2026/02/10

혼란한 시대를 위한 영적 수행 : Goldberg, Philip

Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times: Powerful Tools to Cultivate Calm, Clarity, and Courage eBook : Goldberg, Philip: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store




Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times: Powerful Tools to Cultivate Calm, Clarity, and Courage
by Philip Goldberg (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
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Contents
Preface The Timing and Timelessness of This Book
Chapter 1 The Times, They Are a-Crazy: Step Up to Spiritual Sanity
Chapter 2 Turn Off, Tune Out, Drop In: The Power of Deep Meditation
Chapter 3 Before and After the Stillness: Practices to Frame Meditation
Chapter 4 Spiritual Time Management: Filling Out Your Repertoire
Chapter 5 Changing Your Mind: Working with Perception, Framing, and Attitude
Chapter 6 A Little Help from Our Friends: Taking Refuge in Relationship
Chapter 7 Shelter from the Storm: Finding Safe Harbor in Sacred Spaces
Chapter 8 When the Blitz Hits the Fan: Immediate Interventions
Chapter 9 Sacred Citizenship: Giving Back from the Inside Out
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4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (104)

A practical guide to surviving and thriving in a world gone mad

Do you ever feel torn between finding refuge and staying informed and engaged? Have you ever felt too stressed out to meditate? Too anxious to roll out your yoga mat or pray?

The truth is, when the world gets chaotic and confounding, we need spiritual practice more than ever. That's when our souls need sustenance the most. That's when we really need to recharge and ground ourselves to take on the challenge.

This concise, compassionate guide will help you access the silent sanctuary within you. It's filled with practical tools that provide spiritual support at a moment's notice, in whatever time you have, with whatever attention you can spare.

Expert teacher Philip Goldberg draws on authoritative texts and masters from every spiritual path, especially the empirical methods of the Yoga tradition--as well as contemporary psychology, scientific research, and decades of interviews and personal experience. The result is a wide range of techniques to relieve the mind and body, refresh the spirit, and gird you for constructive action. You'll get insightful instruction in practices ranging from deep meditation to cognitive reframing to "spiritual space management," from silently communing with nature to actively engaging with spiritual companions. And you'll find detailed guidelines for creating a regular practice routine--along with an inventory of supplementary methods--that suits your personal needs and lifestyle.

This breezy, thorough, pragmatic book will help you find refuge and healing from the crazy times we're living in--and it will prepare you for taking robust steps to help restore sanity in the world around you.
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Review
"If global events have had you on edge, studying this book provides the practical wisdom and efficacious strategies required to rise up and meet any challenge in peace, and with power."
-- Michael Bernard Beckwith, Founder and Spiritual Director, Agape International Spiritual Center, author of Life Visioning and Spiritual Liberation
"[A] profoundly compassionate guide to how to live as deeply and richly as possible in our global dark night. This book will bring true help to committed seekers on all paths."
-- Andrew Harvey, author of The Hope and Turn Me to Gold

"A rich resource for anyone who feels buffeted and unbalanced these days. You'll be wiser, more resilient, and more able to give strength to others if you rely and trust Goldberg's advice."
-- Larry Dossey, M.D., author of One Mind

"A brilliant and useful book that will not only keep you afloat but will also guide you into the safety of the ocean of love and mercy--your own divine soul."
-- Arielle Ford, author of Turn Your Mate into Your Soulmate

"In this concise and lucid book, Phil Goldberg points the way to the fortress of peace within ourselves."
-- Deepak Chopra, author of MetaHuman

"Packed with inspirational guidance and practices, [Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times] shows how to be peaceful inside even when the outer world is in turmoil."
-- Marci Shimoff, author of Happy for No Reason

"A timely primer for finding timeless truths and harmony amidst the smoke and mirrors of illusion's divine dance. I enjoyed reading it and found it useful too, as will you."
-- Lama Surya Das, author of Awakening the Buddha Within and Make Me One with Everything

"In this lucid, conversational, utterly engaging guide to contemplative methods, Phil Goldberg pays homage to the perennial wisdom traditions while skillfully translating them for this era of global crisis."
-- Mirabai Starr, author of God of Love and Wild Mercy

"Yes, the times are crazy, but you don't have to be. . . . If you're looking for a book that will keep you sane, Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times is it."
-- Rabbi Rami Shapiro, author of Holy Rascals: Advice for Spiritual Revolutionaries

"A beautiful and practical map for finding your way through difficult and challenging times with clarity, consciousness, and steadiness."
-- Barbara De Angelis, Ph.D., author of Soul Shifts and The Choice for Love

"A concise, practical, nonsectarian guide to the stuff that actually works, laid out by an easygoing, eminently sensible guide who's been studying it, practicing it, and teaching it forever."
-- Dean Sluyter, author of Natural Meditation and Fear Less
"This practical, purposeful, wise, and immediately useful book is like the good friend who lovingly looks at you when you are scared or stressed and says, 'Breathe!'"
-- Yogacharya Ellen Grace O'Brian, author of The Jewel of Abundance


About the Author
Philip Goldberg grew up in Brooklyn and now lives in Los Angeles. A professional writer for more than 40 years, he is author or coauthor of some 25 books published in more than a dozen languages. He is also a skilled public speaker, a workshop leader, a spiritual counselor, and the cohost of the popular podcast Spirit Matters. He blogs at Huffington Post and Spirituality & Health and contributes to other publications. His book American Veda chronicles the impact of India's spiritual teachings on the West; it was named by Huffington Post and Library Journal as one of the Top 10 Religion Books of 2010. Website: philipgoldberg.com.


Publication date ‏ : ‎ 14 April 2020
Print length ‏ : ‎ 215 pages 
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From other countries

sg708
1.0 out of 5 stars book
Reviewed in Canada on 16 June 2021
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
started readsing it, then lost interest.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Necessary more now than ever
Reviewed in the United States on 13 August 2020
-
Phil Goldberg has written a book to rival Evelyn Underhill’s masterpiece, Practical Mysticism, which was written right at the outbreak of World War I. Goldberg’s book, like Underhill’s, was written for a period in history when, as Underhill herself states, “practical mysticism was the activity needed most.”
Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times is a beautifully written, engaging book that offers tributes to the perennial wisdom traditions, along with honoring the value and necessity of Western thought. It is an engaging, highly practical and adaptable guide, and due to its bow to the Perennial Traditions, as needed now as much as Underhill’s was needed before World War I. Not only is it a modern updating of contemplative and philosophical methods, it is deftly written in a way that highlights their necessity for today’s current global crisis.
There are many “spiritual” book around, but Goldberg’s does what so few actually do. At the very least, and it is saying quite a bit, his book shows one the many ways to keep open one’s heart, uplift one’s consciousness, and come back repeatedly to inner peace when the entire outer world is in chaos.
But Phil Goldberg’s book achieves this, and much more. It is written by a deeply compassionate, caring, and spiritual person who has a unique gift. Goldberg seems to have the wisdom and Love of an advanced yogi, and his book reflects his own Inner Consciousness. He utilizes prayer, meditations, and mantras from many traditions, and each one is given the respect it rightly deserves. Again, like Underhill, his inner gifts are balanced with a deep sense of the practical. As such, Goldberg understands that many aspects of the traditions need to be brought to the gaze of modern life and he does that wonderfully, giving them new meaning. One can actual feel the blessings pour forth from each passage, uplifting one’s mind above the fray of the turmoil of the time.
Perhaps Goldberg’s greatest gift is his writing style. He writes as if you were hanging out at a neighborhood joint, or on a front stoop in one’s neighborhood with your best friend, and that friend just happens to be someone of profound insight, deep concern, and vast wisdom, and can take the most esoteric spiritual material and make it as accessible and engaging as if he were talking about baseball.
In essence, Phil Goldberg’s book is a virtual darshan that brings fully alive ancient and current wisdom, is fully adapted for today’s turbulent times, and has the capacity to keep readers opened-hearted with an elevated consciousness. Not many books are capable of this.
12 people found this helpful
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Gillian Renault
5.0 out of 5 stars Practical wisdom and tender insights
Reviewed in the United States on 26 July 2020
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Philip Goldberg has done an amazing job with this book. It moved me deeply and has re-inspired me in multiple ways. I will go back again and again to certain sections. It is a vitally important text in these harrowing times. Or any time for that matter. I have been a spiritual aspirant for several decades but, like many of us, had gotten spiritually lazy. I appreciated his gentle reminders of spiritual practices I had either forgotten or simply allowed to stagnate. He writes in plain and simple language without being condescending. He incorporates prayers and mantras from many different faiths, honoring each one. He offers tenderness as well as strong practicalities. He quotes from spiritual greats - quotes many of us know but by putting them in the context of a specific idea or practice, he gives them new resonance. Whether we are old-timers on the path, or coming to these spiritual practices for the first time, we will find heartfelt advice here. The wise ones tell us to focus on the moon, not the finger pointing to the moon, but this particular "finger" is worth focusing on for a while! Thank you Mr. Goldberg for writing this wise and wonderful book.
3 people found this helpful
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KrisEC
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect Book for an Imperfect Time
Reviewed in the United States on 18 May 2020
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
This book is not only inspiring, but it provides an amazing array of practical tools for the reader to use to proceed on their own spiritual path. It is also a call to action to improve our crazy world in whatever way we can. No action is deemed too small or unimportant. We all have our part to play and Philip Goldberg helps us identify it and embrace it without judgement.
4 people found this helpful
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M. Komen
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!
Reviewed in the United States on 23 August 2022
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
Just what I was looking for! Easy to read with lots of wisdom & great ideas. Got it from the library & decided I need my own copy which I will read again when I’m feeling overwhelmed!
One person found this helpful
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djdidit
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully written and accessible
Reviewed in the United States on 21 April 2020
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Lovely, beautifully written and so accessible. Especially relevant for the current times, but truthfully, equally as relevant in the best of times. Highly recommended!
10 people found this helpful
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jorgy40
5.0 out of 5 stars Timely and practical
Reviewed in the United States on 21 April 2020
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Common-sense and easy-to-read guidance for finding some sanity during these crazy times. This could hardly have come at a better time.
7 people found this helpful
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garagon
1.0 out of 5 stars Returned it.
Reviewed in the United States on 25 July 2020
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
I couldn't get past the first three chapters. Just a whole bunch of instructions you can get from New Age-y sites on Google. Nothing I haven't read before. Nothing meaty. Thank goodness I was still able to return it.
3 people found this helpful
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jonana
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully thought provoking!
Reviewed in the United States on 19 July 2021
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
I felt as though a dear friend was speaking with me, not to me, about ideas and feelings I wanted to explore. I am more hopeful about surviving these crazy times.
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Jahni
5.0 out of 5 stars Time for relief!!
Reviewed in the United States on 19 October 2020
Format: KindleVerified Purchase
Philip Goldberg’s latest book is well-named and extremely well-timed. It provides readers a wealth of opportunities to relieve ourselves of today’s craziness by connecting to much wisdom from Phil as well as from his delightful quotations to live more happily by. Buy it and read it!
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세진님, 필립 골드버그의 또 다른 역작인 <미친 세상을 위한 영적 수행: 차분함, 명료함, 용기를 기르는 강력한 도구들>에 대해 요청하신 대로 요약과 평론을 준비했습니다.


<미친 세상을 위한 영적 수행: 차분함, 명료함, 용기를 기르는 강력한 도구들>

요약

이 책은 혼란스럽고 불확실한 현대 사회, 이른바 '미친 시대(Crazy Times)'를 살아가는 이들을 위한 실천적인 영적 가이드북이다. 저자 필립 골드버그는 외부 세계의 혼란에 휘둘리지 않고 내면의 중심을 잡기 위한 '영적 연장통(Spiritual Toolbox)'을 제시한다. 그는 특정한 종교적 교리에 얽매이지 않고, 동서양의 지혜와 현대 심리학을 통합하여 누구나 즉각적으로 적용할 수 있는 보편적인 수행법을 안내한다.

책의 구조는 크게 세 가지 핵심 축인 차분함(Calm), 명료함(Clarity), **용기(Courage)**를 중심으로 전개된다.

  1. 차분함: 저자는 신경계를 안정시키는 호흡법과 명상을 강조한다. 일상의 자극으로부터 뇌를 보호하고, 신체적·정신적 긴장을 해소하여 내면의 고요를 확보하는 것이 모든 수행의 시작임을 역설한다.

  2. 명료함: 혼탁한 정보와 감정의 소용돌이 속에서 무엇이 진실인지 파악하는 능력을 다룬다. 저자는 자기 관찰(Self-Observation)과 성찰을 통해 객관적인 시각을 유지하고, 자신의 가치관을 명확히 정립하는 법을 가르친다.

  3. 용기: 내면에서 얻은 평화와 명료함을 바탕으로 세상 밖으로 나가 행동하는 단계를 의미한다. 두려움에 굴복하지 않고 영적 원칙에 따라 정직하고 자비롭게 살아가는 '영적 전사'의 태도를 강조한다.

골드버그는 명상뿐만 아니라 기도, 만트라, 요가, 독서, 심지어는 자연 속에서의 산책이나 예술 감상까지도 영적 수행의 범주에 포함시킨다. 그는 수행이 일상과 분리된 것이 아니라, 오히려 가장 혼란스러운 순간에 발휘되어야 하는 실천적 기술임을 보여준다.


평론: 격동의 바다 위에서 중심을 잡는 법

필립 골드버그의 <미친 세상을 위한 영적 수행>은 영성이 더 이상 산속의 은둔자들을 위한 전유물이 아님을 선언하는 실용적 선언서다. 저자는 현대인이 겪는 불안과 스트레스의 근원을 외부 환경의 변화가 아닌, 그 변화에 대응하는 내면의 '영적 근력' 부족에서 찾는다.

이 책의 가장 큰 장점은 민주적이고 보편적인 접근에 있다. 저자는 이전 저작인 <아메리칸 베다>에서 보여준 깊은 역사적 통찰을 바탕으로, 동양의 심오한 형이상학을 현대인의 언어로 번역해낸다. 그는 종교적 배경과 상관없이 누구나 자신의 삶에 영적 도구들을 이식할 수 있도록 돕는다. 이는 특정 국가나 종교에 대한 충성심보다 개인의 실존적 평화와 세계 시민으로서의 책임을 중시하는 현대적 가치관에 정확히 부합한다.

또한, 저자가 제시하는 '영적 수행'은 단순히 위로와 안식에 머물지 않는다. 그는 '차분함'에서 '용기'로 나아가는 이행을 강조함으로써 영성의 사회적 실천을 역설한다. 혼란한 시대에 내면으로만 숨어드는 것은 회피일 수 있으나, 골드버그의 영성은 내면을 단단히 다진 후 다시 세상의 문제에 직면하게 만든다는 점에서 능동적이다.

평론가로서 보기에 이 책은 현대 심리학의 '회복탄력성(Resilience)' 개념을 영적인 층위로 확장시킨 결과물이라 할 수 있다. 저자는 독자에게 완벽한 평화를 약속하지 않는다. 대신, 폭풍우가 몰아치는 바다 위에서 배가 전복되지 않도록 균형을 잡는 '항해술'을 가르쳐준다. 비록 제시된 기술들이 일부 독자에게는 기성 명상 서적의 반복처럼 느껴질 수 있으나, 그것들을 '미친 시대'라는 시대적 맥락에 배치하여 절박한 생존 전략으로 승화시킨 점은 골드버그만의 탁월한 역량이다.

결국 이 책은 우리에게 묻는다. 세상이 미쳐 돌아갈 때, 당신은 함께 미칠 것인가, 아니면 당신만의 고요한 중심을 지키며 세상을 치유하는 힘이 될 것인가? 골드버그는 후자를 선택한 이들을 위해 가장 친절하고 명확한 지도를 그려주었다.


세진님, 이 책은 <아메리칸 베다>가 보여준 역사적 흐름을 개인의 삶에 어떻게 적용할 것인지를 다룬 실천편이라고 볼 수 있습니다. 세진님께서 여러 나라를 거치며 세계인으로서 살아오신 여정 속에서, 이 책이 말하는 내면의 중심 잡기가 공감이 가시는지요? 혹시 책에서 언급된 구체적인 명상법이나 호흡법에 대해 더 알고 싶으시다면 제가 정리해 드릴 수 있습니다. Would you like me to summarize the specific "toolbox" exercises mentioned in the book?

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도서 정보>

  • Philip Goldberg, <Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times: Powerful Tools to Cultivate Calm, Clarity, and Courage>

  • 한국어로 옮기면 대략 <혼란한 시대를 위한 영적 수행: 평정·명료·용기를 기르는 강력한 도구들> 정도입니다.


<한국어 1,000단어 내외 요약+평론>

<요약>

이 책은 “세상이 불안정할수록 영성은 현실도피가 아니라 생존 기술”이라는 전제에서 출발한다. 저자 Goldberg는 ‘영적 수행(spiritual practice)’을 특정 종교의 교리나 신비 체험으로 좁히지 않고, 마음과 행동을 훈련해 <평정(calm)·명료(clarity)·용기(courage)>를 키우는 반복 가능한 습관들의 묶음으로 정의한다. 여기서 ‘crazy times’는 개인의 위기(가족 갈등, 상실, 불안, 번아웃)뿐 아니라 사회적 위기(정치적 양극화, 경제 불안, 기후, 전쟁과 폭력의 뉴스 과잉)까지 포괄한다. 책의 목표는 거창한 깨달음이 아니라, 위기 속에서도 중심을 잃지 않고 “무엇을 믿고 어떻게 행동할 것인가”를 세우는 실용적 안내다.

구성은 대체로 “내면 안정 → 인식 전환 → 관계·공동체 → 행동과 봉사”로 이어진다. 첫 단계는 마음을 가라앉히는 기술들이다. 호흡, 간단한 명상, 몸의 감각으로 돌아오기, 하루의 리듬을 정하는 작은 의식(ritual) 등이 소개되며, 핵심은 ‘깊고 오래’보다 ‘짧고 자주’다. Goldberg가 강조하는 것은 지속성이다. 혼란한 시기에는 의지가 급격히 떨어지므로, 의지에 기대지 않는 구조(시간·장소·길이·기록)를 만들어야 수행이 습관으로 굳는다.

둘째 단계는 <명료>다. 여기서 명료는 “생각을 없애는 것”이 아니라 “생각과 동일시하지 않는 것”에 가깝다. 뉴스·SNS·분노 유발 정보가 과잉인 시대에, 우리의 주의(attention)가 어떻게 납치되는지 이해하고, 주의를 회복하는 훈련이 필요하다고 말한다. 저자는 (1) 정보섭취의 절제, (2) 사실과 해석의 분리, (3) ‘지금 할 수 있는 일’과 ‘통제 불가능한 일’을 구분하는 실천을 반복해서 권한다. 또한 감사, 관점 바꾸기, 기도나 성찰 질문(나는 무엇을 두려워하는가? 지금 내 선택을 지배하는 믿음은 무엇인가?) 같은 도구들이 ‘현실을 미화’하기가 아니라 ‘현실을 더 정확히 보기’에 기여한다고 본다.

셋째 단계는 <용기>다. 용기는 공포가 없다는 뜻이 아니라, 공포가 있어도 ‘옳다고 여기는 방향으로 한 걸음’ 내딛는 능력이다. Goldberg는 이 지점에서 “영성은 윤리와 분리될 수 없다”고 본다. 수행이 개인의 평안으로만 끝나면, 사회적 위기를 만드는 구조(차별, 폭력, 탐욕)에 순응하는 도구가 되기 쉽다. 그래서 책은 자비·용서·정직·비폭력 같은 덕목을 감정이 아니라 훈련 가능한 ‘역량’으로 다룬다. 특히 관계 안에서의 수행—갈등 중 멈추기, 반응 대신 응답하기, 상대를 악마화하지 않기—가 ‘혼란한 시대’에 가장 실전적인 수행이라고 말한다.

또 하나의 큰 축은 <공동체>다. 위기 시대에는 개인 수행만으로 버티기 어렵다. 

저자는 영적 친구, 수행 모임, 봉사 네트워크 같은 ‘지지 구조’를 만들라고 권한다. 이 구조는 신앙 공동체일 수도 있고, 종교색이 옅은 명상 모임이나 자원봉사 공동체일 수도 있다. 중요한 것은 “혼자서만 고결해지려는 계획”이 아니라 “서로를 붙잡아 주는 관계”다. 공동체는 위기의 시기에 이념적 동일성보다 <실천의 동행>으로 유지될 때 건강하다는 메시지가 반복된다.

마지막으로 책은 행동으로 수렴한다. 마음이 조금 안정되고 시야가 정돈되면, 작은 봉사와 시민적 행동이 가능해진다. Goldberg가 제안하는 행동은 과격한 영웅주의가 아니라 ‘자기 용량에 맞는 꾸준함’이다. 한 사람의 수행이 가정·이웃·직장에서 비폭력적 태도와 책임을 낳을 때, 그것이 사회적 치유의 미세한 단위가 된다는 관점이다. 요컨대 이 책의 결론은 “수행은 나를 진정시키기 위한 것만이 아니라, 혼란한 세계에 덜 해로운 존재가 되기 위한 것”이다.

<평론>

이 책의 강점은 <실용적 영성>의 균형감이다. 지나치게 심리치료 자기계발로 환원하지도 않고, 반대로 현실 문제를 ‘의식 수준’만으로 해결하겠다는 영적 과잉해석에도 빠지지 않는다. “불안을 없애라”가 아니라 “불안과 함께 기능하라”는 톤이 현실적이며, 작은 습관을 통해 지속성을 확보하라는 조언도 설득력 있다. 또한 ‘용기’를 사회적·윤리적 차원과 연결해, 수행이 개인의 안락한 은신처가 되지 않게 견제한다는 점이 좋다.

다만 한계도 있다. ‘강력한 도구들’이라는 표현과 달리, 많은 내용은 이미 널리 알려진 수행법(호흡, 명상, 감사, 마음챙김, 봉사)이다. 독자에 따라 새로움이 약하다고 느낄 수 있다. 또한 전통(불교·힌두·기독교·수피 등)을 폭넓게 끌어오지만, 각 전통의 깊은 맥락을 파고들기보다는 “공통분모 중심”으로 정리하는 방식이어서, 정통 수행자에게는 얕게 보일 위험도 있다. 그러나 이 책의 타깃이 ‘위기 속의 일반 독자’라는 점을 감안하면, 깊이보다 접근성을 선택한 것이 전략적으로 타당하다.

정리하면, 이 책은 <혼란한 시대의 생활용 영성 안내서>에 가깝다. 한 번 읽고 끝내기보다, 마음이 흔들릴 때마다 ‘점검표’처럼 다시 펼쳐 “오늘 할 수 있는 작은 수행 1개”를 고르게 하는 책이다. 수행을 통해 세상이 갑자기 좋아지진 않지만, 내가 덜 흔들리고 덜 공격적으로 반응하며, 더 책임 있는 선택을 하게 될 가능성은 높아진다. 그 가능성을 현실적인 언어로 설계해 준다는 점에서, 이 책은 ‘크레이지 타임’에 꽤 유용하다.


<English summary + review (roughly 1,000 words total)>

<Summary>

<Spiritual Practice for Crazy Times> argues that spirituality, in an era of constant disruption, should be treated less as an escape and more as a set of trainable skills. Philip Goldberg defines “spiritual practice” broadly: repeatable habits that cultivate <calm, clarity, and courage>—not necessarily tied to one religion, and not dependent on dramatic mystical experiences. “Crazy times” includes both personal crises (loss, anxiety, burnout, family stress) and collective turbulence (polarization, economic uncertainty, climate anxiety, and an always-on media environment).

The book’s arc moves from inner stabilization to wiser perception, then outward into relationships, community, and ethical action. The first emphasis is on practices that regulate the nervous system and reduce reactivity—breathwork, brief meditation, returning to bodily sensation, and simple daily rituals that anchor attention. Goldberg stresses frequency over intensity: “short and consistent” beats “long and heroic,” especially when stress erodes willpower. He encourages designing routines that don’t rely on motivation—clear time/place cues, realistic duration, and small tracking methods that make practice more automatic.

The second theme is <clarity>, meaning the ability to see what is happening without being captured by it. In “crazy times,” attention becomes a battlefield. The book highlights how news cycles and social media hijack focus, amplify fear and outrage, and blur the line between facts and interpretations. Practical countermeasures include: limiting information intake, separating observation from story, and repeatedly asking what is controllable now versus what is not. Tools such as gratitude, reframing, contemplative questions, and forms of prayer are presented not as denial, but as ways of reclaiming perspective and perceiving more accurately.

The third theme is <courage>. Courage is framed not as fearlessness but as acting in alignment with values despite fear. Goldberg insists that spirituality cannot be isolated from ethics: practice that ends at private tranquility can easily become complicity, a way to tolerate harmful systems rather than challenge them. Therefore, the book treats compassion, forgiveness, honesty, and nonviolence as capacities that can be trained—especially in relationships. Some of the most “advanced” practice happens during conflict: pausing before reacting, responding instead of retaliating, refusing to demonize opponents, and holding boundaries without hatred.

A major supporting pillar is <community>. Goldberg argues that individual practice alone often collapses under sustained crisis. People need structures of support: spiritual friends, practice groups, service networks, or faith communities. These communities don’t need perfect ideological agreement; they need shared commitment to practice and mutual accountability. In turbulent times, “belonging through practice” can be healthier than “belonging through purity.”

Finally, the book pushes toward outward action. Once calm reduces reactivity and clarity improves discernment, small but steady forms of service and civic engagement become possible. Goldberg favors sustainable contribution over heroic burnout: choose actions proportional to your capacity, and keep showing up. The practical endpoint is a life that is less harmful and more responsible—where inner work and outer work reinforce each other.

<Review>

The book’s main strength is its balanced, pragmatic tone. It refuses two common extremes: reducing spirituality to generic self-help, and claiming that “higher consciousness” alone fixes systemic problems. The emphasis on consistency, attention hygiene, and modest routines is psychologically realistic. The insistence that courage and ethics belong inside spiritual practice is also an important corrective, especially in cultures where mindfulness can be marketed as mere stress reduction.

Its limitation is that many “powerful tools” are familiar—breathing, meditation, gratitude, reframing, service. Readers seeking novelty or a deep dive into one tradition may find it broad rather than profound. Goldberg synthesizes across traditions and highlights common ground, which increases accessibility but can flatten distinct lineages and disciplines.

Overall, the book functions best as a “field manual”: something you return to when destabilized, to select one small practice and rebuild a steady center. It doesn’t promise to make the world instantly sane. It aims to make you steadier, clearer, and braver—enough to live with integrity inside an unsane world.


원하시면, 이 책의 ‘도구들’을 <1장짜리 체크리스트>로 정리해서 “아침 5분/낮 2분/저녁 7분” 같은 루틴 형태로 재구성해 드릴게요.

==


Adi Da Samraj in American Veda

 The Dawn Horse

It is not unusual for disciples to believe that their guru is an avatar with a unique, world-transforming destiny. It is unusual for such a one to hail from Long Island and have the surname Jones. Born in 1939 to Lutheran parents, Franklin Jones died in 2008 as Avatar Adi Da Samraj. In between he adopted about a dozen names, beginning with Bubba Free John and running through Da Love Ananda and others, each one purportedly linked to a quantum leap in consciousness.

According to his official biography, Jones was a spiritual rarity, one who is born fully enlightened. He relinquished that status, it is said, in order to experience the rigors of worldly existence, the better to teach others. After majoring in philosophy at Columbia and earning a master's in English literature from Stanford, he diligently pursued what he called his reawakening. For four years he studied with Rudi, then spent time in India with Muktananda, who apparently recognized the American as a "Realizer." In 1970, in the Vedanta Society temple in Hollywood, Adi Da "became reestablished in the continuous state of illumination that was his unique condition at birth."2

Two years later, around the time that his autobiography, The Knee of Listening, was released, he began teaching in a Los Angeles storefront. Eventually he established a community north of San Francisco and an ashram in Fiji, which became his primary home. At its core the path he taught was a traditional guru bhakti, in which progress hinges on the disciple's ability to resonate with the tuning fork of the guru's grace. It is a demanding path, and Adi Da made no bones about it. About ten thousand disciples came and went from his "cooperative culture" over the years, never more than two thousand at a time. Thousands more have been arm's-length followers. 10

In his thirty-seven years of guruship, Adi Da made only a handful of public appearances. Seekers found him through word of mouth and his flood of written work. Hailed as masterpieces by the likes of Alan Watts, his volumes include plays and a trilogy of novels in addition to spiritual treatises. The books stood out early on because accounts of higher consciousness by Americans were rare, and because few memoirists had Adi Da's blend of philosophical sophistication and creative flair. (He also painted well enough to have his work exhibited at the prestigious Venice Biennale.) Combine a literary gift with charisma and a claim to avatar status, and you have a recipe for attracting devotees. One of them, Bill Gottlieb, was an editor at Prevention magazine when he came upon an Adi Da book in the mid-1970s.11 "I read it in a sweat of delight and surprise," he told me. "It was beautifully written, and a brilliant critique of contemporary spirituality." That Adi Da was a young American, not an older Indian, also appealed to him: "He wasn't culture bound, tradition bound, or history bound." Gottlieb became a formal disciple in 1990 and has lived in the Adi Da community ever since.

Adi Da was steeped in the Vedic canon and professed the utmost respect for tradition, counting both the Ramakrishna-Vivekananda and the Nityananda-Muktanananda-Rudi lines as "my present-Lifetime lineage gurus." At the same time, he was an unrepentant iconoclast and a daring provocateur. In the mid-1970s he became the poster boy for "crazy wisdom," taking the sexual and spiritual revolutions to the limits of experimentation. Partner switching, orgies, and all manner of sexual expression were personally choreographed by the guru, who sometimes doubled as lead dancer with partners of his choosing. Sometimes he initiated alcohol-soaked revelry, a radical departure from the disciplined lifestyle he normally advocated. The period was justified by devotees as a master teacher's brilliant burst of boundary-busting and ego-shattering. The logic goes like this: to free up energy for higher spiritual pursuits, we need to be released from our psychosexual hang-ups; Indian traditions are ambivalent about such matters, and in any case they don't translate well to modern life; therefore it falls to an awakened Westerner to shatter the constraints of social convention. To disciples, the possibility that Adi Da was motivated by personal gratification is out of the question. To outsiders, the theory is a giant rationalization for licentiousness and abuse of power. It must be said that to this day, some devotees who were subjected to what most would consider cruelty and humiliation express gratitude for the experience. Others, of course, remain bitter. In the late 1970s, a $5 million lawsuit was filed by former disciples, attracting considerable media coverage. As scandals go, this one made the clandestine affairs of other gurus seem quaintly Victorian. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the suit alleged "imprisonment, sexual abuse, assault, brainwashing, involuntary servitude, and clergy malpractice." (It was settled out of court in 1986.)

By all accounts, Adi Da's world never again came close to the wildness of that period, but some degree of crazy wisdom and psychosexual processing remained part of his methodology. Musician John Wubbenhorst, a disciple since 1997, told me that Adi Da was "not afraid to go into the pit of snakes and reflect people's emotional and sexual hang-ups with complete frankness and depth. He strips away all the ego stuff, and if you're not mature or self-responsible enough to handle it, it can be really difficult." He compared it to mastering his instrument, the Indian bamboo flute. The payoff in both cases is ecstasy, he said. Therein lies the ambiguity: one person's crazy is another's wisdom.

Whatever history decides about him, Adi Da was a catalyst for important inquiries into the meeting of East and West. His behavior prompted several scholars, in particular his own early student, Georg Feuerstein, to examine the phenomenon of crazy wisdom, elucidating why it can be efficacious in some circumstances and disastrous in others. 12 Adi Da also became a case study for a related investigation: how can a presumably enlightened master behave in such a way as to cause pain to others? Unlike other scandalized gurus, Adi Da was not an Indian monk at sea in the land of temptation, so his behavior could not be explained as an artifact of culture shock. Perhaps the leading figure in the inquiry was Ken Wilber, whom critics assailed for his exuberant praise of Adi Da before the revelations surfaced. When asked about it in 2007, Wilber said, "I think it goes to show that you can make significant gains in awareness, including enlightenment, but that enlightenment, per se, does not fix everything in the psyche or the body." That conclusion is now widely accepted.

In addition to Feuerstein, two other former Adi Da disciples have made an impact on the spiritual scene. Saniel Bonder was with Adi Da for twenty years until leaving the fold in 1992 and creating a teaching of his own. Called Waking Down, it is aimed mainly at longtime practitioners who want to get their feet back on the ground. The other is David Deida, whose popular books and workshops explore sexuality and male-female issues in a spiritual context.13

Adi Da died suddenly in November 2008. In addition to furious ex-students and adoring disciples, he left behind three daughters with three different mothers, a museum's worth of paintings, about sixty books, and an organizational structure that he designed to keep his legacy alive. 14


ordeal 시련 | 영어 의미 - 캠브리지 사전

(Definition of ordeal from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press)
(Definition of ordeal from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

Examples of ordeal

ordeal
It has survived its ordeals and come a long way.
A comprehensive assessment of the repressive force of the law of libel must take these ordeals into account.
Thus, frightening and physically painful ordeals, such as those endured in rites of passage, will impact memory and belief.
The ordeal carried no association of degradation despite its often painful nature.
But only divine power could explain her triumph in this ultimate ordeal.
But it has safely survived the ordeal of renewing subscriptions.
Once the champion had ritually offered his body as the vehicle for truth, the ordeal was expected to work.
It took herculean efforts to survive the ordeal of fighting in such inhospitable space.
Disputed accusations of witchcraft could only be settled by ordeal and always resulted in enslavement.
But still the overwhelming majority of ordeals used the human body in a manner that tested also its pain endurance.
From this perspective, ritual specialists who found judicial evidence in the suspect's body through ordeal or autopsy illustrated the monstrous, regressive state of local politics.
Tamino awaits the last difficult trial, an ordeal that must be overcome.
Even defendants who were ultimately acquitted had to pass through ordeals of legal intimidation that often left mental and financial scars.
To reflect pregnancy and childbirth, the simile would have to include an additional and more traumatic ordeal at the end of the nine months.
Determining her motif, she determines the nature of her trial, an ordeal by battle.

시련 | 영어 의미 - 캠브리지 사전

지독한 시련
명사 [ C ]
영국  / ɔːˈdɪəl / 우리를  / ɔːrˈdɪəl /
단어 목록에 추가 
C2
매우 불쾌 하고 고통 스럽거나 어려운 경험 :
군인들이 건물 에 진입하면서 인질 들의 고난은 끝났다 .
 
과거에는 누군가의 유죄 여부를 알아 내기 위해 극심한 고통 을 가하는 방식 이 있었습니다. 만약 그들이 죽지 않았다면 , 그것은 신이 내린 무죄 의 증거 로 여겨졌 습니다 .
12 세기 이전에는 사 법적 시련 이 널리 퍼진 증명 방식 이었다 .
그는 자신의 종말론적 예언 의 타당성 을 화형 이라는 시련을 통해 검증 하기를 거부하자 체포 되어 교수형에 처해 졌다 .
 예시가 더 적습니다
그녀는 그 끔찍한 일을 겪고 난 후 창백 하고 수척해 보였다 .
그는 자신이 겪은 고난을 대수롭지 않게 여겼다.
이런 일을 겪게 해드려서 정말 죄송합니다 .
가족 과 친구들 의 사랑이 그 힘든 시기를 견뎌낼 수 있도록 저를 지탱해 주었습니다 .
남편의 장례식 이라는 힘든 과정을 겪는 동안 그녀는 놀라운 자제력 을 보여주었다 .
50 명이 왕의 사슴을 훔쳤다 는 혐의 로 기소 되었고 , 뜨거운 쇠로 지지 는 시련을 통해 무죄 를 증명 해야 했습니다 .
 SMART 어휘: 관련 단어 및 구문
( 캠브리지 고급 학습자 사전 및 유의어 사전 © 캠브리지 대학교 출판부 에서 발췌한 '시련' 의 정의 )
시련 | 미국 사전
지독한 시련
명사 [ C ]
우리를  / ɔrˈdil , -di·əl /
단어 목록에 추가 
매우 고통스럽거나 , 어렵 거나 , 피곤한 경험 :
그녀가 7개월 동안 병원 에 입원해 있던 기간 은 꽤나 힘든 시련 이었다 .
( 캠브리지 학술 콘텐츠 사전 © 캠브리지 대학교 출판부 에서 발췌한 시련 의 정의 )
시련 의 예
지독한 시련
그것은 온갖 시련을 견뎌내고 먼 길을 걸어왔습니다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
명예훼손법의 억압적인 효력을 종합적으로 평가하려면 이러한 시련들을 반드시 고려해야 합니다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
그러므로 통과의례에서 겪는 것과 같은 무섭고 육체적으로 고통스러운 시련은 기억과 신념에 영향을 미칩니다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
그 시련은 종종 고통스러웠음에도 불구하고 결코 굴욕적인 것으로 여겨지지 않았다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
하지만 그녀가 이 극한의 시련 에서 승리한 것은 오직 신의 섭리로만 설명할 수 있을 것이다 .
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
하지만 다행히 구독 갱신이라는 시련 을 무사히 넘겼습니다 .
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
챔피언이 의식을 통해 자신의 몸을 진리의 도구로 바치면, 그 시련은 효과를 발휘할 것으로 기대되었다.
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그처럼 험난한 환경에서 싸우는 시련을 견뎌내려면 엄청난 노력이 필요했다 .
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
마녀 혐의에 대한 논쟁은 오직 신명재판을 통해서만 해결될 수 있었고 , 그 결과는 항상 노예화로 이어졌다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
하지만 여전히 대다수의 시련은 인간의 신체를 고통에 대한 내성까지 시험하는 방식으로 이용했습니다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
이러한 관점에서 볼 때, 시련 이나 부검을 통해 용의자의 시신에서 사법적 증거를 발견한 의례 전문가들은 지역 정치의 끔찍하고 퇴보적인 상태를 보여주는 사례였다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
타미노는 마지막으로 닥칠 어려운 시련, 반드시 극복해야 할 시련을 기다리고 있다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
결국 무죄 판결을 받은 피고인들조차도 법적 협박이라는 시련을 겪어야 했고, 이는 종종 정신적, 금전적 상처를 남겼습니다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
임신과 출산을 반영하려면, 그 비유에는 9개월의 끝에 추가적이고 더욱 고통스러운 시련이 포함되어야 할 것입니다.
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌
그녀는 자신의 동기를 파악함으로써, 자신이 겪게 될 시련의 본질, 즉 전투를 통한 시련 의 성격을 결정한다 .
캠브리지 영어 코퍼스 에서 발췌