciones que existen entre el raja-yoga y el budismo, ambas corrientes se influenciaron mutuamente.
Me gustó también que el autor utilizara las historias personales de su grupo de Yoga para hacer más comprensibles los conceptos que explica.
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Nava
81 reviews

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May 31, 2020
Stephen Cope gives the perspective of a psychotherapist (and Kripalu Yoga teacher) on Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. The presentation through individual stories is helpful. The appendices contain a translation of the sutras, as well as some distinction from Buddhism.
This book was not at all about asanas and physiology though, and more about states of conciousness and breathing -- as in Buddism.
I picked it up to learn more about the physical practice, but in the end still got a lot out of reading it.

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Logan
23 reviews

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August 14, 2020
I really love the premise and structure of this book - a balanced blend of narrative, Western psychology, and yogic philosophy. This was probably my own personal taste but I found the narrative explorations much more compelling than Cope’s analysis or interpretations of the Yoga Sutras. I found this writing slightly too technical still, or just too far-reaching to really drive home specific teachings of the Sutras. The irony in this is that through the book Cope admits his own struggle with being too scholarly or technical in his writing, which makes me forgive my own experience of this book.

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Lisa
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November 24, 2017
I studied with Stephen Cope twice at Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health and found him to be a very engaging and intelligent person. I spent a lot of time reading this book, as it's one to sip rather than guzzle. Stephen relates Patanjali's Yoga Sutras to his experience as a yoga seeker. As a yoga teacher, I'm hoping to use some of this in my teaching. The book is much more theoretical than I anticipated and quite dense.

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Scott Myers
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March 23, 2019
After having read Alistair Shearer's translation of "The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali" (an excellent translation, in my opinion; very accessible), this book expounded on the Sutras & brought them to life nicely. This book was also a nice story/journey with the characters that are followed in the book. Makes me want to head to Kripalu ... (a venture that has been on my mind for many years before this book came along!) and LIVE there.
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Kimmy Gaul
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December 28, 2018
An easy, relatable read that doesn’t skimp on depth. Diving into the yoga sutra and the ordinary struggles of life, readers gain a well rounded understanding of questions and experiences that humans have had for thousands of years. This is going up on the list of one my top books. Transformative in nature, especially for those who practice yoga and meditation wanting to sink deeper. Recommended!!

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Nirupa Umapathy
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October 7, 2019
A deep, profound book that I did not give into reading even though I had bought the book in 2013. I did not feel ready. I could not relate. I savored this book over almost 6 months this year, reflecting deeply on my new life, and putting it to work in my daily and constantly evolving yoga practice.
While I don't seek as much as I walk everyday, this book is unforgettable. I will always return.

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Laura
28 reviews
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June 26, 2020
Top!
Ho comprato questo libro per ovviare alle spese di spedizione di altri 2 libri.
E si è rivelato un libro molto interessante. Leggere lo yoga dal punto di vista di uno psicoterapeuta era qualcosa che mi mancava.
Fa molte analogie con la psicologia occidentale e, come si legge, gli yogi antichi avevano scoperto questi concetti da ben prima.

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Jeremy Duke
59 reviews

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January 26, 2021
Long and rambling with a few brief moments of actual insight. I found the characters thin and their issues and phobia conveniently introduced only to be nearly instantly resolved. I wasn't looking for a self-help book, rather a deeper understanding of the physical practice of yoga, so the book was a disappointment to me.

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Omly
204 reviews
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October 20, 2022
I had had Stephen Cope recommended to me, and I can see why. Having completed this one, I already have thoughts about returning to reread it, which is relatively unusual for me.

This particular book is written in a very approachable manner, presented as a series of anecdotes to highlight the philosophical concepts .

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Vince
109 reviews

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January 4, 2019
One of the most helpful things about this book is how the author clearly articulates the similarities between Buddhism and the yogic tradition (along with a few of the differences). It's a little dense, but helpful for anyone looking to understand the philosophy behind those stretchy poses.

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Diya
14 reviews
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January 13, 2019
This book was part of my yoga teacher training recommended reading list..... Goodreads just (re)recommended it to me. I often return to the journey my inner world took during this book.... ‘transformative’ is accurate. Stephen Cope walks his talk and is a very good role model.

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Cody
35 reviews
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October 2, 2019
This was a fantastic read! Personally, I would have preferred more of the “technical stuff” and less stories, but that’s just me. There’s a ton of information here and I really enjoyed each chapter. If you are AT ALL interested in the philosophy of yoga, I think you’ll enjoy this book too.
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Angela Morgan
8 reviews

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February 3, 2020
More of a guided psychological book of how to live your life based on yogic and buddhist principals, its a really good book to live your life by, I found lots of ways to incorporate actions into my daily life, and new ways of looking at old situations.

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Alyson
63 reviews
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April 29, 2020
This was the perfect book to read at this moment in time... I savored every page, especially the last chapter. I forced myself to read it slowly and went right back to the beginning when I read the last page. This is a book that I will keep close and return to again and again.


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chiara Rancan
228 reviews
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February 7, 2021
Cercavo una guida che mi permettesse di studiare, di apprendere, di comprendere con facilità gli insegnamenti degli Yogasutra, e l’ho trovata.
Da leggere, sottolineare, e ri leggere tra qualche tempo per metabolizzare e guardare dentro se.

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Kanan Choquette
22 reviews
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January 4, 2023
An amazing dive into the teachings of patanjali and yoga through the perspective of the narrarator’s learnings by interacting with a small group of friends. This more social-approach makes it feel much more relatable and breaks up the density. I highly recommend this book on yoga.

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Pradnya
152 reviews

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June 12, 2017
Interesting case studies and how the experiences of individuals evolve in response to their introspective and meditation practices.
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Jordan Yee
34 reviews
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July 17, 2017
Required reading for yoga teacher training

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Stephanie Spence
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September 28, 2017
One of my favorites that I refer to often.
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From other countries
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Such a beautiful book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 9 June 2023
Verified Purchase
Read it in two sittings. Loved how the author intertwines wisdom with real life stories, making it such a compelling read with so many amazing lessons in it. Highly recommend!
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Ray
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 6 January 2023
Verified Purchase
Truly amazing and enlightening book that will leave you wanting more. The end is really good but is the beginning of wanting to find concentration of a different nature. I have read two of his books and will re-read them both,wow and wow.
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Steven Barber
4.0 out of 5 stars Experience over theory
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 3 September 2022
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This book is a sly exposition of the key parts of yoga philosophy in a deliberately non-scholarly way. The emphasis is on direct experience, the acts of seeking, and the Importance of community. Cope comes at the Sutras from a different angle than most and in that fresh approach is clarity
2 people found this helpful
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars I am so thankful that I found this book!
Reviewed in Germany 🇩🇪 on 11 June 2022
Verified Purchase
I enjoyed every page and got inspired so much! I can recommend it to everyone who is interested in yoga and want to get more knowledge packed in a great story!
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Dr. V
5.0 out of 5 stars Warm, personal, lived version of the Yoga Sutras
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 18 July 2013
Verified Purchase
This book is Stephen Cope's commentary and explanation of Patanjali's yoga sutras. However, it is not a dry commentary, even though it is scholarly. Cope brings together Yoga (as lived by himself and a group of seeker friends) with scholarly but accessible explanations of phenomena addressed by the Yoga Sutras. The explanations are drawn from both Eastern and Western psychology. He often illustrates concepts with quotes from Western literature, most frequently Thoreau. Each chapter begins with a person's story and struggle - which is then explained in terms of both the Yoga Sutras and Western concepts about the self. The book helps the reader join virtually the admirable group of friends Cope was a part of during a period of about two years, when they each (and all) sought freedom from their own kind of suffering. It provides a warm and personal, lived version of the Yoga Sutras, and thus makes them much more accessible to the average (but not only) reader. The book is not a complete treatise on the Yoga Sutras. And I am not sure it is necessarily a guide, since it is really explanatory, not prescriptive. But it is beautifully, wisely, and warmly written, and it will get the reader closer to the essence of Yoga - which has very little to do with physical postures.

I love Cope's combination of rigorous scholarship, spirituality, self-disclosure, warmth, and humor. His voice comes through clearly in this book and is very personable. For me, this is one of the books I hope to come back to again and again.
5 people found this helpful
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KitKat1972
4.0 out of 5 stars Textbook for a course I'm to take...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 31 December 2007
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I've participated in yoga courses for quite a few years now on and off, --some excellent and some not so great, depending on the instructors. I have an excellent teacher now and she is about to offer a new course in meditation and yoga. This is the text for it. I am excited to be learning more about what yoga is all about on spiritual/philosophical/meditative levels. This book is easy to read and offers insights about yoga for the average Westerner and how it can both simplify and enrich your life and help you understand more about yourself and others, how you can become more mindful in your daily life. Life in the 21st century is crazy, fast-paced, and full of pressures, stresses, and negativity (war, global warming, worries about the economy). Yoga is one of various paths to greater understanding, serenity, clarity, and wisdom. Earlier this year I took a course called Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction which included some yoga as well as meditation, and other exercises for reducing stress. This course resulted in my wanting to learn more about what is behind yoga and meditation, their history, to understand more about their modern-day and past expert practitioners. I guess the only thing that bothers me at all about the book is all of the unfamiliar terms that are introduced that I can't get fixed in my mind, but perhaps taking the course will help with that, or perhaps that doesn't matter so much. The book is easy to read and understand and is very informative and insightful.
11 people found this helpful
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Sara Smithie
5.0 out of 5 stars Mind Blowing approach on the depth of yoga
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 20 July 2021
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Stephen Cope has become a writer I will follow for several reasons. This book has changed my life regarding yoga and its power to change us. His writing is comprehensive and inspiring - and actually, down right mind-blowing in what he brings to the reader. I will read more if his work. Thank You Stephen Cope.
2 people found this helpful
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Erick DuPree
3.0 out of 5 stars not bad... for a beginner, but not philosophy either
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 25 April 2014
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This is the 1st book i've read about yoga and its deeper purpose. As an atheist, I am intrinsically weary of self-help and spiritual books but I am also deeply in love with yoga so I thought I'd give this book a go since I've heard great things about it. There was a lot of amazing insight in it for me, and I really like how he talks about the fact that scientists have studied what happens in our brains when we meditate and practice yogic physical and mental movements. That part of it speaks to me. Though I've done yoga on and off for probably 15 years, it never really did much for me until I needed it and in the last 2 years it really changed the way I think and live. Cope talks a lot about some of the initial changes that occur when you start practicing yoga and I can relate. I didn't connect with the latter half of the book because the whole idea of living in a yoga retreat for months on end just screams of a certain type of privilege that again, I am just intrinsically weary of. How does that apply to real peoples' lives when the insights in the book from its characters come from months (and sometimes years) of living in a cabin out in the woods? Who can really do that? Maybe some day in the future I will relate with those sections of the book as well but now, not so much
7 people found this helpful
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Jamie O'Connell
5.0 out of 5 stars Great 1st yoga book
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 17 June 2019
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I started hot yoga six months ago for back pain and it has changed my life. Now, I want to have a deep understanding of it and started to study at home in addition to spending a session almost every day at my local studios.

After googling for "best yoga books", "great yoga books", and "yoga books"...this one kept on appearing at the top of many lists, so I decided to purchase it. The book is great, reads like a novel and is highly recommended for those who are looking to increase their knowledge of yoga off the mat.
4 people found this helpful
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Rachael Enright
5.0 out of 5 stars Story of discovery
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 12 January 2020
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This book was very refreshing I am usually so drawn to facts and non-fiction. Whereas this book is a story of friends on the path of self discovery. The disclosure of each person's patterns and blocks gives you a great perspective of the range of people and issues which can attract you to yoga.

The book itself is a sweet discription of what mindfulness is and the various stages in which you fall deeper into practice and peace.

I felt like this book was really reaffirming. Nice read.
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Cliente Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully written, wonderful journey into the most important principles of a 'yoga' kind of life
Reviewed in Spain 🇪🇸 on 18 September 2017
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This is probably one of the most beautiful books I've ever read, one that wish it wouldn't end. One that I will come back again and again to remind me who I am and how to get back to my center every time I feel astray.
Stephen Cope writes humbly, beautifully and so satisfying for both a fiction lover as well as for a scientific minded reader. It takes the basic principles of yoga, opens them to the understaing of us all and shows them applicability in different stories of his characters.
It's a book for beginners, for those who don't know what yoga is and for advanced practicioners at the same time.
It has really changed both my perspective on meditation, it changed my yoga practice and my way of seeing things in general
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R Sharpe
5.0 out of 5 stars Tonic for the soul
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 11 June 2019
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I’ve just read three of Stephen Cope’s books in succession and loved them all: The Great Work of Your Life, The Wisdom of Yoga and Deep Human Connection. They each offer a valuable distillation of more complex works enabling the lay reader, like me, to absorb truths that I otherwise may not have accessed. Stephen has a beautiful writing style and peppers his own thoughts and other quotes with stories that make his writing come alive. Each of the books I have is beginning to look rather battered as I have a tendency to keep referring back to them.
3 people found this helpful
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Amanda
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book for Yoga Teachers
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 2 January 2015
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I ordered this book before I did my yoga teacher training, since it was on the recommended reading list.

It's a fascinating book that reads almost like a novel. I started reading it, then actually started over when I was just a few pages in so I could get a highlighter and mark the passages that really sang to me.

The best part of this book, for me, was learning about metta meditation. Doing that meditation was the first time I was really able to let myself sink into a meditation, and it taught me an appreciation for and interest in further study of meditation.

You might not find this book interesting if you're not into yoga. I would definitely recommend it, certainly for any yoga teacher or aspiring yoga teacher.
14 people found this helpful
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Caitlin
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Book Ever
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 17 April 2014
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I saw someone reading this book and asked them about it, they told me that it was life changing. Now I hear that about a lot of things this day and age, but, being the book feign I am, I just had to go and buy it. I'm here to tell you anyone who want to know if they should by this or not, BUY IT! The book has nothing to do with poses and such, its more about the deeper knowledge and how the lessons of yoga can effect and change your life. Mixed in with the message of the book, they do however give you ideas on what to do and how to do them. Amazing and outstanding. I would buy this book for all my friends if I could
One person found this helpful
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K. Jolly
1.0 out of 5 stars No thanks
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 9 June 2023
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Recommended reading for a teacher training program. Would never have purchased otherwise. Nothing of substance to be found within these pages.
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M. Gordon
5.0 out of 5 stars now I get it- thanks Stephen
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 20 December 2006
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There is little need for another rave review about this book as I agree with the other positive reviews. I just would like to add this: I became a Cope fan reading his articles in Yoga Journal and his first book. Most of my yoga instructors learned at Kripalu. Amrit Desai, who started Kripalu, requires 2 years of daily yoga practice before you can take his teacher's training course. Now I understand why, as I have been practicing hatha yoga daily for that long now. A daily practice, from a few days a week for decades, has opened me up in ways that I would never have imagined. Reading and absorbing this fantastic, understandable interpretation of the Sutra I have now been given the gift of validation for how I manage to live an "extraordinary life" and can manage my "human" moments. Read this book and then...practice, practice, practice.
14 people found this helpful
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Barbara A. Parcells
5.0 out of 5 stars A real treasure.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 20 June 2017
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This is my second time around reading this book. With a little age and wisdom behind me, it takes me much deeper and answers the questions I couldn't have answered before without experiencing life a bit more. The author does get a bit technical from a psychology point of view, but it is in the stories of the individual people and their struggles to find an authentic, peace filled way to live that we learn and grow from it. I don't doubt that at some point I will revisit these stories again in the future.
4 people found this helpful
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Erik C. Pihl
5.0 out of 5 stars Some answers to a few of life's persistant questions
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 7 January 2007
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In his book, "The Wisdom of Yoga," Stephen Cope has created a small masterpiece. He has not tried to answer questions about man's place in the universe or or the existence of an external world. He has, however, by means of telling vignettes from the lives of people he knows well and insightful comments about what must be one of the most gnomic series of insights into the practice of Yoga, given the average reader a sence of what it is to become involved in the practice of Yoga and some of its life-changing potential. In addition to this, he has included illustrations from other belief systems, specifically Buddhist thought and Christianity that provide a wider context for his practice. The Yoga practioner, as well as the average person who would like to learn a little about Yoga, could both benefit from the wonderful book.
40 people found this helpful
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Francie Nolan
3.0 out of 5 stars I Found Myself Skimming Too Much
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 31 March 2018
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I just started doing yoga and Googled the top ten books on yoga. This was named number one on one of the lists, so it had a lot to live up to.

I found myself skimming way too early. The stories he weaves in about his friends were a distraction. I didn't feel it contributed to this book at all.

When I skim, I read the first sentence of each or every other paragraph until one holds me. Sometimes I found very interesting and riveting information. Sometimes not.

I didn't finish the book. Stopped about half way. I think the writer is a great guy. I loved his energy, but the book needed a better editor IMO.
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Debra Newman
5.0 out of 5 stars a wonderful book that brings yoga wisdom home
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 21 August 2006
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I love this book from the first page to the last! The introduction, prologue and appendices are quite helpful in providing vital information to the reader. Cope takes some everyday people and their life's challenges and brings to light some answers to the struggles of the human condition. The book reads like a novel, in a way, but is very scholarly and cites the words and philosophies of many pundits in the field of religion such as Mircea Eliade, Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, Thomas Merton and Georg Feuerstein, to name but a few. I didn't want the book to end and the final chapter made me cry with joy of the knowledge of contentment, despite challenges, in our lives. Thank you Stephen Cope!
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돌봄의 시간들: 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시선 : 네이버 카페

돌봄의 시간들: 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시선 : 네이버 카페

돌봄의 시간들: 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시선

1:1 채팅

누구나 돌봐야 하는 사람-동물-사물이 있거나, 머지않은 장래에 나에게도 돌봄의 필요하다고 예감하며 살아가는 돌봄의 시대이다.

코로나19와 포스트-코로사 시대가 불현듯, 그러나 필연적으로 다가왔듯이 '돌봄의 시대'도 필연적으로, 그러나 어느날 갑자기 찾아왔다.

그러나, 많은 개선에도 불구하고 '가사노동'이 '노동'으로 제대로 인정받지 못하고 있는 것처럼,

돌봄은 '방과후 돌봄'을 제외하고는 아직도 그 내용에 값하는 인정을 받지 못하고 있다.

그나마 '돌봄'이라는 이름이 이름을 갖고, 돌봄의 목소리를 내기 시작했다는 것이 희망의 씨앗이다.

오늘날, 돌봄의 시대 돌봄의 다양한 얼굴-‘돌봄들’을 커밍아웃하듯 가시화하며,

돌봄의 편중이나 불평등을 해소하고, 생명력을 활성화하는 다양한 접근법을 모색하는 일은 시급한 과제다.

전통적으로 돌봄은 고역일 뿐만 아니라, '보람'이기도 하였다.

오늘의 돌봄은 오로지 고역으로 전락하여 바닥에 도달하고 있다.

사회 여건과 변화에 돌봄에 대한 인식이나 돌봄의 철학, 돌봄의 제도가 뒤따르지 못하기 때문에 생긴 비극이다.

'간병살인' 같은 것은 빙산의 일각이고, 무엇보다, '자기돌봄'의 부재, 부족, 부실로 말미암은 '공황장애'의 빈발이 뚜렷한 증거다.

이 책, [돌봄의 시간들: 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시]은 이 문제 해결의 실마리를 '정동'에서 찾아 보기로 한다.

정동의 관점으로 돌봄을 이해함으로써, 누구나 돌봄의 주체가 되고 또 동시에 돌봄의 대상이 될 수 있는 가능성을 열어 놓는다.

우선 돌봄의 책임은 여전히 가족의 굴레를 벗어나지 못하고 있다. 둘째, 그와 관련하여 돌봄 수행의 여성 젠더 편향성은 지금도 지속되고 있다. 셋째, 돌봄의 외주화는 자연스러워졌다. 각종 도움 서비스는 이미 커다란 시장, 산업의 영역 속에 놓이게 되어 버렸다. 이때 돌봄은 저렴한 노동력 상품으로 통용되며 그 행위 자체가 폄하되는 악순환 속에 놓이게 되었다. 그런 까닭에 돌봄을 수행하는 일은 여전히 기피되거나 폄하되는 일을 벗어나지 못한다. 넷째, 지금까지와는 조금 다른 이야기지만 돌봄이 그것을 수행하는 측의 입장 위주로 사유되다 보니, 돌봄의 또 다른 주체인 돌봄 받는 측은 시야에서 사라지고, 돌봄이 관계적이며 정동적인 활동이라는 점도 망각된다. (본문, 187쪽)

위와 같은, 개화하지 못한(미개한) 사고들 -

돌봄은 여성들의 일이라는 식의 편향적, 편파적인 시각을 걷어내고,

번아웃이나 감정 파산, 공황장애를 야기하는 독박 돌봄을 방지하며,

국가나 사회적 돌봄이 미치지 못하는 돌봄 소외지대 해소를 기획한다.

(한국의 어떤 차원은 여전히 '개화기'를 관통하는 중이다)

인간은 절대돌봄(유년기)-자기돌봄(청년기)-서로돌봄(커플기)-배치돌봄(장년기)-절대돌봄(노년기)으로

전 생애 전 과정에 걸쳐 사랑과 돌봄과 연대 속에서 살아가는 존재다.

최근에 비로소 그렇게 된 것이 아니라, 인간의 속성이 그러하다.

그것이 인간과 동물의 가장 결정적인 차이이다.

그러므로, 돌봄에 관하여 생각하고, 의론하는 것은 오늘 기후 위기, 지구 위기 시대가

곧 인간 위기, 생명 위기로 비화하고 있는 이 시대에

인간의 자리를 다시 묻고, 인간의 삶의 이유, 행복의 근거를 모색하는 일이다.

돌봄의 현장성, 구체성, 다양성을 도외시하지 않으면서도 거기에 매몰되지 않고

미학화, 사회화하고 지속가능성과 확장가능성을 열어낸다.

이를 통해서, 다양한 돌봄 상황에 능동적으로 대처하는 ‘돌봄력’이 충만한 사회-세계를 기약하고 전망한다.

* 이 책이, 저자 중 한 사람의 '유작'이 되었다. 책이 독자의 손에 가 닿기도 전에 그는 불귀의 객이 되었다. 그가 꿈꾸던, 깊이-넓이-높이의 마음 충만한 세상이 올 때까지, 그가 많은 사람들의 마음속에서 살아 있을 거라는 걸, 장례식장에서 다시 확인할 수 있었다. 그의 '살아 있음'을 위한 발길에 나도 한 걸음을 더 보태기로, 다시 마음 먹는다.


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돌봄의 시간들 - 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시선 권범철,김미정,신승철,이무열,이준용,전형민,조기현,조명아 (지은이),생태적지혜연구소협동조합 (기획)모시는사람들2023-07-20 320쪽

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누구나 돌봐야 하는 사람-동물-사물이 있거나, 머지않은 장래에 나에게도 돌봄이 필요하다고 예감하며 살아가는 돌봄의 시대에, 돌봄의 다양한 얼굴-‘돌봄들’을 가시화하며, 편중이나 불평등을 해소하고, 생명력을 활성화하는 다양한 접근법을 담고 있다. 정동의 관점으로 돌봄을 이해함으로써, 누구나 돌봄의 주체가 되고 또 동시에 돌봄의 대상이 될 수 있는 가능성을 열어 놓는다. 돌봄에 대한 편향적, 편파적인 시각을 걷어내고, 번아웃이나 감정 파산을 야기하는 독박 돌봄을 방지하며, 국가나 사회적 돌봄이 미치지 못하는 돌봄 소외지대 해소를 기획한다. 절대돌봄(유년기)-자기돌봄(청년기)-서로돌봄(커플기)-배치돌봄(장년기)-절대돌봄(노년기)의 생애 전 과정에 걸쳐 사랑과 돌봄과 연대가 어우러질 수 있는 방안, 나아가 인류문명이 야기한 기후위기나 생명위기까지를 돌볼 근거와 방법을 모색한다. 돌봄의 현장성, 구체성, 다양성을 도외시하지 않으면서도 거기에 매몰되지 않고 미학화, 사회화하고 지속가능성과 확장가능성을 열어낸다. 이를 통해서, 다양한 돌봄 상황에 능동적으로 대처하는 ‘돌봄력’이 충만한 사회-세계를 기약하고 전망한다. 목차 서문 1부┃ 사건, 제도, 관계에서의 돌봄 사건으로서의 돌봄─포기의 가치를 계산하기 ●이준용 포기의 스펙트럼과 돌봄의 스케일 생존주의적 포기자 A 달관한 포기자 B 출가한 포기자 C 연구하는 포기자 D의 결론 제도로서의 돌봄─노동과 돌봄 사이에 던지는 질문들 ●조기현 노동사회에서 초로기 치매 당사자의 경험 돌봄노동과 정동적 평등 일할 수 없는 몸과 일할 수 있는 몸 노동할 권리와 권리를 생산하는 노동 참여소득과 일자리보장제 질병권과 아픈 몸 노동권 돌봄-노동에서 노동-돌봄으로 관계로서의 돌봄─자기돌봄과 서로돌봄의 관계 ●신승철 돌봄모듈과 탈성장 전환사회 관계의 시공간 축으로 본 돌봄 관계의 배치로 본 돌봄 관계의 체계로 본 돌봄 정동적 평등을 위하여 2부┃ 세대, 젠더, 가치에서의 돌봄 세대로서의 돌봄─영 케어러의 돌봄과 통계적 접근 ●조명아 통계로 본 한국의 돌봄 상황 청년에서 돌봄자로 한국사회의 청년: 청년담론부터 청년돌봄까지 영 케어러의 돌봄 영 케어러, 청년이 주체가 되어야 한다 젠더로서의 돌봄─젠더 불평등과 교차성 돌봄에서의 쟁점들 ●조명아 누가 돌봄을 수행하는가 돌봄의 여성화: 왜 돌봄은 여성이 하게 되었을까 돌봄의 교차성 돌봄 문제의 새로운 국면을 향하여 가치로서의 돌봄─자본주의 가치 법칙으로부터 돌봄 해방시키기 ●김미정 오늘날 ‘돌봄’의 자리 우리의 내밀한 감각 속 돌봄×노동 돌봄이 노동이 되기까지 3부┃ 지역과 가정, 커먼즈에서의 돌봄 지역과 돌봄─지역과 돌봄 생활 ●이무열 근대 산업사회 돌봄과 지역 돌봄 생활의 차이 호혜적 돌봄의 장(場)이 되는 지역 위기 상황에 다시 주목받는 돌봄 돌봄에 대한 몇 가지 오해와 회복 방향 돌봄의 특징과 지역에서 돌봄이 작동하는 힘 지역 안에서의 관계 돌봄과 포괄적 돌봄 커먼즈와 돌봄─생태 위기와 돌봄의 조건 ●권범철 일을 강제하는 사회 돌봄을 전유하는 사회 돌봄의 재구성 재난 행동주의를 위해 가정과 돌봄─아버지를 돌보는 청년의 기록 ●전형민 예고된 가족돌봄청년, 한부모가족 아픈 가족을 돌본다는 것 돌봄과 노동의 커리어 돌봄과 노동의 위기1 돌봄과 노동의 위기2 돌봄과 애도 연습 위험과 절망 곁에서 서로를 책임지는 돌봄 접기 책속에서 P. 222~223 [가정] 돌봄에 대한 첫 번째 오해는 돌봄이 여성적인 일이며 나약한 사람들에게 제공되는 것이라는 관습적인 인식과 태도이다. 오래된 가부장제 관습에서 돌봄은 가정에서 아이를 돌보고 식사를 준비하는 등의 집안일이 되어 여성의 성역할로 강요되었다. 여성의 역할이 된 돌봄은 사회활동에서 중요하지 않은 부차적인 일이면서 공동체도 정부도 관여하지 말아야 할 사적이고 개인적인 영역으로 치부된다. 여성의 사회활동이 활발한 지금까지도 아이를 키우고 식사를 준비하는 등 전통적으로 여성이 도맡아 온 생명살림 가치는 제대로 인정받지 못하고 있다. 그러한 가운데 여성들은 중요한 살림을 외면할 수도 혼자서 감당할 수도 없는, 이중으로 구속된 상황에서 벗어나지 못하고 있다. 여성의 일이자 사적인 활동으로 잘못 이해되고 있는 돌봄을 이제는 성역할에서 벗어날 수 있도록 해야 한다. 그것이 돌봄의 사회적인 가치를 회복하고 상호역할로 작동되는 제대로 된 돌봄의 시작이다. 접기 P. 234~237 [생태] 오늘날의 생태 위기는 주체성의 위기다. 무엇보다 그 위기를 다룰 수 있는 주체가 부재하다는 점에서 그렇다. 국가가 큰 역할을 할 수 있겠지만 현실은 그와 거리가 멀다. 2021년 11월 막을 내린 제26차 유엔기후변화협약 당사국 총회(COP26)에서 우리가 확인한 건 각국 정부가 여전히 생태 위기를 외면하거나 무기력한 상태에 빠져 있다는 것뿐이다. (중략) 각 개인 모두가 기후 변화에 책임이 있으며 우리가 각자의 본분을 다해야 한다고 말하는 대신에 아무도 책임이 없으며 그것이 바로 문제라고 말하는 편이 더 나을 것이다. 생태 재앙의 원인은 어떤 비인격적인 구조다. 그 구조는 온갖 방식의 효과를 만들어 낼 수 있지만 정확히 말해 책임을 질 수 있는 주체는 아니다. 우리에게 필요한 주체, 즉 집합적인 주체는 존재하지 않는다. 접기 P. 259 [생태] 노동 시간 단축은 그 자체로 생태 위기에 대응하는 하나의 방법이다. 우리가 생산에 시간을 덜 쓸수록 탄소 감축에 기여할 수 있는 것은 당연한 일이다. 영국 환경단체 <플랫폼 런던>은 2021년에 발표한 보고서에서 영국이 주 4일 근무제로 전환하면 2025년까지 연간 1억 2700만 톤의 온실가스 배출을 줄일 수 있다고 주장했다. 이는 영국 전체 온실가스 배출의 21.3%에 해당하고, 스위스의 한해 온실가스 배출량과 맞먹는 양이다. 이렇듯 기후 비상사태 상황에서 노동 시간 단축은 필수적이다. 접기 P. 187 [젠더] 우선 돌봄의 책임은 여전히 가족의 굴레를 벗어나지 못하고 있다. 둘째, 그와 관련하여 돌봄 수행의 여성 젠더 편향성은 지금도 지속되고 있다. 셋째, 돌봄의 외주화는 자연스러워졌다. 각종 도움 서비스는 이미 커다란 시장, 산업의 영역 속에 놓이게 되어 버렸다. 이때 돌봄은 저렴한 노동력 상품으로 통용되며 그 행위 자체가 폄하되는 악순환 속에 놓이게 되었다. 그런 까닭에 돌봄을 수행하는 일은 여전히 기피되거나 폄하되는 일을 벗어나지 못한다. 넷째, 지금까지와는 조금 다른 이야기지만 돌봄이 그것을 수행하는 측의 입장 위주로 사유되다 보니, 돌봄의 또 다른 주체인 돌봄 받는 측은 시야에서 사라지고, 돌봄이 관계적이며 정동적인 활동이라는 점도 망각된다. 접기 P. 161~162 [제도] 지난 20여 년 동안 노인돌봄에 대한 인식과 가족 내 주돌봄자의 역할이 상당히 변화한 것을 알 수 있다. 흥미로운 점은 돌봄의 스펙트럼이 상당히 넓혀졌다는 점이다. 전통사회의 노인돌봄만 하더라도 여성, 주로 그 집안의 장남이나 아들의 배우자인 며느리가 맡아서 수행했으나, 친자녀 돌봄 규범이 확산되었다. 또 노인들이 돌봄을 가족에게만 의존하기보다 다양한 사회 서비스와 제도를 이용하고 있으며, 비혈연 관계자에게서도 돌봄을 지원받는 것으로 나타났다. 이는 새로운 돌봄 형태의 등장, 돌봄 유형의 다양화를 의미한다. 접기 더보기 저자 및 역자소개 권범철 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 생태적지혜연구소 부소장, 문화/과학 편집위원. 서울시립대학교에서 「도시 공통계의 생산과 전유」라는 제목의 논문으로 박사학위를 받았으며, 메트로폴리스의 공간과 예술에 대한 연구와 관련 활동을 하고 있다. 『Art of Squat. 점거 매뉴얼북』(오아시스프로젝트, 2007)을 함께 편집했으며, 『텔레코뮤니스트 선언』(갈무리, 2014)과 『빚의 마법』(갈무리, 2015), 『로지스틱스』(갈무리, 2017)를 옮겼다. 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들>,<문화과학 112호 - 2022.겨울>,<문화과학 111호 - 2022.가을> … 총 13종 (모두보기) 김미정 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 《뉴 래디컬 리뷰》편집위원. 문학평론가. 평론집으로《움직이는 별자리들》, 공저로《문학을 부수는 문학들》《문학은 위험하다》 《민주주의, 증언, 인문학》, 《무한텍스트로서의 5.18》, 옮긴 책으로 《정동의 힘》외 다수가 있다. 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들>,<뉴래디컬리뷰 2022.겨울>,<뉴래디컬리뷰 2022.여름> … 총 20종 (모두보기) 신승철 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 문래동 예술촌에서 아내와 함께 <철학공방 별난>을 운영하면서 공동체 운동과 사회적 경제, 생태철학 등을 공부해 왔다. 2010년 프랑스 철학자 펠릭스 가타리에 대한 연구로 박사학위를 받고, 『세 가지 생태학』과의 만남을 계기로 줄곧 생태철학을 연구하는 중이다. 2019년부터 〈생태적지혜연구소협동조합〉(ecosophialab.com) 이사장으로 활동하면서 조합원들과 함께 기후위기 시대의 대안으로서 탈성장 전환사회를 향한 실험과 도전을 하고 있다. 동아 대 전임연구원, 녹색당 정책자문위원, 한살림 모심과살림연구소 연구기획위원, ... 더보기 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들>,<탈성장을 상상하라>,<낭만하는 공동체 넘어서기> … 총 60종 (모두보기) 이무열 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 2013년부터는 기획가, 디자이너, 카피라이터, 예술가들이 함께 만든 ‘마케팅커뮤니케이셥협동조합 이사장을 맡고 있고 전환스튜디오 와월당·臥月堂 대표로 일하고 있다. 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들>,<개벽의 징후 2020> … 총 2종 (모두보기) 이준용 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 서울대학교 인류학과 석사 수료 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들> 전형민 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 돌봄청년 커뮤니티 n인분 및 자립하는 소농학교 활동가 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들> 조기현 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 작가, 돌봄청년 커뮤니티 n인분 대표 스무 살 때 아버지가 쓰러지면서 ‘새파란 돌봄’이 됐다. 가난과 돌봄이 언제까지 이어질지 모른다는 막막함이 찾아들 때마다 회피하듯 책을 읽고 영화를 봤다. 어느새 뭔가를 읽거나 보고 누군가를 돌보는 시간이 삶의 동력이 됐다. 아버지를 돌보며 겪은 일을 책 《아빠의 아빠가 됐다》에 담았고, 치매가 시작된 아버지의 노동과 생애를 영화 〈1포 10kg 100개의 생애〉로 기록했다. 돌봄 경험으로 연결된 시민들하고 함께 ‘돌봄의 새 파란’을 일으키려 궁리하면서 《새파란 돌봄》을 썼다. 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들>,<몫>,<새파란 돌봄> … 총 5종 (모두보기) 조명아 (지은이) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 충남대학교 사회학과 박사 수료 최근작 : <돌봄의 시간들> 생태적지혜연구소협동조합 (기획) 저자파일 신간알리미 신청 2019년 여름 <철학공방 별난>을 기반으로 한 세미나 구성원들이 기후위기의 대응양식인 생태적지혜 미디어를 만들 수 있는 결사체를 형성했다. 이후 실수와 실패를 거듭하면서도 일관되게 기후행동의 입장에서 고민하고 마음을 나누며 기후위기에 대한 대응양식으로 생태적지혜 미디어 매체를 기획하고 실험했다. 더불어 씨앗조직의 확산에 따라 결사체의 꼴을 갖추어 나갔다. 그로부터 4년이 지난 현재 연구소는 기후위기에 대응하는 탈성장의 아젠다에 대한 전반적인 구성원들의 결의를 만들어냈다. 연구소는 수입과 지출의 회계에 있어서 군더더기나 잉여... 더보기 출판사 제공 책소개 돌봄 속에서 자라나서, 돌보며 살다가, 돌봄 속에 죽는다 누구나 돌봄의 주체이며, 누구나 돌봄의 대상 돌봄의 시대다. 어느 날 눈떠 보니, 우리는 그동안 숱하게 다양한 돌봄 속에서, 돌봄을 주고받으며 살고 있었다. 돌봄이 필요한 처지든 돌봄을 감당하는 경우든 우리 모두는 돌봄 문제에 직면해 있다. 하다못해, 누구나 자기돌봄을 필요로 하는 시대다. 최근 돌봄은 탈성장 전환사회의 마중물로 간주되거나, 거대한 기후위기에 대한 적응과 대응의 방법이거나, 정동을 순환시켜 커뮤니티를 지속가능하게 만드는 활동으로도 간주된다. 전통적으로 돌봄은 여성의 일로 간주되어 왔다. 가정 내에서든 노동시장에서든 여성들이 주로 돌봄을 수행해 왔기 때문이다. 많은 개선에도 불구하고 여전히 돌봄의 헤게모니(hegemony of care), 즉 이상적인 돌봄자는 대개 중년의, 육아 경험이 있는, 여성으로 고착화된 측면이 있다. 그러나 이러한 관념은 유효하지 않고 자의든 타의든 많은 부분 이미 파괴되어 있다. 그럼에도 불구하고 이를 대체할 돌봄의 철학, 사상, 양식, 제도가 자리 잡지 못한 데서 많은 현대사회의 비극이 발생한다. 자기돌봄에서 생명돌봄까지, ‘돌봄들’의 시대 사회학적으로 돌봄이 부각되는 시대 흐름은 돌봄이 사회화 되는 측면과 핵가족화 등으로 ‘개인’ 영역이 확장되면서, 개인에게 돌려지는 부담이 증가하는 측면의 양 측면이 공존한다. 돌봄과 관련하여 말하자면, 이제 본격적으로 개막된 포스트코로나 시대, 코로나19 팬데믹을 경유하면서 우리가 깨달은 진실은 우리가 서로 연결된 존재라는 점이다. 그런 점에서 코로나19 팬데믹을 경유하여 우리가 도달한 포스트코로나 시대의, 가정/사회/지구는 ‘돌봄의 세계’이다. 돌봄 속에 태어나, 돌봄 속에 돌아가는 것이 인생이다. 이 인생의 기본요건을 충족하는 삶이 행복한 삶이다. 우리 세계는 생산과 성장 위주의 시대에서 돌봄 하기, 돌봄 받기의 시대로 이행하는 중이다. 거기에 값하는 윤리, 도덕, 철학, 사상, 상식과 제도를 마련하는 것이 급선무인 까닭이다. 이처럼 우리 삶의 한가운데에는 다층적이면서도 필수불가결한 요소로서 돌봄이 순환하고 있다. 양적으로나 질적으로 돌봄 부자도 있고, 돌봄의 소외에 직면한 돌봄 약자나 시민도 있다. 그런가 하면 돌봄으로 말미암아 번아웃에 빠져 허우적대는 사람도 있다. 이런 다양성에도 불구하고, 보편적으로 인간은 태어나서 죽을 때까지 돌봄을 주고받지 않을 수 없다. 인간의 생애주기에 따라 절대돌봄(유년기) - 자기돌봄(청년기) - 서로돌봄(커플기) - 배치돌봄(장년기) - 절대돌봄(노년기)으로 흐르는 돌봄의 이야기 구조는 우리 삶의 또 다른 궤적을 그려낸다. 독박 돌봄을 방지하고, 돌봄 소외를 소거한다 ‘돌봄의 시대’에 돌봄은 사회 일각에서, 특정한 상황에 놓인 사람에 국한된 일이 아니다. 누구나 돌보거나 돌봄 받는 처지에 놓여 있는 일상적이며 보편적인 흐름이 되었다. 더 이상 시혜적이거나 예외적인 행위가 아니게 된 것이다. 정동(affect)이라는 활력과 생명력의 입장에서는 돌봄은 능동/수동이 아니라, 둘 다 강렬한 상호작용 속에 있게 된다. 돌봄의 생명력이 살아나는 것이다. 정동으로서의 돌봄을 발견하고 발휘하고 발전함으로써 우리는 돌봄을 받는 상황에서도 돌봄의 대상으로만 방치되지 않고 다시 타자를 사랑하고 돌보는 주체자로서, 타자와 연대할 수 있다. 돌봄에 종사하는 상황에서도 독박 돌봄에 갇히지 않고 사랑하고 돌보고 연대할 수 있다. 모두가 연쇄적인 돌봄의 관계망 속에 존재할 때 돌봄 관계를 일방향적인 관계로 규정하지 않게 된다. 이렇게 함으로써 돌봄의 정의와 평등, 돌봄의 지속 가능성, 돌봄의 돌봄까지를 내다볼 수 있게 되는 것이다. ‘돌봄력’ 강화로 돌봄 지속가능성 사회로 간다 우리는 돌봄 없이 살 수 없다. 따라서 돌봄 없이 사회가 지속될 수 없다. 자기 스스로를 돌보고 서로 돌보는 관계를 회복시키지 못하는 위장 돌봄(Care Washing) 같은 복지 정책과 시장에서의 돌봄 상품을 내려놓고 생각해보자. 그러면 누구도 서로 돌봄 없이는 식의주(食衣住)와 같이 나를 살아가게 하는 생활을 혼자서 해결할 수 없다는 것을, 또 공기, 물, 나무 등 자연의 돌봄 없이도 살아갈 수 없다는 것을 경험으로 알고 있다. 이 책은 돌봄에 대한 안이한 생각과 오해를 바로잡고 돌봄의 새로운 기준을 만들어 가야 하는 시대, 누구나 돌보아야 하고, 돌봄을 필요로 하는 시대를 여는 인문학적인 지혜를 담고 있다. 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시선 『돌봄의 인문학: 돌봄에 관한 9가지 정동적 시선』은 총 3부 9장으로 구성된다. 1부-1장은 사건으로서의 돌봄으로 ‘나’와 ‘나’ 사이에 일어나는 자기돌봄을 살펴본다. 1부-2장은 제도로서의 돌봄으로 한국사회의 제도가 돌봄을 어떻게 규정하고 제한을 두는지 살펴본다. 1부-3장은 관계로서의 돌봄으로 개인이 다양한 관계 내에서 주고받는 돌봄을 살펴본다. 2부-1장은 세대로서의 돌봄으로 최근 자주 언급되는 영 케어러에 대해 논의한다. 2부-2장은 젠더로서의 돌봄으로 돌봄의 젠더 불평등뿐만 아니라 교차성의 관점에서 젠더, 연령, 혼인 여부, 계층 등 확장된 돌봄자 스펙트럼을 소개한다. 2부-3장은 가치로서의 돌봄으로 사회구조의 기반에 있는 자본주의 시스템에 갇혀 있는 돌봄의 불평등, 부정의(不正義)의 문제점을 적시하고 시사점을 제시한다. 3부-1장은 지역과 돌봄으로 말 그대로 인간에게 필수불가결한 돌봄이 지역에서 돌봄 공동체로서 재구성되어야 한다고 주장한다. 3부-2장 공유지(Commons)와 돌봄에서는 생태 위기를 시작으로 오늘날 한국사회에 ‘우리’라는 존재 문제를 어떻게 만들어야 하고, 이를 저지하는 게 무엇이 있을지 고민한다. 3부-3장은 가정과 돌봄으로 필자가 영 케어러로서 20대부터 30대인 현재까지 아버지 돌봄을 수행해 온 경험을 자전적이고 회고적으로 풀어낸다. 접기