|
* indicates link to Amazon.com
online bookshop
** indicates link to Amazon.co.uk
online bookshop
Listed in alphabetical order of
surname of author
*
Mitch Albom -
Tuesdays
with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson
Review by a reader "Death of the body is an inescapable part of life; but death of the spirit during the process
of dying is a choice. Each of us has a personal belief system about what happens to the spirit after death occurs; but no matter what
your's is, this book has at least one lesson to offer you to enhance the life you are living now. Mitch Albom has given all of us the
opportunity to share with him in Morrie's mentorship, a gift for which I will always be most humbly grateful. Morrie's lessons aren't
geared to any one age or stage of life. I firmly believe that our youth as well as our elders will respond to this book with a true
opening of the spirit, and come away with insights they might never have received otherwise. If you were planning to read only one more
book in your lifetime, I would definitely recommend that this be the one."
*
James Allen -
As
You Think, Paperback/Published May 1998
Book Note by the publisher, Marc Allen: "
It's not an overstatement to say this book
is the single most powerful book I've ever read. It has changed my life. I've
read it countless times over the past 20 years; I pick it up whenever I need
some inspiration. For years, I've had a quote from the book in big letters over
my desk: "You will become as great as your dominant aspiration... if you
cherish a vision, a lofty ideal in your heart, you will realize it." This
book has helped me go from a poverty case, struggling with my own start-up
publishing company, to a multi-million dollar success. I'm not kidding -- no
other book has had anywhere near the kind of impact in my life that this simple
little book has had. Don't let its brevity fool you. It is worth reading and
re-reading and re-reading, until you have fulfilled your dreams."
|
* Robert Bach -
Jonathan Livingston Seagull"...Most gulls don't bother to learn more than the simplest facts of
flight - how to get from shore to food and back again. For most gulls it is not flying that matters, but
eating. For this gull, though, it was not eating that mattered, but
flight...Ultimately, he learns the meaning of love and kindness..."
* Rhonda Byrne - The Secret*Lewis Carroll - Alice in
Wonderland, John Tenneil (Illustrator) Paperback
"...One day Alice
came to a fork in the road and saw a Cheshire cat in a tree. �Which road do
I take ?� she asked. His response was a question: �Where do you want to go?�
�I don�t know� Alice answered. �Then� said the cat, �it doesn�t matter�....
*Cherie Carter-Scott,
Jack Canfield -
If Life Is a
Game, These Are the Rules : Ten Rules for Being Human, As Introduced in Chicken Soup for
the Soul
"...Each time you view your circumstances as possessing value, regardless
of the apparent confusion or hardship, you grow. Your personal evolution will depend on
how readily you embrace your lessons and integrate them into your life. Remember, the only
consequence for resisting lessons, is that they will keep repeating themselves until you
learn them... When the lesson is learned... you then move on to more complex and
challenging ones....Wishing that you had already graduated from the school of life does
not accelerate your progress or make the lessons any easier. Examining the situation for
the real lesson is the scavenger hunt..." [**alternate link
to
Amazon.co.uk bookshop]
*Edgar Cayce
Answers
Life�s 10 Most Important Questions
*Charles
Chaplin -
My Autobiography
published by William Clowes & Sons, Ltd, London 1964
"...I'm sorry, but I
don't want to be an emperor. That's not my business. I don't
want to rule or conquer anyone. I should like to help everyone -
if possible - Jew, Gentile - black men - white. We all want to
help one another. Human beings are like that. We want to live by
each other's happiness - not by each other's misery. We don't
want to hate and despise one another. In this world there is
room for everyone. And the good earth is rich and can provide
for everyone..."
|
*Deepak Chopra -
Ageless Body, Timeless Mind: The Quantum Alternative to Growing Old
*Deepak Chopra -
Creating Affluence |
|
*Paul Coelho
-
The Alchemist: A Fable About Following Your Dream
"My heart is afraid that it will have to suffer," the boy confides to the
alchemist one night as they look up at a moonless night.
"Tell your heart that the fear of suffering is worse than the
suffering itself," the alchemist replies. "And that no heart has ever
suffered when it goes in search of its dreams, because every second of
the search is a second's encounter with God and with eternity."
*Russell H. Conwell -
Acres of Diamonds
*Stephen
R. Covey -
The 7 Habits of
Highly Effective People : Powerful Lessons in Personal Change
" 'Begin with the end in mind' is based on the
principle that all things are created twice. There's the mental or first
creation, and a physical or second creation. To begin with the end in mind means to start
with a clear understanding of your destination. It means to know where you are going so
that you better understand where you are now and so that the steps you take are always in
the right direction. It is incredibly easy to get caught in the activity trap..... It is
possible to be busy - very busy - without being effective... How different our lives are
when we really know what is deeply important to us, and, keeping that picture in mind, we
manage ourselves each day to be and to do what really matters most..." [**
alternate link
to amazon.co.uk]
*Stephen R.
Covey, Roger & Rebecca Merrill - First Things
First : To Live, to Love, to Learn, to Leave a Legacy
"If you were to pause and think seriously about the 'first things' in your
life - the three or four things that matter most - what would they be? Are these things
receiving the care, emphasis, and time you really want to give them?... Why is it that so
often our first things aren't first? Basing our happiness on our ability to control
everything is futile. While we do control our choice of action, we cannot control the
consequences of our choices... In one sense, this approach is new; in another it is very
old. Its deeply rooted in classic timeless
principles that represent a distinct contrast to the quick fix... approach to life,
promoted by so much of current 'success' literature... There is no short cut. But there is
a path. ... Only as we focus more on contributing than consuming can we create the context
that makes peace in all aspects of life possible. It's in leaving a legacy that we find
meaning in living, loving and learning..." [**alternate link
to amazon.co.uk]
* Stephen R. Covey
The 8th Habit : From Effectiveness to Greatness
""Find your voice and inspire others to find
theirs." Covey sees leadership "as a choice to deal with people
in a way that will communicate to them their worth and potential
so clearly they will come to see it in themselves." His holistic
approach starts with developing one's own voice, one's "unique
personal significance." - Publishers Weekly
"The 8th Habit is about finding out
why you're
here and helping others to do the same" -
Ken Blanchard
*Thomas F. Crum
-
The Magic of Conflict: Turning a Life of Work into a Work of Art
*Mihaly
Csikszentmihalyi -
Creativity
: Flow and the Psychology of Discovery and Invention
"..creativity requires not only
unusual individuals, but a culture and field of experts that can foster and
validate such work. Most creative people have dialectic
personalities: smart yet naive, both extroverted and introverted..."
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*Robert S. De
Ropp - The Master Game
"This book is concerned with games and aims... Seek above all, for a game
worth playing... Having found the game play it with intensity - play as if your life and
sanity depended on it. (They do depend on it)... Life games reflect life aims. And the
games men choose to play indicate not only their type but also their level of inner
development... we can divide life games into object games and meta-games. Object games can
be thought of as games played for the attainment of material things, primarily money and
the objects which money can buy. Metagames are played for intangibles such as knowledge or
the salvation of the soul. In our culture object games predominate. In earlier cultures
meta-games predominated.
To the players of meta games, object games have always seemed shallow and
futile, an attitude summarised in the Gospel saying: what shall it profit a man if he gain
the whole world and lose his own soul. To the players of object games, meta-games seem
fuzzy and ill-defined, involving nebulous concepts like beauty, truth or salvation. The
whole human population of the earth can be divided roughly into two groups, meta-game
players and object-game players, the Prosperos and the Calibans. The two have never
understood one another and it is safe to predict that they never will. They are,
psychologically speaking, different species of man and their conflicts throughout the ages
have added greatly to the sum of human misery...."
|
*Deikman, Arthur
J. The Observing
Self : Mysticism and Psychotherapy [see also
Arthur J.Deikman in
the Unfolding Consciousness Pages]
"...our lives and our psychological health
depend on a sense of purpose. Mere survival is a purpose, but not enough for human
consciousness. Nor is working for the survival of others sufficiently meaningful if one
believes that the human race has no place to go, that it endlessly repeats the same
patterns, or worse..."
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*Lloyd C Douglas -
Magnificent Obsession
*Wayne
W. Dyer -
There's a Spiritual Solution to Every Problem - |
*Eknath Easwaran -Take Your Time: Finding Balance in a Hurried World |
*Eknath Easwaran
Conquest of Mind |
*Eknath Easwaran -
The Bhagavad Gita |
*Eknath
Easwaran
-
Gandhi, the Man: The Story of His Transformation |
*Eknath
Easwaran - Climbing
the Blue Mountain : A Guide for the Spiritual Journey
"...Meditation places the
loftiest of goals before us and gives us the means by which that goal can be
achieved. No matter how far technology advances, without an overriding goal in life it is not possible to live well, just as without a destination it is not possible to get where you want to go. With a goal, even if you wander, you always know how to regain your course; without a goal, you never even know where you are. I had a friend in India who once got so restless that he went down to Madras Central, laid his money on the counter, and said. "Give me a ticket. " The clerk, who was used to all kinds of people, asked politely, "Where to, sir?" My friend shrugged. "Just give me a ticket - any ticket. I don't care where I go. " This seems to be our condition today, and as a result we find ourselves with an increasing number of problems. To make wise choices in life, even in simple rnatters, we have to have a goal to which we can refer every day. Otherwise events are irrelevant; they do not hang together in any meaningful pattern..."
*Epictetus, Sharon Lebell
-
The Art of Living: The Classic Manual on Virtue, Happiness, and Effectiveness
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*Mark Fisher
-
The Instant Millionaire: A Tale of Wisdom and Wealth
*
Frankfurt, Harry G. - On Bullshit
"One of the most salient features of our
culture is that there is so much bullshit ... Everyone knows
this. Each of us contributes his share. But we tend to take the
situation for granted..." more
|
*Victor E.
Frankl - Man's Search for
Ultimate Meaning [see also
Victor E.Frankl in the Unfolding
Consciousness Pages]
"...Don't aim at success - the more you aim at
it and make it a target, the more you are going to miss it. For success, like happiness,
cannot be pursued; it must ensue, and it only does so as the unintended side effect of
one's personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself or as the by product of one's
surrender to a person other than oneself..."
*Robert Fulghum -
All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten : Fifteenth Anniversary
Edition Reconsidered, Revised, & Expanded With Twenty-Five New Essays
|
*M.K. Gandhi -
An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth
[see also
Mahatma
Gandhi]
*Kahlil Gibran
-
Sand and Foam: A Book of Aphorisms
*Daniel Goleman -
Emotional Intelligence : Why It Can Matter More Than IQ
There was a time when IQ was considered the leading
determinant of success. In this fascinating book, based on brain and
behavioral research, Daniel Goleman argues that our IQ-idolizing view of
intelligence is far too narrow. Instead, Goleman makes the case for
"emotional intelligence" being the strongest indicator of human success. He
defines emotional intelligence in terms of self-awareness, altruism,
personal motivation, empathy, and the ability to love and be loved by
friends, partners, and family members. People who possess high emotional
intelligence are the people who truly succeed in work as well as play,
building flourishing careers and lasting, meaningful relationships. Because
emotional intelligence isn't fixed at birth, Goleman outlines how adults as
well as parents of young children can sow the seeds.
*Daniel Goleman
-
Destructive Emotions : A Scientific Dialogue with the Dalai Lama
|
*David Ray Griffin - Spirituality and
Society : Postmodern Visions (Suny Series in Constructive Postmodern Thought)
"...The relation between a society and its member's spirituality is
reciprocal. A society's customs and laws, on the one hand reflect the spirituality of its
members. The spirituality of its members, on the other hand, is largely shaped by the
nature of society. This 'largely' is never, however, 'totally'..."
|
* Charles Handy - Myself and Other More Important Matters
* David R Hawkins -
Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior
"All human endeavor has the common goal of understanding or influencing human
experience. To this end, man has developed numerous descriptive and analytical
disciplines: Morality, Philosophy, Psychology, and so on....Regardless what
branch of inquiry one starts from-philosophy, political theory, theology-all
avenues of investigation eventually converge at a common meeting point: the
quest for an organized understanding of the nature of pure consciousness....To
explain that which is simple can be difficult indeed. Much of this book is
devoted to the process of making the simple obvious. If we can understand even
one simple thing in depth, we will have greatly expanded our capacity for
comprehending the nature of the universe and life itself..."
* Aldous Huxely - Brave New World and Brave New World Revisited* Joachim Israel - The
Language of Dialectics and the Dialectics of Language
|
**Oliver James -
They F*** You Up: How to Survive Family Life
Synopsis: Clinical
psychologist Oliver James demonstrates that who we are is largely the result of
the way we were cared for during our first six years, rather than our genes and
other environmental factors. The particular way we were treated in these
earliest months and years explains why siblings can be so different. They may
have been raised in the same family, but their mother and father related so
differently to each of them that they might as well had a different parents.
These early experiences affect our choices of friends and lovers, define our
interests and professional drives, make us more or less prone to mental illness.
James illustrates a vast body of scientific evidence with detailed clinical case
histories and those of prominent interviewees as diverse as Jeffrey Archer and
Stephen Fry, along with revealing psychobiographies of the likes of Woody Allen,
Mia Farrow and Prince Charles. Each chapter also includes a straightforward
questionnaire that allows you to complete an 'emotional audit' so that you can
be more aware of your role in the family script. Above all, this text shows how
insight into and understanding of what really went on in our original family
drama can be life-changing.
Book Note contributed by Mahul Spencer: "Authored by Oliver
James who has dedicated to his parents who were both clinical psychologists like
him. His previous work was "Britain on the Couch" or it may as well have been
America or Australia etc on the couch. He has taken one to four lines from the 3
verse 12 line poem (given below) of Philip Larkin to head all his chapters in
the approx 370 page (hard cover) book which should now be available in
paperback.
"This be the Verse
They fuck you, your mum and dad. They may not mean to, but they do. They fill you with the faults they had And add some extra just for you.
But they were fucked up in their turn By fools in old-style hats and coats, Who half the time were soppy-stern And half at one another s throats
Man hands on misery to man. It deepens like a coastal shelf. Get out as early as you can, And don t have any kids yourself.
|
*Spencer Johnson - Who Moved My
Cheese? : An Amazing Way to Deal With Change in Your Work and in Your Life ( also in Audio CD
)
"... 'Cheese' is a metaphor for what you to have in life - whether
it is a good job, a loving relationship, money, a possession, health or spiritual peace of
mind. And 'The Maze' is where you work in, or the family or the community you live in...
Change Happens (They keep Moving the Cheese); Anticipate Change (Get Ready for the Cheese
To Move); Monitor Change (Smell the Cheese Often So You Know When It Is Getting Old);
Adapt to Change Quickly (The Quicker You Let Go of Old Cheese, The Sooner You Can Enjoy
New Cheese...."
*Spencer Johnson -
The Present : The Gift That Makes You Happier And More Successful At Work And
In Life, Today!
|
*Martin Luther King -
A Testament of Hope : The Essential Writings and Speeches of Martin Luther
King, Jr.
"...The strong man holds in a
living blend strongly marked opposites. Not ordinarily
do men achieve this balance of opposites. The idealists are not usually realistic, and the
realists are not usually idealistic. The militants are not generally known to be passive,
nor the passive to be militant. Seldom are the humble self assertive or the self assertive
humble. But life at its best is a creative syntheses of opposites in fruitful harmony....
truth is found neither in the thesis nor the antithesis, but in the an emerging synthesis
which reconciles the two.
Jesus recognised the need for
blending opposites. He knew that his disciples would face a difficult and hostile world,
where they would confront the recalcitrance of political officials and the intransigence
of the protectors of the old order. He knew that they would meet cold and arrogant
men whose hearts had be hardened by the long winter of traditionalism. So he said to them,
'Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves'. And he gave them a formula for
action; 'Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves'. It is pretty difficult
to imagine a single person having simultaneously, the characteristics of the serpent and
the dove, but that is what Jesus expects. We must combine the toughness of the serpent and
the softness of the dove, a tough mind and a tender heart...
...We do not need to look far to
detect the dangers of soft mindedness. Dictators, capitalising on soft
mindedness, have led
men to acts of barbarity and terror that are unthinkable in civilised society. Adolf
Hitler realised that soft mindedness was so prevalent among his followers that he said, 'I
use emotion for the many and reserve reason for the few'. In
Mein Kampf
he asserted: 'By means of shrewd lies, unremittingly repeated, it is possible to make
people believe that heaven is hell - and hell, heaven... The greater the lie, the more
readily it will be believed...' There is little hope for us until we become
tough minded...
A nation or a civilisation that continues to produce soft minded men purchases its own
spiritual death on an installment plan..."
*Arthur
Koestler - Janus : A
Summing Up , Hutichinson of London, 1978 [see also Arthur Koestler in the
Unfolding Consciousness Pages]
"...Now the reductionist fallacy lies not in
comparing man to a 'mechanism powered by a combustion system' but in declaring that he is
'nothing but' such a mechanism and that his activities consist of 'nothing but' a
chain of conditioned responses which are also found in rats...".
|
* Jiddu Krishnamurthi - The Awakening of
Intelligence [see also
Meeting
Jiddu Krishnamurthi - Nadesan Satyendra]
"...Intelligence is not personal, is not the outcome of argument, belief,
opinion or reason. Intelligence comes into being when the brain discovers its fallibility,
when it discovers what it is capable of, and what it is not.... When (thought) sees that
it is incapable of discovering something new, that very perception is the seed of
intelligence, isn't it? That is intelligence ...The discovery of that is
intelligence...Thought is of time, intelligence is not of time. Intelligence is
immeasurable... Intelligence comes into being when the mind, the heart and the body are
really harmonious..."
*
Jiddu Krishnamurthi -
The
Book of Life, Daily Meditations - Published by Harper, San Francisco
From a review at Amazon.com: This volume is ... unique..
All the books by or about (Krishnamurti) seem to offer added insight but this book is very
useful in what it brings to the reader. I found that it was best, for me, to read a week's
worth of daily readings at a sitting since they are chosen to relate to each other...each
week having a single focus. No book can capture the man or the totality of his challenge
to us but this book surely is a must for anyone seriously trying to get an understanding
of the man and his trying to verbalize that which is not easily expressed in words.
* Jiddu Krishnamurthi
-
Think on These Things
'Krishnamurti�s
observations and explorations of modern man�s estate are penetrating and
profound, yet given with a disarming simplicity and directness. To listen to him
or to read his thoughts is to face oneself and the world with an astonishing
morning freshness.� Anne Marrow Lindbergh
|
Ervin Laszlo, Stanislav Grof, Peter Russell -
The Consciousness Revolution
|
*Blaine Lee The Power
Principle : Influence With Honor / Paperback / Published 1998
"...You don't become principle centred in a day. Principle centred power,
which enables you to influence others with honour, builds over a lifetime of deliberate
living. In this book, I have invited you to consider a way of living the rest of your
life.... 'Wisdom is knowing what to do; virtue is doing it'. Here are some possibilities
for you to consider as re-evaluate your key relationships and the types of power bases you
want to operate from. I recommend you implement one suggestion at a time. Give yourself
permission and space to try and fail and try again. One course correction can put you on a
path to a new and different place. One idea, realistically and patiently implemented, can
change your life...". [ also *Audio Cassette ]
[** alternate link
to amazon.co.uk]
|
*John McCormack -
Self-Made in America: Plain Talk for Plain People About the Meaning of
Success |
*Alan
Loy McGinnis -
Confidence: How to succeed at being yourself |
* Dan Millman - Way of the Peaceful Warrior: A Book That Changes Lives
*John
R. O'Neil -
The Paradox of Success: When Winning at Work Means Losing at Life : A Book
of Renewal for Leaders
"...Leaders in all fields suffer from
the paradox of success: with heartbreaking frequency, they feel that
the costs of their victories outweigh the rewards. Their
accomplishments often invoke the envy and resentment of others.
Their power often leads to arrogance, isolation, and stagnation. The
good news is that it doesn't have to be that way. Many leaders are
learning to step back and rebalance their lives. John O'Neil, a
well-known consultant to business executives, draws on his
fascinating studies of long distance winners' psychological and
business strategies to show the way out of this dilemma. In a lively
and inviting style, The Paradox of Success teaches readers how to
sustain personal development over the long haul, through
self-observation, deep learning, and regenerative retreats. It can
help readers become long-distance winners, and renew their lives and
reinvigorate their organizations in the process."
"...The idea of hubris - excessive pride or self inflation - has deep
roots. The myths and historical accounts of heroes who fell because they reached too high
resonate through time. In Greek mythology, someone suffering from hubris aspired to be
like the gods, an affront to those duties usually punishable by death. In classical Greek
drama, hubris was the hero's fatal flaw..." [**alternate link
to Amazon.co.uk]
*Og Mandino -
The Choice
*Og Mandino -
The Twelfth Angel
Alex Pattakos - Prisoners of Our Thoughts: Viktor Frankl's Principles for Discovering Meaning in Life and Work
|
* George Orwell - 1984 |
*M.
Scott Peck -
The Road Less Travelled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and
Spiritual Growth |
*Trina Paulus
-
Hope for the Flowers |
*Anthony
Robbins -
Awaken the Giant Within: How to Take Immediate Control of Your Mental,
Emotional, Physical, and Financial |
*David Schwartz -
Magic of Thinking Big
|
*Dr Seuss -
Oh, the Places You'll Go! ! |
Jack Rauahala - Find Your God:A Pilgrim's
Guide to the Cosmos
"The meaning of the cosmos is its purpose.
The purpose of the cosmos is its meaning... there is no
enlightenment. There is only continuous enlightening because
reality is a verb, a process, a reaching for total communion
with the Consciousness of the Cosmos..."
|
*Wilhelm Reich -
Listen, Little
Man! [see also Wilhelm Reich
in the Unfolding Consciousness Pages]
"....They call you 'Little Man', 'Common
Man'; they say a new era has begun, the 'Era of the Common Man'. It isn't you who says so,
Little Man. It is they, the Vice Presidents of great nations, promoted labour leaders,
repentant sons of bourgeois families, statesman and philosophers. They give you your
future but don't ask about your past.... I have never heard you complain: "You
promote me to be the future master of myself and the world, but you don't tell me how one
is to be the master of oneself, and you don't tell me the mistakes in my thinking and my
actions..."
* Jonathan Roof - Pathways to God: A Study Guide to the Teachings of Sathya Sai Baba
* David Servan-Schreiber -
Healing Without Freud or Prozac : Natural Approaches to Conquering Stress,
Anxiety, Depression Without Drugs and Without Psychotherapy
|
*
Robin S. Sharma
-
The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari : A Fable About Fulfilling Your Dreams and Reaching Your Destiny, 1999
".. Everyone on this planet is a wonder of this world. Every one of us is a hero in some way or another. Every one of us has the potential for extraordinary achievement, happiness and lasting fulfillment. All it takes are small steps in the direction of our dreams...
Small victories lead to large victories. Tiny, incremental changes and improvements such as those I have suggested will create positive habits. Positive habits will create results. And results will inspire you towards greater personal change. Begin to live each day as if it was your last. Starting today, learn more, laugh more and do what you truly love to do. Do not be denied your destiny.
For what lies behind you and what lies in front of you matters little when compared to what lies within
you...
We are spiritual people having an earthly experience..."
*Robin S. Sharma -
Who Will Cry When You Die? Life Lessons from the Monk Who Sold His Ferrari
|
*E. F. Schumacher -
A Guide for the
Perplexed Published 1978
"...Anyone who goes openly on a journey into the
interior, who withdraws from the ceaseless agitation of everyday life and pursues the kind
of training - satipatthana, yoga, Jesus Prayer, or something similar - without which
genuine self knowledge cannot be obtained, is accused of selfishness and of turning his
back on social duties... Meanwhile, world crisis multiply and everybody deplores the
shortage, or even total lack, of 'wise' men or women, unselfish leaders, trustworthy
counsellors etc. It is hardly rational to expect such high qualities from people who have
never done any inner work and would not even understand what was meant by the
words..."
* Metta Spencer -
Two Aspirins and a Comedy: How Television Can Enhance Health and Society*Ekhart Tolle
-
The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment
|
Jandyla Venketeswara Sastri - Tapovanam |
*Denis
Waitley - Empires of the
Mind : Lessons to Lead and Succeed in a Knowledge-Based World Paperback (August
1996)
"...One of the greatest lessons I've learned in life is that
success is neither the destination nor the journey, but a way of travelling. Destinations
and journeys inevitably involve arrivals and endings. I have always felt the word retired,
for example was misspelled. The word should be retried or maybe, reinspired.
Retired implies tired again or perhaps tired for the final time... Life is not something
to step back from and admire when completed. It is an ongoing process of design, laying
the foundations, forming, erecting, bonding, changing, detailing, refining and
renovating... It is always under construction.. It calls for us to gain hindsight from all
that went before... It calls for us to gain foresight by imagining a better world ahead
for all by passing on our trials, errors, and achievements as lessons in leadership. It
calls for us to live in the present, longing for neither yesterday nor tomorrow, but
rather facing what today offers, boldly, optimistically and flexibly..."
|
*Alan Watts -
Om -
Creative Meditations, Edited and Adapted by Judith Johnstone, 1980
"...Really, the
fundamental, ultimate mystery, the only thing you need to know to understand the deepest
metaphysical secrets is this: That for every outside there is
an inside, and for every inside there is an outside, and though they are different,
they go together...."
*Neale Donald Walsch
- Conversations with God : An Uncommon Dialogue -
(Book 1)
-
(Book 2)
-
(Book 3)
*Margaret J. Wheatley -
Turning to One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future
"The intent of this book is to encourage and support you to
begin conversations about things that are important to you and those near you..
It has no other purpose." ... 10 "conversation starters" like
"Do I feel a 'vocation to be truly human'?" "When have I experienced good
listening?" and "When have I experienced working for the common good"..
|
Ken Wilbur - A
Brief History of Everything, Shambhala Publications, 1996
From a 'Note to the Reader' by the Author "In Douglas Adams's Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, a massive supercomputer is designed to give the ultimate answer, the
absolute answer, the answer that would completely explain "God, life, the universe, and
everything." But the computer takes seven and a half million years to do this,
and by the time the computer delivers the answer, everybody has forgotten the question. Nobody remembers the ultimate question, but the
ultimate answer the computer comes up with is: 42.
This is amazing! Finally, the ultimate answer. So wonderful is the answer that a contest is held to see if
anybody can come up with the question. Many profound questions are offered, but the final
winner is: How many roads must a man walk down?
"God, life, the universe, and everything" is pretty much what this book is
about, although, of course, the answer is not quite as snappy as
"42". It deals with
matter, life, mind, and
spirit, and the evolutionary
patterns that seem to unite them all in a pattern that connects."
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*Marianne
Williamson - A Return to Love
: Reflections on the Principles of a Course in Miracles
"...Your playing small does not serve the
world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people wont feel
insecure about you. We were born to manifest the glory of God that is within us. Its
not just in some of us; its in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we
unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our
own fear, our presence automatically liberates others..."
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* Rosamund Stone Zander, Benjamin Zander -
The Art of Possibility : Transforming Professional and Personal Life
" We are saying that, on the whole, you are more likely to
extend your business and have a fulfilled life if you have the attitude that
there are always new customers out there waiting to be enrolled rather than
that money, customers and ideas are in short supply. You are more likely to
be successful , overall, if you participate joyfully with projects and goals
and do not think your life depends on achieving the mark because then you
will not be able to connect to people all around you. On the whole,
resources are likely to come to you in greater abundance when you are
generous and inclusive and engage people in your passion for life. There
aren�t any guarantees, of course. When you are oriented to abundance, you
care less about being in control, and you take more risks. You may give away
short-term profits in pursuit of a bigger dream; you may take a long view
without being able to predict the outcome. In the measurement world, you set
a goal and strive for it. In the universe of possibility, you set the
context and let life unfold. "
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* Danah Zohar - SQ - Spiritual
Intelligence, the Ultimate Intelligence
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