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Rating:  Summary: Superb - This book really is compelling reading Review: I am not a religious person at all and you don't need to be to appreciate this book. It has been written in a very graceful way that leads you through the book to experience emotions you never knew you could. This book is outstanding and should be read by everyone, the enlightenment the author shares is intense and his adaptation of age old principles into human life today is a gift. Although it would usually be a great pleasure for me to meet an author I do not need to in this case, he has shared so much in the book I feel I know him well. Reading this has been like sitting discussing the ways of the world with a close friend and a really nice experience for me.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent book Review: I bought this book to understand Buddhism and found instead a spiritual journey filled with discovery and recognition. I highly recomend this book to anyone seeking inner happiness and peace.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent book Review: I bought this book to understand Buddhism and found instead a spiritual journey filled with discovery and recognition. I highly recomend this book to anyone seeking inner happiness and peace.
Rating:  Summary: Wonderful Work Review: The writer is a monk from Sri Lanka, Bhante Y. Wimala, also the originator of the "Center for Conscious Evolution" in Cambridge. Bhante looks at the entire world as his teacher, and is totally content being in his present state of constant learning. That's the driving gusto of this work, that everything is cinstantly teaching us, incessantly. We can learn not only from holy texts or nature herself, but every single moment; mind you "moment" is eternal and infinite. Here we are asked to re-contact the child within and reclaim our original inquisitiveness. To acknowledge and appreciate the beauty of all things, not only the sunshine, but also the days of gray. As the old snippet goes, " Rain makes the flowers grow in the field, and also the thorns in the marshes." Bhante also offers fascinating meditative suggestions, and ultimately calls us all to become world participants. From the book, "The lotus has taken a long path through the mud and the murky water, seeking the sunrise to open its heart to the world and express its essence." Enjoy!
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