2022/06/07

McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality Purser, Ronald E.

Amazon.com: McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality eBook : Purser, Ronald E. : 도서




Audible 샘플

저자 팔로우

Ronald E. Purser
팔로우


McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality Kindle Edition
기준 Ronald E. Purser (Author) 형식: Kindle Edition


별 5개 중 4.4 176개의 평가

Kindle
US$8.99부터읽기: 무료앱
오디오북
US$0.00
Audible 무료 평가판으로 무료
Paperback
US$16.90

A lively and razor-sharp critique of mindfulness as it has been enthusiastically co-opted by corporations, public schools, and the US military.

Mindfulness is now all the rage. From celebrity endorsements to monks, neuroscientists and meditation coaches rubbing shoulders with CEOs at the World Economic Forum in Davos, it is clear that mindfulness has gone mainstream. Some have even called it a revolution.

But what if, instead of changing the world, mindfulness has become a banal form of capitalist spirituality that mindlessly avoids social and political transformation, reinforcing the neoliberal status quo?

In McMindfulness, Ronald Purser debunks the so-called "mindfulness revolution," exposing how corporations, schools, governments and the military have co-opted it as technique for social control and self-pacification. A lively and razor-sharp critique, Purser busts the myths its salesmen rely on, challenging the narrative that stress is self-imposed and mindfulness is the cure-all.

If we are to harness the truly revolutionary potential of mindfulness, we have to cast off its neoliberal shackles, liberating mindfulness for a collective awakening.
=====

301 페이지

편집자 리뷰

Review
In this insightful book, Ron Purser has evaluated the strengths and weakness of the mindfulness movement, while clearly showing the way to cultivate authentic mindfulness that liberates us from the true causes of individual and collective suffering.”
- B. Alan Wallace, President, Santa Barbara Institute for Consciousness Studies

“Far from being either a harmless form of New Age self-indulgence or meditation dressed up as a medicalized antidote to the ubiquitous stresses of modern life, Ron Purser sees the mindfulness movement as epitomizing a malignant trend of contemporary Western individualism, one that is blinding us to the social problems of inherent in neoliberalism and capitalism, providing an anodyne where what is needed is rigorous analysis and political action.”
- Barry Magid, author of What’s Wrong With Mindfulness

“McMindfulness makes an important critique of self-centered mindfulness and points us towards a new vision for real social change.”
- Christopher Titmuss, author of The Political Buddha

“Ron Purser cuts through the comforting New Age jargon used to promote mindfulness, enabling us to distinguish between the practice and its marketing.”
- Richard Payne, Institute of Buddhist Studies

"Timely and incisive... Purser reveals how mindfulness became a vast industry, promising to cure us of a growing range of psychological ailments, and simultaneously propping up the political and economic system that generates them.”
— William Davies, author of Nervous States and The Happiness Industry

“If you are wondering about whether mindfulness is really a panacea for all our problems, this is the book to read.” — David Loy, author of Money, Sex, War and Karma

"Provocatively illustrates how mindfulness has been hijacked by corporate interests, turned into an opiate of the masses, and how we can radically rethink the meaning of mindfulness in contemporary life.”
— Dr. Steven Stanley, School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University

"Spiky, witty, meticulously researched and thoroughly engaging, McMindfulness is the best assessment of ‘Mindfulness’ to date."
— Manu Bazzano, author of Zen and Therapy: Heretical Perspectives and editor of After Mindfulness: new Perspectives on Psychology and Meditation

"A much needed wake-up call to the dark side of mindfulness-based practices... a must-read.”
– Richard King, Professor of Buddhist and Asian Studies, University of Kent.

"Just the right book at just the right time... May it help turn the tide of western ‘spirituality’ toward a genuine model of personal and social health.”
— Glenn Wallis, author of A Critique of Western Buddhism and Director of Insight Seminars


--이 텍스트는 대체 kindle_edition 에디션을 참조합니다.


About the Author
Ronald Purser is a Professor of Management at San Francisco State University. His essays and cultural criticism have appeared in the Huffington Post, Salon, Alternet and Tricycle magazine. His viral article, "Beyond McMindfulness", opened the floodgates for the mindfulness backlash. His recent books include the Handbook of Mindfulness: Culture, Context and Social Engagement and the Handbook of Ethical Foundations of Mindfulness. Dr. Purser began his Buddhist training beginning in 1981 at the Tibetan Nyingma Institute in Berkeley, California and is an ordained Buddhist teacher in the Korean Zen Taego order. He is co-host of Mindful Cranks podcast and is a regular speaker and guests on radio shows and podcasts. He lives with his family and dog in San Francisco, CA. --이 텍스트는 대체 kindle_edition 에디션을 참조합니다.

====
출판사 ‏ : ‎ Repeater (9 7월 2019)
발행일 ‏ : ‎ 9 7월 2019


저자 정보
저자를 팔로우하여 새로운 출시에 대한 최신 정보와 개선된 권장 사항을 확인하세요.

팔로우

Ronald E. Purser



Ronald Purser is Professor of Management in the College of Business at San Francisco State University. Dr. Purser earned his Ph.D. in Organizational Behavior from the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University and his B.A. in Psychology from Sonoma State University. He is past Division Chair of the Organization Development and Change division of the Academy of Management.

His essays and cultural criticism have appeared in the Huffington Post, Salon, Alternet, Tikkun, and Tricycle magazine. His viral article, "Beyond McMindfulness", opened the floodgates for the mindfulness backlash. His new book, McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality, is being published this July by Repeater Books.

His other recent books include the Handbook of Mindfulness: Culture, Context and Social Engagement and the Handbook of Ethical Foundations of Mindfulness. Dr. Purser began his Buddhist training beginning in 1981 at the Tibetan Nyingma Institute in Berkeley, California and is an ordained Buddhist teacher in the Korean Zen Taego order. He is co-host of Mindful Cranks podcast and is a regular speaker and guests on radio shows and podcasts. He lives with his family and dog in San Francisco, CA.
고객 리뷰
별 5개 중 4.4
====


Tom Pepper

별 5개 중 3.0 Important critical response to the mindfulness hype.미국에서 2019년 7월 17일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
It is encouraging to see someone take a thoroughly critical stance toward a profitable ideological project. And no doubt difficult to do, in an age when almost all access to media is controlled by a few big corporations which are focused exactly on promoting such projects. This book is accessible enough, and engaging enough in its accounts of various mindful practices, that it is possible it may provoke some reaction, and so some critical thought about the newest mantra of neoliberalism. So, kudos to Purser and to Repeater Books for publishing it.

But, of course, I have some concerns.

To begin with, Purser makes it clear that he “do[es] not question the value of adapting mindfulness for therapeutic use, nor do[es he] deny that it can help people”(83). My position on this has always been that in fact this is what we do need to question. That is, that mindfulness does not actually help most people, and those people whom it does “help” it helps to become horrendous human beings.

To some degree, Purser would seem to agree with my last statement. The overwhelming force of his book is in its argument that mindfulness produces a passive subject trained to adapt to the world as it is and never question, and certainly not attempt to change, the social formation. The good subject of neoliberalism blames herself for her suffering, and seeks to avoid even considering the possible existence of any social or material causes of human suffering outside of her own attitude, her own disposition. Such people may, if they are affluent enough, actually be happy enough as they go about the business of reproducing capitalist social relations. But what they are doing is clearly, even on Purser’s account, nothing more than profiting by enabling the oppression of others. I can see how this is therapeutic, if we understand therapy as the adjusting of individuals to better serve the interests of global capitalism—that is, if we grasp that therapists are, as Purser says (quoting Fromm) “the priests of industrial society,” whose goal is “helping the person to become better adjusted to existing circumstance”(258). Given the overall force of the argument, and the approving citation of Fromm, it would seem to me to be a contradiction to still maintain that “the therapeutic functions of mindfulness-based interventions are clearly of value” and so “we don’t need to stop using them” (258).

To be clear, what Purser is advocating is that we “need to do much more”(258). That is, that we should do mindfulness practice, but then add on some critical thinking which will enable active participation in the transformation of society. My position is that this is not possible. That is, that the goal of undertaking mindfulness is exactly to render the subject incapable of the “much more” that Purser, rightly I think, urges us to engage in.

So why this apparent contradiction? Why the simultaneous acceptance of mindfulness as a necessary beginning in the midst of an overwhelming argument that beginning from there forecloses any hope of meaningful progress?

I’ve written a longer response to the book on my blog, Faithful Buddhist, at Wordpress. I cannot provide a link here, because of Amazon policy, but if you’re interested I try to account for the contradiction at the heart of this book there.

49명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다

유용침해 사례 신고

Ira Israel

별 5개 중 5.0 Brilliant!미국에서 2019년 8월 23일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
I loved "McMindfulness" because it speaks truth to power. There is something fundamentally corrupt about teachers with a few months or a few years of training peddling $5,000 workshops demonstrating one technique pilfered from Buddhism and secularized. To watch the same machine do to mindfulness what Yogaworks and CorePower did to yoga, what Dominos did to pizza, what Starbucks did to coffee, is horrifying. People are stressed out because of the excess competition of late capitalism. This is the problem we need to address. Not administering 10 minute salves that act as brief respites from the rat race.

38명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다

유용침해 사례 신고

Zen

별 5개 중 5.0 This isn’t a how-to book on mindfulness미국에서 2019년 7월 27일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
I don’t understand why some of the reviewers have given McMindfulness anything less than a 4-5 star review. This isn’t a how-to book on mindfulness – there are 50,000 of those already on Amazon. No, this book takes on the elite, mindfulness gurus – both teachers, consultants and even the scientists – that have been hawking and promoting mindfulness for companies such as Monsanto, Google, Goldman Sachs – even hailing it as a “transformative” practice for “optimizing warrior performance” in the US Military. This is a take-no-prisoners book. I found Purser’s critique of “privatized mindfulness” and its ideological role in transmitting a neoliberal ethos to be particularly refreshing. Purser is also no newcomer to mindfulness – as he has been a practicing Buddhist for quite some time. The book is a quick read; the chapters are not the typical heavy academic – theory jargon. In fact, Purser does a great job of explaining complex concepts to a lay audience.

36명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다

유용침해 사례 신고

Keith A. Williams

별 5개 중 4.0 An unsettling view of how mindfulness was commercialized미국에서 2019년 7월 10일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
This is a must-read, well-written and thoroughly researched account of how mindfulness has come to permeate our culture. Whether you apply mindfulness practices or simply hear the buzzword echoed around you, this book is essential reading! The only caveat that I would offer is that this book is not an appropriate ~introduction~ to mindfulness; for readers entirely unaware of it, I would not begin here.

As explained by the author in Chapter 1, the originator of the term "McMindfulness" was Buddhist teacher, psychoanalyst and author Miles Neale who offers this fast-food analogy: McMindfulness is "a feeding frenzy of spiritual practices that provide immediate nutrition but no long-term sustenance." In subsequent chapters, the author examines how mindfulness found its way into myriad institutions- commercial, academic, medical, political, and religious. Why did it become such a buzzword in so many different contexts? The book offers a well-researched narrative.

If you are a proponent of mindfulness and already find it useful, do not fear: this isn't so much a critique of mindfulness itself as an exposé of how it became a commoditized pseudo-spiritual cure-all. This is not an opinion piece; the author has a very strong and broad basis for his concerns, and he presents them quite factually. Frankly, I took minor offense in a few spots. However, on the whole, I feel better informed after reading it, and I will probably revisit certain sections many more times.

I highly recommend this book!


22명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다

유용침해 사례 신고

모든 리뷰 보기


다른 국가의 상위 리뷰
모든 리뷰를 한국어로 번역


Mal Smith
별 5개 중 5.0 Excellent critique of Mindfulness영국에서 2020년 1월 2일에 검토됨
검증된 구매

This is an excellent critique of the mindfulness bandwagon, but as the author is a Buddhist it does pull a few punches here and there. "The Unexpected Way" by Paul Williams is more severe critique of Buddhism by a (former) insider. "The Buddha Pill" is better on the "bad science" aspects. But McMindfulness is the definitive hatchet job on Kabat Zinn and MBSR.

7명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기


Terry Hyland
별 5개 중 5.0 Excellent radical critique of mindfulness commodification영국에서 2019년 8월 10일에 검토됨
검증된 구매

A much-needed radical critique of the mutation of Buddhist mindfulness through capitalist exploitation, particularly trenchant on corporate and military abuses

10명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기


Ingram
별 5개 중 5.0 Bold, necessary, and often very funny.영국에서 2020년 9월 4일에 검토됨
검증된 구매

Ron Purser does not like Mindfulness's hijacking of the dharma. He drills relentlessly into its fluffy repurposing of Buddhism. Who you gonna call?

1명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기


Dilly Doe
별 5개 중 2.0 Repetitive critique of capitalism that lacks mindfulness in prose and concision캐나다에서 2020년 5월 13일에 검토됨
검증된 구매

Very repetitive.

There are some good points brought up, especially the removal of ethical teachings which accompany typical buddhist teachings. However, the author broadly and repeatedly blames capitalism and neoliberalism for causing the stresses and anxieties that people seek out mindfulness and meditation to alleviate, without citing specific mechanisms. He also absurdly suggests some vague form of societal and political revolution is the answer that will resolve all these stresses and anxieties. If all the repeated, unproductive, and vague condemnations of capitalism were removed you’d get a book half the length.

The author also seems to lack imagination, or is unable to draw from history. Stress and anxiety have been part of everyday life throughout history and every society, weather in the form of drought, plague, famine, or war. Sure we can make society more equitable and fair, I'm all for it. But the vague utopian world, free from stress and anxiety that the author advocates revolution for, does not exist. How would a societal revolution fix all the stress and anxiety a pandemic like COVID-19 is causing?

It is also deeply ironic that the author readily implies that mindfulness is peddled as a way for tolerating a life in poverty and making people complacent with their oppressed lives in capitalistic societies. In reality, mindfulness is largely practiced by parts of society that have benefited the most from capitalism and neoliberalism, the well-off upper and middle classes, and not poor working classes. Poor people don't have the time or money to take part in mindfulness retreats and meditation classes.

At one point the book weakly attempts to discredit web of scientific knowledge on the biology of stress by citing a single cultural anthropologist. He also tries to discredit the field of stress science by associating a prevalent scientists in the field with big tobacco. Having ties with a notorious industry does not invalidate important scientific discoveries that were made before it.

This book is unproductive in its approach and criticism and does not provide meaningful solutions to what preachers of meditation and mindfulness attempt to do. Instead the author advocates for cultural revolution and the complete dismantling of the capitalist neoliberal system ad nauseam. A rush to revolution without a clear vision of what society should look like post-revolution is a recipe for chaos. The author also doesn't seem to have a clear vision of present day pre-revolutionary society either.
간단히 표시

5명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기


Theatermann
별 5개 중 1.0 Extrem redundant – so gut wie inhaltslos독일에서 2020년 9월 9일에 검토됨
검증된 구매

Im Grunde steht in dem Buch nichts, was nicht schon mit dem Untertitel gesagt ist. Das aber immer wieder. Purser erklärt, dass die Konzerne diese Meditationen verwenden, um gut leitbare, passive Subjekte zu erzeugen, die sich nur noch für sich interessieren, die fest daran glauben, dass die Ursache aller Probleme (ihrer selbst und der Welt) in ihnen liegt, und die glauben, dass sie sie mit Meditation bewältigen können. Dieser Gedanke, der sicherlich nicht falsch ist, wird bis zum Überdruss wiederholt. Was nicht aufgezeigt wird, ist der Mechanismus, wie das funktioniert. Von ernstzunehmenden Alternativen ganz zu schweigen. Stattdessen gibt es jede Menge schickes »Storytelling« und ziemlich wahllos zusammengesammelte Zitate aus allen möglichen Zeitschriften, Fernsehsendungen, Webseiten usw. die alle nichts weiter besagen, als was dieser unendlich wiederholte Gedanke auch schon sagt.

Diese starke Redundanz hat damit zu tun, dass das Buch eine Zusammenstellung von Artikeln ist, die schon an anderen Orten publiziert wurden. Das wird an keiner Stelle offengelegt, aber man erkennt es an zum Teil wörtlichen Übereinstimmungen ganzer Passagen und an Einleitungs- und Schlusspassagen der einzelnen Kapitel, die in einem separaten Artikel sinnvoll sind, aber nicht im Zusammenhang eines Buchs. Der Autor hat sich nicht einmal die Mühe gemacht, die verschiedenen Texte so zu redigieren, dass sie ein neues Ganzes ergeben. Dem Beispiel sollte man folgen und das Buch gar nicht erst lesen und es schon gar nicht kaufen. Es lohnt sich beim besten Willen nicht.
간단히 표시

3명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기
모든 리뷰 보기

Walking the Way by Robert Rosenbaum, Sojun Mel Weitsman - Ebook | Scribd

Walking the Way by Robert Rosenbaum, Sojun Mel Weitsman - Ebook | Scribd
Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching

Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching


By Robert Rosenbaum and Sojun Mel Weitsman

2/5 (1 rating)
405 pages
12 hours

Included in your membership!
at no additional cost

Description
Walking the Way affirms that, like yin and yang, the flowing spontaneity of Tao and the precise simplicity of Zen find perfect balance with one another. Robert Meikyo Rosenbaum brings the two traditions together in a unique presentation that elicits Zen insights from his fresh interpretation of verses from the Taoist classic, the Tao Te Ching. Personal anecdotes illustrate the dynamic potential of Rosenbaum's approach, skillfully revealing Zen within the Tao and the Tao of Zen. Not only does the author reveal the elegance of each tradition, he shows how their interrelatedness does, in fact, have import on our meditative practices and on our day-to-day lives. Parenting, meditating, dealing with setbacks and illnesses--Walking the Way shows us how to live well in the midst of many complex demands, finding harmony and equilibrium between honing in and letting go, balance between being ourselves and selflessly serving others.
Philosophy
Buddhism
Theology
All categories




===

Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching Kindle Edition
기준 Robert Rosenbaum (Author), Sojun Mel Weitsman (Foreword) 형식: Kindle Edition


별 5개 중 4.2 26개의 평가






모든 형식 및 에디션 보기


Kindle
US$13.99부터읽기: 무료앱
Paperback
US$14.98
US$3.50부터 28 사용됨US$12.85부터 6 신규









Walking the Way affirms that, like yin and yang, the flowing spontaneity of Tao and the precise simplicity of Zen find perfect balance with one another. Robert Meikyo Rosenbaum brings the two traditions together in a unique presentation that elicits Zen insights from his fresh interpretation of verses from the Taoist classic, the Tao Te Ching. Personal anecdotes illustrate the dynamic potential of Rosenbaum's approach, skillfully revealing Zen within the Tao and the Tao of Zen. Not only does the author reveal the elegance of each tradition, he shows how their interrelatedness does, in fact, have import on our meditative practices and on our day-to-day lives. Parenting, meditating, dealing with setbacks and illnesses--Walking the Way shows us how to live well in the midst of many complex demands, finding harmony and equilibrium between honing in and letting go, balance between being ourselves and selflessly serving others.
간단히 읽기



인쇄 길이

386 페이지
언어

English
출판사

Wisdom Publications


편집자 리뷰

About the Author
Sojun Mel Weitsman is a Zen teacher in the lineage of Shunryu Suzuki and a former abbot of the San Francisco Zen Center. He lives in San Francisco.
Review
"Deftly written essays, snapshot vignettes of daily life lived with emotion and depth, and a poetic version of the Tao Te Ching backed by a lifetime of spiritual practice--these are the elements of a text that will inspire and awaken you like the sound of water or the calm voice of a friend. This book is to be savored." (Norman Fischer, author of Taking Our Places: The Buddhist Path to Truly Growing Up)

"Robert Rosenbaum manages to restore some of the bite to the Tao Te Ching. His humor, wisdom, personal struggles, and genuine aspirations combine to make it new and make it speak to us with live words." (Barry Magid, author of Ordinary Mind)

"Walking the Way is deeply thoughtful and eminently practical." (Elana Rosenbaum, author of Here for Now)

"In a world already brim-full of translations of the Tao Te Ching, one would think that there isn't room for one more. Walking the Way, however, should immediately put such reservations at rest. To read these lovely and tender versions of this breathtaking text is in itself a process of questioning the 'givens' of one's life. Combined with the profound and provocative Zen-based commentary of Robert Rosenbaum, they fold seamlessly into a book that is indispensable to any true seeker's roadmap for the path." (Chris Faatz, Powell's Books)

"This charming book is an oasis of truth, compassion, laughter, and beauty. Welcome!" (Michael F. Hoyt, author of Brief Psychotherapies)

"A book full of wisdom--a gentle breeze, pointing you in new directions." (Arthur C. Bohart, author of How Clients Make Therapy Work)

"A warm, thoughtful companion for life's journey." (Peter Levitt, poet and author of Fingerpainting on the Moon)

"Fresh and poetic. A wonderful book that brings the Tao Te Ching up close. In sharing his open-hearted love of these verses, Rosenbaum gives them to us anew, as if Lao Tzu were speaking directly to us through him." (Susan Moon, author of This Is Getting Old: Zen Thoughts on Aging with Humor and Dignity)

"A pearl of wisdom, filled with deep insights to the most fundamental issues we all encounter in our lives. You will find the truth in every paragraph, in every page of this book." (Moshe Talmon, author of Single Session Therapy) --이 텍스트는 대체 kindle_edition 에디션을 참조합니다.

제품 세부 정보
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00B3M48VQ
출판사 ‏ : ‎ Wisdom Publications (22 4월 2013)
발행일 ‏ : ‎ 22 4월 2013
언어 ‏ : ‎ English
파일 크기 ‏ : ‎ 2171 KB
스크린 리더 ‏ : ‎ 지원
개선된 조판 ‏ : ‎ 지원
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ 지원
인쇄 길이 ‏ : ‎ 386 페이지
별 5개 중 4.2 26개의 평가





비디오
비디오를 업로드하여 다른 사람들이 이 제품에 대해 자세히 알아볼 수 있도록 도와주세요.비디오 업로드


저자 정보
저자를 팔로우하여 새로운 출시에 대한 최신 정보와 개선된 권장 사항을 확인하세요.

팔로우

Robert Rosenbaum



Robert Rosenbaum, Ph.D., began Zen practice in 1971. Between 1989 and 2010 he studied with his root teacher, Sojun Mel Weitsman. After receiving lay entrustment from Sojun, with his encouragement Bob established the Meadowmind sangha in the Sierra foothills and participated as a founding member of the Lay Zen Teachers’ Association. He has taught at numerous sanghas in the United States, Australia and Finland; in 2019 he received denkai in Ordinary Mind Zen from Karen Terzano.

Bob found a natural complement to Zen in the Taoist practice of Dayan (Wild Goose) Qigong as taught by Master Hui Liu in the lineage of Grandmaster Yang Meijun. In 1991 Master Liu authorized Bob as a teacher; at her request he brought Dayan Qigong to numerous venues in the USA and around the world. He continues to teach master classes and train teachers at the Wen Wu school in El Cerrito.

After receiving his Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology in 1980 he divided his time between clinical neuropsychology, brief psychotherapy and behavioral medicine. He was a Fulbright Professor at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in India. Working at Kaiser Permanente with his colleagues Moshe Talmon and Michael Hoyt he pioneered groundbreaking work on Single Session Psychotherapy; working with colleagues in Neurology and Medicine he innovated programs in mind-body medicine, including qigong and meditation programs for patients with chronic pain.

Bob’s books include Zen and the Heart of Psychotherapy; Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching; What's Wrong with Mindfulness - and what isn’t (co-edited with Barry Magid) and, most recently, That Is Not Your Mind! - Zen Reflections on the Surangama Sutra.

Bob currently lives and practices in Sacramento, California with his sweetheart/wife/dharma partner and fellow qigong teacher, Jeanne Courtney.


고객 리뷰
별 5개 중 4.2

Philosopher
별 5개 중 1.0 No zen insights캐나다에서 2017년 6월 13일에 검토됨
검증된 구매

This book claims to give zen insights into the Tao Te Ching, but I did not find them
침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기


===

Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching

by
Robert Rosenbaum,
Sojun Mel Weitsman (Foreword)
3.96 · Rating details · 46 ratings · 5 reviews
Walking the Way affirms that, like yin and yang, the flowing spontaneity of Tao and the precise simplicity of Zen find perfect balance with one another. Robert Meikyo Rosenbaum brings the two traditions together in a unique presentation that elicits Zen insights from his fresh interpretation of verses from the Taoist classic, the Tao Te Ching. Personal anecdotes illustrate the dynamic potential of Rosenbaum's approach, skillfully revealing Zen within the Tao and the Tao of Zen. Not only does the author reveal the elegance of each tradition, he shows how their interrelatedness does, in fact, have import on our meditative practices and on our day-to-day lives. Parenting, meditating, dealing with setbacks and illnesses--Walking the Way shows us how to live well in the midst of many complex demands, finding harmony and equilibrium between honing in and letting go, balance between being ourselves and selflessly serving others. (less)

GET A COPYKobo
Online Stores ▾
Book Links ▾

Paperback, 384 pages
Published May 21st 2013 by Wisdom Publications (first published January 1st 2013)
ISBN
1614290253 (ISBN13: 9781614290254)
Edition Language
Average rating3.96 ·
Rating details
· 46 ratings · 5 reviews

Write a review

Mar 05, 2016Claire rated it really liked it
This was what I was reading at the time as I fully transitioned from secular atheist to "well, okay, the zen mindfulness exercises really do calm me down and make me feel better... let's say Buddhist until further notice" Taoist or Confucianist. It's all the same in the end. We're all seriously just people here, and this actually helps me improve.

Te is what I found most interesting.

The literature is kind of out there.. But honestly, I have concrete proof that when I "ground" myself with a zen meditation or the like, concentration and everything else comes much easier! (less)
flagLike · comment · see review



Oct 21, 2016Matt rated it really liked it
At times it was quite insightful.
flagLike · comment · see review



Jan 06, 2017Ellen Keener rated it it was amazing
Found much wisdom presented in an accessible way.
flagLike · comment · see review



Apr 12, 2014Bryan rated it it was ok
Shelves: abandoned
Lightweight and utterly forgettable. Read ~40 pages leaving almost no impression whatsoever, so set aside.

===

What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't) by Robert Rosenbaum

What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't) by Wisdom Publications - Ebook | Scribd

Robert Rosenbaum
What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't): Zen Perspectives

What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't): Zen Perspectives


By Wisdom Publications
276 pages
9 hours

Included in your membership!
at no additional cost

Description
Mindfulness seems to be everywhere—but are we sure that's a good thing? Teachers Sallie Jiko Tisdale, Gil Fronsdal, Norman Fischer, and more explain how removing mindfulness from Buddhism may set a dangerous precedent.

Mindfulness is in fashion. Oprah loves it, Google teaches it to employees—it has become widespread as a cure-all for stress, health problems and psychological difficulties, interpersonal trouble, and existential anxiety.

However, when its proponents try to make it more accessible by severing it from its Buddhist roots, they run the risk of leeching mindfulness of its transformative power. Taught outside of its ethical and spiritual context it becomes a mere means to an end, rather than a way of life. Mindfulness is in danger of being co-opted into the spiritual equivalent of fast food: “McMindfulness.” Instead of being better people, we just become better employees, better consumers. The Zen teachers gathered here ask a bold question: Is universal mindfulness really a good thing?

Ranging from thoughtful critiques to personal accounts of integrating mindfulness into daily life, each chapter offers insights to ground mindfulness in a deeper understanding of both where it comes from, and where it might be headed.

With contributions from Marc Poirer, Robert Meikyo Rosenbaum, Barry Magid, Hozan Alan Senauke, Sallie Jiko Tisdale, Gil Fronsdal, Max Erdstein, Zoketsu Norman Fischer, Janet Jiryu Abels, Grace Schireson, Sojun Mel Weitsman, and Robert Sharf.
Philosophy (Religion)
Buddhism
Meditation and Stress Management
All categories

===


GO TO PAST EVENT
from What's Wrong with Mindfulness (and What Isn't) held on February 15, 2017
Robert Rosenbaum, Neurophsychologist; Psychotherapist; Co-editor, What's Wrong with Mindfulness (and What Isn't); Author, Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching and Zen and the Heart of Psychotherapy

In his new book, Rosenbaum and co-editor Barry Magidin bring together various essayists who examine critical concerns and creative engagment of zen experience with mindfulness practice. The marketplace, mindfulness myths, fantasies and facts, solitude and mindfulness in the arts, feminism and Zen liberation, Western Buddhism—all consider the topic. Rosenbaum introduces the topic with the "Zen in America" question of "Universal Mindfulness—Be careful what you wish for?"

Robert Meikyo Rosenbaum is a neuropsychologist and psychotherapist who is a Zen practitioner and senior teacher in the Taoist practice Dayan QiGong. 


==
What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't): Zen Perspectives Paperback – 18 10월 2016
기준 Robert Rosenbaum  (Editor), Barry Magid (Editor)
별 5개 중 3.2    10개의 평가
모든 형식 및 에디션 보기
Kindle
US$9.99부터
읽기: 무료앱
 
Paperback
US$13.72 
US$2.27부터 39 사용됨
US$9.66부터 15 신규
Mindfulness seems to be everywhere—but are we sure that's a good thing? Teachers Sallie Jiko Tisdale, Gil Fronsdal, Norman Fischer, and more explain how removing mindfulness from Buddhism may set a dangerous precedent. 

Mindfulness is in fashion. Oprah loves it, Google teaches it to employees—it has become widespread as a cure-all for stress, health problems and psychological difficulties, interpersonal trouble, and existential anxiety. But when mindfulness is separated from the Buddhist tradition, is something lost?

The Zen teachers gathered here each offer a unique perspective on what “mindfulness” means, its strengths, and the potential pitfalls.

Gil Fronsdal and Max Erdstein thoughtfully explore the rich Pali roots of mindfulness

Barry Magid and Marc Poirier examine the unintended side effects of exposing a spiritual tradition to the demands of capitalism

Norman Fischer demonstrates how mindfulness informs his creative process

Grace Schireson shows how mindfulness allows her to engage fully with the world as a feminist

And more, including essays on mindfulness and environmentalism, science, and psychology.

Each chapter offers insights to ground mindfulness in a deeper understanding of both where it comes from, and where it might be headed.
간단히 읽기
 잘못된 제품 정보 신고.
인쇄 길이
208 페이지
언어
English
출판사
Wisdom Publications
발행일
18 10월 2016
규격
15.24 x 1.52 x 22.86 cm
Next page
이 타이틀을 본 고객이 본 품목
McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality
McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality
Ronald Purser
별 5개 중 4.4 176
Paperback
US$16.90
Mindfulness and Its Discontents: Education, Self, and Social Transformation
Mindfulness and Its Discontents: Education, Self, and Social Transformation
David Forbes
별 5개 중 4.6 18
Paperback
시작가가 US$7.00인 21개 오퍼
이 품목을 구매한 고객이 함께 구매한 품목페이지 1 / 2페이지 1 / 2
Previous page
McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality
McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality
Ronald Purser
별 5개 중 4.4 176
Paperback
US$16.90
Mindfulness and Its Discontents: Education, Self, and Social Transformation
Mindfulness and Its Discontents: Education, Self, and Social Transformation
David Forbes
별 5개 중 4.6 18
Paperback
시작가가 US$7.00인 21개 오퍼
Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life: How to Enjoy a Life of Great Meaning and Altruism
Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life: How to Enjoy a Life of Great Meaning and Altruism
Shantideva
별 5개 중 4.7 76
Paperback
시작가가 US$6.23인 12개 오퍼
A Guide to the Bodhisattva Way of Life
A Guide to the Bodhisattva Way of Life
Santideva
별 5개 중 4.8 182
Paperback
시작가가 US$5.10인 70개 오퍼
Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching
Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching
Robert Rosenbaum
별 5개 중 4.2 26
Paperback
시작가가 US$3.50인 34개 오퍼
Introduction to Buddhist Meditation
Introduction to Buddhist Meditation
Sarah Shaw
별 5개 중 4.2 7
Paperback
시작가가 US$14.06인 19개 오퍼
The Way of Tenderness: Awakening through Race, Sexuality, and Gender
The Way of Tenderness: Awakening through Race, Sexuality, and Gender
Zenju Earthlyn Manuel
별 5개 중 4.6 103
Paperback
시작가가 US$14.94인 5개 오퍼
Next page
편집자 리뷰
Review
“This book is the best thing I’ve read on mindfulness and the mindfulness movement.” -- David R. Loy, author of A New Buddhist Path

“This thoughtful book offers reassurance to those concerned about maintaining authenticity amidst the current hype about mindfulness. The book presents a range articulate and courageous voices that collectively expand the reader's understanding of mindfulness in the context of Zen teachings. What’s Wrong with Mindfulness merges deep respect for tradition with thorough acceptance of contemporary times.” -- Deborah Schoeberlein David, author of Living Mindfully

“If you’re really into mindfulness; if you really want to know about mindfulness deeply, then this is a book for you to read and, more, to contemplate. This isn’t about how to use mindfulness to make you happy, or to deal with stress, or to help with your business. This is about knowing more profoundly what it is all about and what it isn’t. Be prepared to be moved.” -- Arthur C. Bohart, professor emeritus California State University Dominguez Hills

“More than ever, with mindfulness now an in thing to do rather than be, I am awed, appreciative and impressed by the daring of the editors to examine the meaning of the word “mindfulness” and how it is being lived. It is refreshing to read a book of wisdom and depth by people of experience who are committed to maintaining the integrity of this ancient tradition. I applaud the questions raised and the diversity of thought and practice. May we all be awake, alive and read this book!” -- Elana Rosenbaum, author of Being Well (Even When You’re Sick)

“Raises urgent questions about Mindfulness—capital "M"—now that it has been extracted from its Buddhist roots.” -- Gaelyn Godwin, Abbot, Auspicious Cloud Temple, Houston Zen Center

“What’s Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn’t) does a fantastic job of detailing these setbacks and offering a clear picture of what earnest practice looks like.” ― The Tattooed Buddha

“The essays in What’s Wrong With Mindfulness mutually illuminate each other, like the facets of a jewel. The critical and historical analyses create a space in which the personal accounts of mindfulness, grounded in years of Zen practice, sparkle with creativity and the potentiality of free play.” -- Linda Galijan, San Francisco Zen Center
About the Author
Robert Meikyo Rosenbaum is a neuropsychologist and psychotherapist who now devotes himself full time to Zen and Dayan (Wild Goose) Qigong. He received lay entrustment from Sojun Mel Weitsman of Berkeley Zen Center and is authorized by Master Hui Liu as a senior teacher of the Taoist practice of qigong in the lineage of Yang Meijun.  Bob is the founding teacher of the Meadowmont Sangha in the Sierra foothills and the author of Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching and Zen and the Heart of Psychotherapy.  He also enjoys leading annual meditation/qigong trekking retreats in the Nepal Himalayas (www.zenqigong.com). Rosenbaum lives in Emeryville, CA.

Barry Magid is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst practicing in New York City, and the founding teacher of the Ordinary Mind Zendo, also in New York. He is the author of the Wisdom titles Ordinary Mind: Exploring the Common Ground of Zen and Psychoanalysis, Ending the Pursuit of Happiness: A Zen Guide, and Nothing Is Hidden: The Psychology of Zen Koans. Magid lives in New York, NY.
제품 세부 정보
출판사 ‏ : ‎ Wisdom Publications (18 10월 2016)
언어 ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 208 페이지
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1614292833
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1614292838
규격 ‏ : ‎ 15.24 x 1.52 x 22.86 cm
최다 판매 순위: 에서 #1,339,858도서 ( 에서 상위 100개 보기도서)
에서 #1,269선불교 영성
에서 #2,556종교 및 철학
에서 #12,125명상(도서)
고객 리뷰: 별 5개 중 3.2    10개의 평가
비디오
비디오를 업로드하여 다른 사람들이 이 제품에 대해 자세히 알아볼 수 있도록 도와주세요.
비디오 업로드
저자 정보
저자를 팔로우하여 새로운 출시에 대한 최신 정보와 개선된 권장 사항을 확인하세요.

팔로우
Robert Rosenbaum
Robert Rosenbaum, Ph.D., began Zen practice in 1971. Between 1989 and 2010 he studied with his root teacher, Sojun Mel Weitsman. After receiving lay entrustment from Sojun, with his encouragement Bob established the Meadowmind sangha in the Sierra foothills and participated as a founding member of the Lay Zen Teachers’ Association. He has taught at numerous sanghas in the United States, Australia and Finland; in 2019 he received denkai in Ordinary Mind Zen from Karen Terzano.

Bob found a natural complement to Zen in the Taoist practice of Dayan (Wild Goose) Qigong as taught by Master Hui Liu in the lineage of Grandmaster Yang Meijun. In 1991 Master Liu authorized Bob as a teacher; at her request he brought Dayan Qigong to numerous venues in the USA and around the world. He continues to teach master classes and train teachers at the Wen Wu school in El Cerrito.

After receiving his Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology in 1980 he divided his time between clinical neuropsychology, brief psychotherapy and behavioral medicine. He was a Fulbright Professor at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in India. Working at Kaiser Permanente with his colleagues Moshe Talmon and Michael Hoyt he pioneered groundbreaking work on Single Session Psychotherapy; working with colleagues in Neurology and Medicine he innovated programs in mind-body medicine, including qigong and meditation programs for patients with chronic pain.

Bob’s books include Zen and the Heart of Psychotherapy; Walking the Way: 81 Zen Encounters with the Tao Te Ching; What's Wrong with Mindfulness - and what isn’t (co-edited with Barry Magid) and, most recently, That Is Not Your Mind! - Zen Reflections on the Surangama Sutra.

Bob currently lives and practices in Sacramento, California with his sweetheart/wife/dharma partner and fellow qigong teacher, Jeanne Courtney.

간단히 읽기


오늘 Amazon에서 도서를 쇼핑한 경험에 대해 어떻게 평가하겠습니까?





매우 나쁨 보통 훌륭함
고객 리뷰
별 5개 중 3.2
5개 중 3.2개
10개의 글로벌 고객 평가
별 5개
 27%
별 4개
 23%
별 3개
 15%
별 2개
 13%
별 1개
 23%
고객 리뷰 및 평점 운영 방식
이 제품에 대한 리뷰
다른 고객과 아이디어를 공유하십시오
고객 리뷰 쓰기
리뷰 필터링
한국어
영어

최상위 리뷰
최상위 리뷰
미국의 상위 리뷰
C. Roderick
별 5개 중 5.0 A thoughtful guide to those who choose to meditate
미국에서 2017년 9월 4일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
Wonderful, thoughtful, and timely...McMeditation needs critics...here they are... if you ever asked yourself what road you were on in your meditation practice, this book will help shed light on "the way"....
4명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
유용
침해 사례 신고
Anthony Coleman
별 5개 중 4.0 Good Collection of Essays
미국에서 2016년 12월 16일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
In What's Wrong with Mindfulness (and What Isn't), a host of Zen authors critically interact with the current mindfulness movement in the West. Having witnessed the rise and fall in the popularity of Zen practice, these authors are in a unique position to offer advice to leaders in the mindfulness movement. Contributors to this book range from being extremely critical of the direction of mindfulness to more sympathetic outlooks. Mindfulness instructors and practitioners as well as those engaged in Western Buddhism as a whole will benefit from reading this collection of essays.

See my full review here: [...]
10명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
유용
침해 사례 신고
Bodhidharma
별 5개 중 5.0 Profound Insight into Superficiality, Misinformation, AND Potential Depth of 'Mindfulness'
미국에서 2020년 1월 9일에 검토됨
The supercharged negative reviews here are a dead giveaway this book hits its mark perfectly. This book points directly to the shadow of not only certain aspects of 'The Movement' as a whole but at specific individuals who don't want to see parts of themselves this book has revealed, hence the supercharged negative comments fueled from their shadow aspects.

I got the book from the library and had to take copious notes from a few of the essays they were so insightful and helpful. Among the most memorable was the distinction between what we call 'mindfulness' vs 'clear comprehension' and that 'The Movement' as a whole has it nearly completely backwards.

The crux of the issue has to do with Mahasi Sayadaw's taking the monastic discipline of meditation to a lay audience. In doing so, he left the tradition and made the preliminary practice of meditation much more accessible. Nobody is saying this was wrong or right, but it is wrong to present 'Insight Meditation' as being just that because in that context it is McMindfulnes. There is nothing wrong with Mindfulness, but be honest about what you're doing. If you tell people they are practicing 'Insight' when it's actually the mere preliminary practice of Formal Insight/Vipassana they may stay stuck rather than move deeper into the practice. All traditions from Theravada to Vajrayana start with Mindfulness as a preliminary practice, then several stages of Formal Concentration as the indispensable foundation for true Vipassana or Formal Insight Meditation. It's of crucial importance to not play fast and loose with the word 'Insight' and take it totally out of it's original context. Insight/Vipasana is seeing directly into the processes of the mind and Subtle Impermanence (the 'Virgin Birth' of all things arising and disintegrating countless times each instant). It's tempting to puff up people's egos by telling them they are in college when they are in elementary school and that's what is wrong with much of Mindfulness today.

There is no accusation of 'Mindfulness' being wrong if not used for it's original purpose, which is Awakening. The book as a whole is asking for self-honesty about one's practice and offers perhaps for some with eyes to see that they could take it much deeper should they have the desire (notice desire can be very healthy).

Sometimes the squeaky wheel gets the grease and that's all this book is attempting to accomplish. They don't want to destroy the wheel, just make it run smoother.

Of course some essays were better than others, but overall this book was very helpful there are more than enough nuggets here to justify purchasing this book and giving parts of it a second, third, etc... read.

If you can, just be aware of the context of your own practice versus the original intentions set forth by its originators. Mindfulness in an indispensable preliminary and part of formal meditation later on. In fact, without proper instruction 'mindfulness' can lead one into Formal Concentration/Calm Abiding via the backdoor as your mind will become concentrated if you are very dedicated, vigilant, and patient. If you want to know more about the stages of Meditation there are numerous books on Mahamudra with Daniel Brown's being a comprehensive overview of several. The bibliography of his 'Pointing Out the Great Way' will point you to the books that can help you refine your practice.
간단히 표시
4명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
유용
침해 사례 신고
Kindle Customer
별 5개 중 4.0 Great
미국에서 2016년 12월 11일에 검토됨
An interesting and poignant look into the mind with lots of different perspectives. Easy and enjoyable read.
5명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
유용
침해 사례 신고
Amazon Customer
별 5개 중 1.0 Just more pretentious holier than thou whining.
미국에서 2019년 7월 26일에 검토됨
Just more pretentious holier than thou whining. I would have found it interesting if it had anything of value in it.
유용
침해 사례 신고
David Clark
별 5개 중 2.0 Author needs to get a life.
미국에서 2016년 12월 22일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
I have trouble with the authors concerns about mindfulness being taught and used in venues other than pure Buddhism. Mindfulness is beneficial in many areas of my life. I think Rosenbaum needs to get a life.
9명이 유용하다고 평가했습니다
유용
침해 사례 신고
모든 리뷰 보기
다른 국가의 상위 리뷰
모든 리뷰를 한국어로 번역
Emily
별 5개 중 3.0 Enticing title
캐나다에서 2017년 6월 28일에 검토됨
검증된 구매
Some chapters were better than others.
침해 사례 신고
한국어(으)로 리뷰 번역하기


==
What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't): Zen Perspectives
by Robert Rosenbaum (Editor), Barry Magid (Goodreads Author) (Editor)
 3.27  ·   Rating details ·  37 ratings  ·  9 reviews
Mindfulness seems to be everywhere—but are we sure that's a good thing? Teachers Sallie Jiko Tisdale, Gil Fronsdal, Norman Fischer, and more explain how removing mindfulness from Buddhism may set a dangerous precedent. 

Mindfulness is in fashion. Oprah loves it, Google teaches it to employees—it has become widespread as a cure-all for stress, health problems and psychological difficulties, interpersonal trouble, and existential anxiety. But when mindfulness is separated from the Buddhist tradition, is something lost?

The Zen teachers gathered here each offer a unique perspective on what “mindfulness” means, its strengths, and the potential pitfalls.

Gil Fronsdal and Max Erdstein thoughtfully explore the rich Pali roots of mindfulness

Barry Magid and Marc Poirier examine the unintended side effects of exposing a spiritual tradition to the demands of capitalism

Norman Fischer demonstrates how mindfulness informs his creative process

Grace Schireson shows how mindfulness allows her to engage fully with the world as a feminist

And more, including essays on mindfulness and environmentalism, science, and psychology.

Each chapter offers insights to ground mindfulness in a deeper understanding of both where it comes from, and where it might be headed. (less)
GET A COPY
KoboOnline Stores ▾Book Links ▾
Paperback, 208 pages
Published October 18th 2016 by Wisdom Publications
ISBN1614292833  (ISBN13: 9781614292838)
Edition LanguageEnglish
Other Editions (1)
What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't): Zen Perspectives
All Editions | Add a New Edition | Combine
...Less DetailEdit Details
FRIEND REVIEWS
Recommend This Book None of your friends have reviewed this book yet.
READER Q&A
Ask the Goodreads community a question about What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't)
54355902. uy100 cr1,0,100,100 
Ask anything about the book
Be the first to ask a question about What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't)

LISTS WITH THIS BOOK
The Power of Myth by Joseph CampbellThe Man Without Qualities by Robert MusilThe Hero With a Thousand Faces by Joseph CampbellThe Selfish Gene by Richard DawkinsThe Story of Philosophy by Will Durant
How we see the world
237 books — 172 voters
Lies My Teacher Told Me by James W. LoewenCake Wrecks by Jen YatesThe Right Stuff by Tom WolfeLet the Right One In by John Ajvide LindqvistNothing Can Possibly Go Wrong by Prudence Shen
Right and Wrong
419 books — 28 voters


More lists with this book...
COMMUNITY REVIEWS
Showing 1-30
 Average rating3.27  ·  Rating details ·  37 ratings  ·  9 reviews

Search review text


All Languages
More filters | Sort order
Sejin,
Sejin, start your review of What's Wrong with Mindfulness (And What Isn't): Zen Perspectives

Write a review
David
Oct 11, 2017David rated it it was ok
could have sed 3 stars -- it's not bad. Makes some reasonable points, including:

1. Adopting a mindfulness practice IN ORDER to gain some desired end such as greater relaxation, lower pain level, etc., is natural in light of how it's being studied these days but is potentially in tension with the Zen notion of letting go of desire and attachment.

2. Anything that becomes popular attracts a somewhat distasteful bandwagon-following hucksterism -- if decades of devoted Zen practice with your own personal teacher is great, how about a weekend workshop with me? i learned MBSR last Fall and have now come up with my own version. Get the free tote bag and nifty t-shirts!

Conversely.............

3. Collections of essays are hard to edit, I realize, but they didn't make a heroic effort to minimize repetition. Seemed as if no chapter author could resist pointing out that "many now refer to the phenomenon of McMindfulness" -- snap!

4. Purist/early-adopter grumpiness affects a lot of us but is not an attractive quality. Lifelong highly competitive runners moan about nouveau hobbyjoggers with fuel belts for their 30-minute workouts, certified Academy of Cognitive Therapy fellows grouse about lightly-trained eclectic therapists advertising their "cognitive-behavioral" orientaton; and so on and so on.

To me the antidote to getting too worked up about it is just looking at one's own life and identifying areas/activities/expertise that you dabble in but enjoy. Ex: I like going to movies but don't really know anything about directorial techniques or what is "Felliniesque" etc. I have had fun playing ultimate frisbee sometimes but am not in a league, don't know the names of the best players, etc. Wouldn't want to be raked over the coals for it by insiders.

If that makes sense and is widely shared [i would tell the editors of this book], then the real issue is whether mindfulness-stripped-of-its-Zen-roots is mostly (1) a good thing - bringing better health and contentment to lots of people - or (2) mostly a bad thing - a ripoff, a hoax, detrimental to their well-being..... And this particular collection doesn't really dive into the evidence that would help a reader decide [spoiler alert: it's #1].


(less)
flag2 likes · Like  · comment · see review
Terry
Jul 06, 2017Terry rated it liked it
Shelves: philosophy, religion
I'm not into mindfulness, buddhism, zen, etc., but believe I embrace some or many of the basic tenets.

I started reading the book b/c a friend does regular mindfulness sessions individually and in a group. I am curious what the goals are and how an ancient philosophy/religion relates to our modern times.

It was enlightening to hear the multiple perspectives about mindfulness and how it's been co-opted by others, and if it's possible/allowable to be a part-time buddhist, and what that might mean.

After reading 5 or 6 selections, I realized that it was not possible for me to gain any real understanding of buddhism - there are too many forms, interpretations, and disagreements among the practitioners as this book illustrated.

Unlikely I will check out the book again but I do recommend it for someone like me who is curious about the mindfulness 'fad' and wants something deeper than a magazine article to chew on.

Some raw notes:
p.
29 Any meditation process can become poison
Mindfulness taken out of its buddhist context; adapted/co-opted as a solution to modern ills
30 M can help us deal w/ disappointments, and challenges. If it stops there, it reinforces the false sense of essential self which is NOT B. Essential self is the "I" observer
31 repulsiveness of body
33 zen delights in paradoxes - they're fun
M is about being fully awake in our lives
36 zen meditation
37 drinking tea example

there was also a mindfulness description of preparing and eating an avocado sandwich. was that humor?! (less)
flagLike  · comment · see review
Cassandra
Aug 14, 2019Cassandra rated it liked it
I am on the fence about this book. Some of these essays were really enlightening (pun intended!), especially in the critical part, although I would have liked if they went a little deeper. Considering the format however, I guess they were not meant to explore their subject in depth. They made me want to read more, and that I appreciate.
On the other hand, some essays sounded bitter (the buffet thing) or were plain obnoxious. In particular, the one about environmentalism reeked of self-righteousness and was so self-congratulatory. I will not go into details but it really pissed me off. In general, the essays on the benefits of mindfulness were the weakest ones in my opinion, although I was interested by the one on feminism, which was nuanced and well written.
Overall I liked the book and I think I got a lot from it, but some of the essays annoyed me so much I had to take down two stars. I would recommend the book though. (less)
flagLike  · comment · see review
Judi
Apr 03, 2018Judi rated it liked it
Multiple authors offering essays on mindfulness... some resonated, some did not. Often felt repetitive... bits of insight to improve my practice.
flagLike  · comment · see review
Martha
Mar 02, 2022Martha rated it really liked it
First section and conclusion: 4.5
Second section: 2.5

This book is very much written from a white American Soto Zen perspective, and it helps to have some familiarity with Dogen before reading this. But presumably that's precisely the audience it is targeted toward. While I wish it had Asian and Asian-American voices, that unfortunately seems to be a high bar to pass in most mainstream American Buddhist publishing grumble grumble. (Note: while I found pictures of these writers, ancestry isn't always immediately apparent, and if I'm wrong that they're all white let me know.)

Anyway, the first section is a great examination of the different objections to the popular, commercialized "mindfulness" movement that divorces Buddhist practice from a Buddhist context and sells it as a way to cope in our late capitalist dystopia. There are soteriological objections routed in anatman, objections to the lack of sangha and reliable teachers, and of course just the often weak psychological studies that can be used to spin mindfulness into a cure-all when the reality is much more complicated. The conclusion is a great essay that compares current issues surrounding mindfulness with the emergence and controversial nature of Chan (Zen) at its outset which was good stuff that made my religious studies major heart happy.

The second section is a very mixed bag of positive things to say about mindfulness that probably help demonstrate how poorly defined mindfulness is in their grab-bag quality. They are not bad, but they lack a real sense of connective tissue to each other.

So yeah, as someone who has seen mindfulness being sold to teachers and students as a way to band-aid over the real institutional and economic problems that are the source of our stress, I overall recommend this book strongly. (less)
flagLike  · comment · see review
Lee Barry
Dec 23, 2016Lee Barry rated it liked it
Shelves: psychology, sociology, philosophy
Lots of interesting counterpoint on an overused word. (I particularly liked the essay "The Buffet...".)

Mindfulness as used in everyday life is merely being calmly attentive and observant. Like Creativity, Mindfulness is a term of art, almost in the literal sense in some cases.

(It's interesting that the book is Dewey 200-Religion, but now could be classified in a number of topical areas.) (less)
flagLike  · see review
Scott Hensley
Nov 15, 2016Scott Hensley added it
What an amazing book.
flagLike  · comment · see review
Susan
Dec 11, 2016Susan rated it really liked it
Shelves: misc-read
I won this book through Goodreads. Really great look through the mind from all different perspectives. Easy and enjoyable read