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This Extraordinary Moment: Moving Beyond the Mind to Embrace the Miracle of What Is [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 120 pages, height x width x depth: 228x152x14 mm, weight: 280 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Dec-2018
  • Izdevniecība: New Harbinger Publications
  • ISBN-10: 1684031818
  • ISBN-13: 9781684031818
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 120 pages, height x width x depth: 228x152x14 mm, weight: 280 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Dec-2018
  • Izdevniecība: New Harbinger Publications
  • ISBN-10: 1684031818
  • ISBN-13: 9781684031818
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

"The realization that there is no explanation for existence or awareness of existence is ultimate liberation. John Astin's book offers an opportunity for this liberation, if you are ready."  —Deepak Chopra

“This book has the power to transform lives.” —Shauna Shapiro, author of The Art and Science of Mindfulness

Anyone who attempts to describe what is ultimately indescribable faces the same challenge—how does one use words to explain something that transcends language? Many writers fall into the trap of using more words to do the job that most words aren’t even particularly suited for, the ideas growing ever more allusive and abstract as the verbiage piles up. But in trying to unmoor the essence of lived experience from the concepts and stories we use to construct it, author and spiritual teacher John Astin takes a different approach—using fewer words instead of more, and grounding them with exercises designed to evoke the actual experience of what he’s describing.

Evoking the true nature of experience in words is a tricky proposition: perceptual reality has no beginning and no end, making it impossible to delineate, and what arises internally as thoughts and feelings are equally limitless, indeterminate, and unresolvable. While we have countless ways to categorize, conceptualize, and label things, the truth of whatever is being felt, seen, tasted, touched, or heard is infinitely more complex and multidimensional than our conceptual or linguistic structures would have us believe. By becoming more intimate with experience itself—rather than trying to narrate, avoid, or escape it—we can begin to discover that our experiences cannot possibly limit us in the ways we’ve imagined, owing to their radically open-ended and ultimately indefinable nature.

This Extraordinary Moment? invites you on a journey of boundless inquiry, which becomes a liberating free-fall into the mysteries that lie just beyond our understanding of lived reality—which words can never quite describe. Built entirely around personal experience and exploration, this book provides activities, dialogues, exercises, and meditations to help you unlearn the basic misapprehensions about the nature of moment-to-moment experience, and shows you how to gain distance from the stories you tell about what you’re experiencing, so as to better focus on what’s actually happening in the present moment.

With ultrashort chapters grounded in experiential practices, and without the use of the usual spiritual jargon, this fast-moving, highly readable book makes the esoteric accessible to all—from anyone interested in stress management, well-being, or positive psychology to the devoted spiritual seeker.



Anyone attempting to describe the indescribable nature of reality faces the same challenge—how does one use words to explain something that transcends language? Many writers fall into the trap of using more words, but author, spiritual teacher, and health psychologist John Astin takes a different approach: using fewer words instead of more, and grounding them with practical exercises designed to help readers focus on the content of their immediate experiences, rather than their linguistic or conceptual descriptions of them.
Foreword ix
Preface x
Introduction 1(2)
Suggestions for How to Approach This Book
3(2)
Two Approaches to Happiness
5(3)
The Impressionistic Nature of Experience
8(1)
The Misinterpretation of Experience
9(2)
Cognitive Fusion
11(3)
The Map Is Not the Territory
14(2)
What Is Experience Made Of?
16(2)
The Partiality of All Explanations
18(2)
It's Not What You Think It Is
20(1)
Dialogue: The Uses and Limitations of Language
21(3)
Reality, the Greatest Drug of All
24(2)
The Confirmation Bias
26(4)
Distinguishing Thought from Experience
30(2)
Categories
32(3)
Dialogue: Discovering the Common Denominator
35(7)
Interpretive Frameworks
42(1)
Experience Deviates from Our Interpretations
43(2)
The Vast and Indescribable Nature of Experience
45(1)
Dialogue: Are You Saying That Suffering Isn't Real?
46(7)
Relaxing All Effort
53(1)
Don't Do Anything About This
54(2)
Refer to Nothing
56(2)
The Continuous Discontinuity
58(1)
Mindfulness Is Unavoidable
59(2)
Sitting on a Chair Isn't Merely Sitting on a Chair
61(1)
Let Yourself Be Astounded
62(1)
Dialogue: The Room
63(4)
Let the Winds Blow
67(1)
Boundaries
68(2)
Reality: Virtual, Actual...or Both?
70(2)
Everything Is Present
72(2)
The Phenomenal Nature of Phenomena
74(2)
The Mystery of Intention
76(2)
Not Privileging Thought
78(1)
What's True About This?
79(1)
This Is It
80(1)
Resting as the View
81(1)
The Ease of Being Here
82(1)
The Miracle of Perceiving
83(2)
Expressions of Energy
85(1)
We Have Not Been Here Before
86(2)
Everything Slips Away
88(1)
The Knowing of This Moment Is the Feeling of It
89(2)
Being Here Now
91(2)
Presence
93(2)
Drifting Toward Reality
95(2)
The Problem of Oversimplification
97(4)
Signal and Noise
101(2)
What Is Awareness?
103(2)
Dialogue: The Miracle of Everything
105(2)
Wide Open
107(1)
No Hierarchy
108(1)
Time
109(2)
The Freedom of Uncertainty
111(2)
Dialogue: The World Is Made of Verbs
113(3)
The Bottomless Well of Infinity
116(2)
The Borderless Field of Being
118(2)
No Distractions
120(2)
The Olympic Athlete Model of Spirituality
122(1)
Dialogue: The Many Flavors of Here
123(3)
Everything's a One-Off
126(2)
Awareness Is Experience
128(2)
The Fullness of Experience
130(2)
The Surface Is the Deep
132(2)
Overdramatizing the Path
134(2)
Identity and the Body of Experience
136(2)
What Are We?
138(2)
The Impossibility of Measurement
140(3)
Many Flavors, One Taste
143(1)
Experience Doesn't Matter
144(1)
The Magic Show
145(2)
Everything Is What You Want
147(1)
The Indescribability of Everything
148(2)
It's Exactly What You Think It Is... and So Much More
150(2)
Epilogue: This Life That Is Also Death 152(2)
Postscript 154(1)
Acknowledgments 155(1)
References 156
Foreword writer Adyashanti is an American-born spiritual teacher devoted to serving the awakening of all beings. His teachings are an open invitation to stop, inquire, and recognize what is true and liberating at the core of all existence. Adyashanti is author of The Way of Liberation, Falling into Grace, Emptiness Dancing, True Meditation, and The End of Your World. Based in California, he lives with his wife, Mukti, and teaches throughout North America and Europe, offering satsangs, weekend intensives, silent retreats, and a live Internet radio broadcast.