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OverviewSuffering may well be the most difficult part of life, as Episcopal priest and therapist Gordon Peerman knows first hand. Based on his conviction that Buddhist teachers have a lot to teach about dealing with suffering, what helps and what doesn't, Peerman takes readers on a lively, even light-hearted, journey through nine Buddhist practices that can bring ""blessed relief"" to a wide range of human suffering: Feeling Inadequate / Mindfulness; Wanting ""Other""/ Dropping the Story; Anxiety / Spacious Awareness; Perfectionism / Kind Attention; Destructive Anger / The Way of Nonharming; Conflict / Nonviolent Communication; Hurt / Beginning Anew; Woundedness / Bowing to the Moment; Injustice / Softening the Heart. Peerman's experience of coming to Buddhist practice, by way of Thomas Merton and the Trappists, has been evolving over a twenty-five-year time span, but rather than abandon his Christian tradition, Peerman brings the riches he has discovered to his birth community. Peerman's writing is warm and down-to-earth, his stories moving and interesting and his suggested exercises for putting theory into practice, wonderfully useful. This book will especially appeal to Christian audiences interested in the writings of Thomas Merton, Thomas Keating and Thich Nhat Hanh. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Gordon PeermanPublisher: Jewish Lights Publishing Imprint: SkyLight Paths Publishing,US Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.00cm ISBN: 9781594732522ISBN 10: 1594732523 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 18 September 2008 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"Introduction ix The Buddha Way and the Christian Way ix What Helps and What Doesn't xi Dropping Your Story Line xii Finding Freedom xiii 1. Big Mind, Big Medicine 1 Everything Changes 1 The Heart of Mindfulness 5 The Weakest Link 7 Small Mind, Big Mind 10 Renunciation Practice 13 A Refuge from Words 16 Dropping into Freedom 19 Blessed Relief: The Three-Minute Breathing Space 24 2. The Cry for Help 27 The Why and the What of Suffering 27 An Exit from Hell 29 Bearing Suffering 32 The Work 36 Clearing the Lens 38 The Judging Mind Goes on Retreat 41 Blessed Relief: The Work 45 3. Beyond Belief 49 A Happy Accident 49 Spacious Awareness 52 Incline Your Mind 55 Who's Talking? 57 The Cloud of Unknowing 60 Blessed Relief: The Practice of Inquiry 63 4. Quiet Ambition 65 Not Enough 65 Kind Attention 69 Spontaneous Joy 72 The Hungry Ghost 74 Blessed Relief: The Sacred Breath 77 5. An Instrument of Peace 79 Angr-r-r-y 79 Self-Soothing: Bringing Attentiveness to Anger 81 Self-Defining: Being Willing to Speak Your Truth 85 Self-Transcending: Bringing RAIN to Blame 91 Blessed Relief: Working with RAIN 98 6. Meeting Our Edges 101 ""You All Belong"" 101 The Failed Buddhist Bypass 104 Nonviolent Communication 110 May the Circle Be Unbroken 114 Blessed Relief: Nonviolent Communication (NVC) 117 7. Beginning Anew 121 Unwrapping the Experience 121 A Place to Begin 123 True Intimacy 125 Zazen in the Devil’s Cauldron 129 Blessed Relief: The Practice of Beginning Anew 134 8. The Dharma of Dying 137 Remembrances 137 The Great Way 140 Bowing to the Moment 143 Old Wounds 147 Blessed Relief: The Five Remembrances 150 9. Mobile Loaves and Fishes 153 Compassion Rising 153 Beyond Us and Them 157 A Retreat on the Streets 159 Softening the Heart 161 Blessed Relief: Compassion Practice 166 Afterword 168 Glossary 173 Suggested Resources 175 Acknowledgments 179 Credits 182"ReviewsA spiritual banquet ... to heal our psyches and awaken our hearts. Helps us open to the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christianity and Buddhism. Tara Brach, clinical psychologist; author, Radical Acceptance Both a moving personal story and a source of valuable insight for all those who are wrestling with questions of suffering in their lives. It is a serious book that is also fun to read. Phillip Moffitt, founder and president of the Life Balance Institute; author, Dancing With Life Meets our contemporary struggles with refreshing clarity and power. Peerman's understated humor in relating ordinary life encounters frequently had me weeping with the laughter of self-recognition. Marjorie J. Thompson, author, Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life Exceptional . With uncommon vulnerability, engaging humor, and sure-footed counsel, Gordon Peerman invites us to hear and make our own a far vaster story arising from deep sources of wisdom East and West, whose language conveys the liberating spaciousness of being truly awake, aware and alive. John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal A guide to freedom from fear, filled with stories to make us laugh, sigh, cry, and wake up to compassion for ourselves and all the world. Margaret McGee, author, Sacred Attention: A Spiritual Practice for Finding God in the Moment Remarkable. A spiritual exploration that unites centuries of Buddhist teachings with Christian wisdom. [The] approach is not only inspired, but also eminently practical yet profoundly powerful. Derek Lin, translator/annotator, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained A spiritual banquet ... to heal our psyches and awaken our hearts. Helps us open to the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christianity and Buddhism. --Tara Brach, clinical psychologist; author, Radical Acceptance Both a moving personal story and a source of valuable insight for all those who are wrestling with questions of suffering in their lives. It is a serious book that is also fun to read. --Phillip Moffitt, founder and president of the Life Balance Institute; author, Dancing With Life Meets our contemporary struggles with refreshing clarity and power. Peerman's understated humor in relating ordinary life encounters frequently had me weeping with the laughter of self-recognition. --Marjorie J. Thompson, author, Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life Exceptional.... With uncommon vulnerability, engaging humor, and sure-footed counsel, Gordon Peerman invites us to hear and make our own a far vaster story arising from deep sources of wisdom East and West, whose language conveys the liberating spaciousness of being truly awake, aware and alive. --John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal A guide to freedom from fear, filled with stories to make us laugh, sigh, cry, and wake up to compassion for ourselves and all the world. --Margaret McGee, author, Sacred Attention: A Spiritual Practice for Finding God in the Moment Remarkable. A spiritual exploration that unites centuries of Buddhist teachings with Christian wisdom. [The] approach is not only inspired, but also eminently practical ... yet profoundly powerful. --Derek Lin, translator/annotator, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained Gordon Peerman is an Episcopal priest and psychotherapist in private practice and an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt Divinity School, where he teaches seminars in Buddhist-Christian dialogue. He also teaches Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction at the Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health. For over 2,000 years, Buddhists have studied and dealt with the challenges and benefits of human suffering. In the process, they have also explored happiness, generosity, kindness, equanimity, and compassion. Peerman has spent 25 years in what he calls a dual citizenship in Christianity and Buddhism. In this enlightening book, he opens the door of freedom for us so we can leave fear and all its companion stories behind. Peerman shares many of his retreat experiences and presents nine practices that address the problem of human suffering: The Three-Minute Breathing Space The Work The Practice of Inquiry The Sacred Breath Working with RAIN Nonviolent Communication (NVC) The Practice of Beginning Anew The Five Remembrances Compassion Practice On a contemplative kayaking retreat in the wilderness of southern Alaska, Peerman confronts the grasping of his small mind, organized around me and mine, and revels in the openness of the big mind which knows the truth of impermanence. In his probes on suffering, he comes to see that it is a waste of time to try to find out the cause of suffering better to focus on a way to follow when suffering comes. The Buddhist wisdom teachers proclaim that it is our resistance to what is that is the source of all our problems. Peerman does a fine job of explaining how the Work of Byron Katie is helpful in questioning our thoughts and stories about reality. Further explication comes with his comments on the ten believed thoughts that lead to suffering identified by Tara Bennett-Goleman. In an interesting chapter on Quiet Ambition, the author examines his external need to be seen and recognized as special, one who is immensely accomplished, along with his internal fears of not being good enough. Peerman holds this tension in his awareness and comes to a deeper realization of his reactivity. He brings the same mindfulness to anger and the option of transforming it into compassion and peace. On another retreat, Peerman deals with his own spiritual edge through the process of Nonviolent Communication espoused by Marshall Rosenberg. He uses the Beginning Anew ceremony developed by Thich Nhat Hanh with his wife and deals with his grief over the death of his father by bowing to the moment. Peerman closes with his involvement in a Mobile Loaves and Fishes project which enables him to practice compassion. He calls it a softening of the heart: Our work, our inner work, is to transform anger into justice, hurt into compassion, suffering into wisdom. --Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat Spirituality & Practice (11/20/2008) GORDON PEERMAN The Colbert Report recently featured a preacher exhorting his Christian God to use the presidential election to prove His superiority over Hindu, Buddha and Allah. It would be funny if it weren't so sad. In such an environment, Gordon Peerman's new book, Blessed Relief: What Christians Can Learn From Buddhists About Suffering (Skylight Paths, 182 pp., $16.99), is a welcome reminder that religion at its best isn't about divisiveness. It's about providing solace and promoting peace without regard for labels. An Episcopal priest and psychotherapist, as well as an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt, Peerman has studied Buddhist practice for decades. He gently demonstrates how our own expectations cause much of our suffering, and how we allow event the smallest annoyances to destroy our equanimity. And he doesn't exempt himself: At one retreat, a roommate with sleep apnea drives him to near-murderous thoughts: After two nights of no sleep, I found myself toying with the hope that, in the long silences between snores, my roommate might actually have died. Alas, he snored on. What Blessed Relief does best is to remind us that true faith builds bridges of kindness and compassion, whatever religion it happens to spring from. After his son causes an auto accident, Peerman uses Buddhist practice to overcome his irritation about the cost and inconvenience involved. When he calls the other boy's mother, her response is equally telling: We're Christians, she says, and we believe that blame never helps and that understanding and forgiveness do. Two people using their faith to communicate with each other instead of doing battle surely, the world would be a little better if everyone could follow their example. Gordon Peerman discusses and signs Blessed Relief: What Christians Can Learn From Buddhists About Suffering at Davis- Kidd Booksellers Nov. 6 at 7 p.m. FAYE JONES BLESSED --Faye Jones Nashville Scene (11/05/2008) The author of Blessed Relief has been an Episcopal priest for thirty years and found himself drawn to Buddhist spirituality. Through a time of illness he was drawn to Christian contemplative practices and was enriched by Buddhist teaching. Buddhism is not a religion so much as a philosophy. As such the believer can draw on its deep understanding of life, suffering, pain and conflict. I have found that this continues to draw us back to Jesus and the rich history of Christianity. Blessed Relief is inspiring, instructive and useful to those interested in prayer. I loved this book. It is easy to read, full of narrative stories and each chapter finishes with simple practices to experience blessed relief. The concept of mindfulness reminded me of Jesus' teaching as recorded in Matthew 6. Questioning our thoughts is at the heart of Buddhist practice. The chapters cover awareness, ambition, conflict, being an instrument of peace, beginning anew, dying and compassion. I especially loved the chapter on non-violent communication, a practice that would enrich our personal relationships as well as our communications within the communities of faith of which we are a part. Non-violent communication would assist in conflict resolution and mediation in church conflicts. Mr. Peerman's writings will not appeal to everybody, but as one who believes we can learn a lot from our believing sisters and brothers of other faiths, I found it instructional. In reading Blessed Relief I was led repeatedly back to the Christ and the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christian and Buddhist teachings. --Marian Zaunbrecher Journey - Website (09/07/2009) A spiritual banquet ... to heal our psyches and awaken our hearts. Helps us open to the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christianity and Buddhism. Tara Brach, clinical psychologist; author, Radical Acceptance Both a moving personal story and a source of valuable insight for all those who are wrestling with questions of suffering in their lives. It is a serious book that is also fun to read. Phillip Moffitt, founder and president of the Life Balance Institute; author, Dancing With Life Meets our contemporary struggles with refreshing clarity and power. Peerman's understated humor in relating ordinary life encounters frequently had me weeping with the laughter of self-recognition. Marjorie J. Thompson, author, Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life Exceptional . With uncommon vulnerability, engaging humor, and sure-footed counsel, Gordon Peerman invites us to hear and make our own a far vaster story arising from deep sources of wisdom East and West, whose language conveys the liberating spaciousness of being truly awake, aware and alive. John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal A guide to freedom from fear, filled with stories to make us laugh, sigh, cry, and wake up to compassion for ourselves and all the world. Margaret McGee, author, Sacred Attention: A Spiritual Practice for Finding God in the Moment Remarkable. A spiritual exploration that unites centuries of Buddhist teachings with Christian wisdom. [The] approach is not only inspired, but also eminently practical yet profoundly powerful. Derek Lin, translator/annotator, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained Gordon Peerman is an Episcopal priest and psychotherapist in private practice and an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt Divinity School, where he teaches seminars in Buddhist-Christian dialogue. He also teaches Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction at the Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health. For over 2,000 years, Buddhists have studied and dealt with the challenges and benefits of human suffering. In the process, they have also explored happiness, generosity, kindness, equanimity, and compassion. Peerman has spent 25 years in what he calls a dual citizenship in Christianity and Buddhism. In this enlightening book, he opens the door of freedom for us so we can leave fear and all its companion stories behind. Peerman shares many of his retreat experiences and presents nine practices that address the problem of human suffering: The Three-Minute Breathing Space The Work The Practice of Inquiry The Sacred Breath Working with RAIN Nonviolent Communication (NVC) The Practice of Beginning Anew The Five Remembrances Compassion Practice On a contemplative kayaking retreat in the wilderness of southern Alaska, Peerman confronts the grasping of his small mind, organized around me and mine, and revels in the openness of the big mind which knows the truth of impermanence. In his probes on suffering, he comes to see that it is a waste of time to try to find out the cause of suffering better to focus on a way to follow when suffering comes. The Buddhist wisdom teachers proclaim that it is our resistance to what is that is the source of all our problems. Peerman does a fine job of explaining how the Work of Byron Katie is helpful in questioning our thoughts and stories about reality. Further explication comes with his comments on the ten believed thoughts that lead to suffering identified by Tara Bennett-Goleman. In an interesting chapter on Quiet Ambition, the author examines his external need to be seen and recognized as special, one who is immensely accomplished, along with his internal fears of not being good enough. Peerman holds this tension in his awareness and comes to a deeper realization of his reactivity. He brings the same mindfulness to anger and the option of transforming it into compassion and peace. On another retreat, Peerman deals with his own spiritual edge through the process of Nonviolent Communication espoused by Marshall Rosenberg. He uses the Beginning Anew ceremony developed by Thich Nhat Hanh with his wife and deals with his grief over the death of his father by bowing to the moment. Peerman closes with his involvement in a Mobile Loaves and Fishes project which enables him to practice compassion. He calls it a softening of the heart: Our work, our inner work, is to transform anger into justice, hurt into compassion, suffering into wisdom. --Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat Spirituality & Practice (11/20/2008) GORDON PEERMAN The Colbert Report recently featured a preacher exhorting his Christian God to use the presidential election to prove His superiority over Hindu, Buddha and Allah. It would be funny if it weren't so sad. In such an environment, Gordon Peerman's new book, Blessed Relief: What Christians Can Learn From Buddhists About Suffering (Skylight Paths, 182 pp., $16.99), is a welcome reminder that religion at its best isn't about divisiveness. It's about providing solace and promoting peace without regard for labels. An Episcopal priest and psychotherapist, as well as an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt, Peerman has studied Buddhist practice for decades. He gently demonstrates how our own expectations cause much of our suffering, and how we allow event the smallest annoyances to destroy our equanimity. And he doesn't exempt himself: At one retreat, a roommate with sleep apnea drives him to near-murderous thoughts: After two nights of no sleep, I found myself toying with the hope that, in the long silences between snores, my roommate might actually have died. Alas, he snored on. What Blessed Relief does best is to remind us that true faith builds bridges of kindness and compassion, whatever religion it happens to spring from. After his son causes an auto accident, Peerman uses Buddhist practice to overcome his irritation about the cost and inconvenience involved. When he calls the other boy's mother, her response is equally telling: We're Christians, she says, and we believe that blame never helps and that understanding and forgiveness do. Two people using their faith to communicate with each other instead of doing battle surely, the world would be a little better if everyone could follow their example. Gordon Peerman discusses and signs Blessed Relief: What Christians Can Learn From Buddhists About Suffering at Davis- Kidd Booksellers Nov. 6 at 7 p.m. FAYE JONES BLESSED--Faye Jones Nashville Scene (11/05/2008) The author of Blessed Relief has been an Episcopal priest for thirty years and found himself drawn to Buddhist spirituality. Through a time of illness he was drawn to Christian contemplative practices and was enriched by Buddhist teaching. Buddhism is not a religion so much as a philosophy. As such the believer can draw on its deep understanding of life, suffering, pain and conflict. I have found that this continues to draw us back to Jesus and the rich history of Christianity. Blessed Relief is inspiring, instructive and useful to those interested in prayer. I loved this book. It is easy to read, full of narrative stories and each chapter finishes with simple practices to experience blessed relief. The concept of mindfulness reminded me of Jesus' teaching as recorded in Matthew 6. Questioning our thoughts is at the heart of Buddhist practice. The chapters cover awareness, ambition, conflict, being an instrument of peace, beginning anew, dying and compassion. I especially loved the chapter on non-violent communication, a practice that would enrich our personal relationships as well as our communications within the communities of faith of which we are a part. Non-violent communication would assist in conflict resolution and mediation in church conflicts. Mr. Peerman's writings will not appeal to everybody, but as one who believes we can learn a lot from our believing sisters and brothers of other faiths, I found it instructional. In reading Blessed Relief I was led repeatedly back to the Christ and the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christian and Buddhist teachings.--Marian Zaunbrecher Journey - Website (09/07/2009) A spiritual banquet ... to heal our psyches and awaken our hearts. Helps us open to the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christianity and Buddhism. Tara Brach, clinical psychologist; author, Radical Acceptance Both a moving personal story and a source of valuable insight for all those who are wrestling with questions of suffering in their lives. It is a serious book that is also fun to read. Phillip Moffitt, founder and president of the Life Balance Institute; author, Dancing With Life Meets our contemporary struggles with refreshing clarity and power. Peerman's understated humor in relating ordinary life encounters frequently had me weeping with the laughter of self-recognition. Marjorie J. Thompson, author, Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life Exceptional . With uncommon vulnerability, engaging humor, and sure-footed counsel, Gordon Peerman invites us to hear and make our own a far vaster story arising from deep sources of wisdom East and West, whose language conveys the liberating spaciousness of being truly awake, aware and alive. John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal A guide to freedom from fear, filled with stories to make us laugh, sigh, cry, and wake up to compassion for ourselves and all the world. Margaret McGee, author, Sacred Attention: A Spiritual Practice for Finding God in the Moment Remarkable. A spiritual exploration that unites centuries of Buddhist teachings with Christian wisdom. [The] approach is not only inspired, but also eminently practical yet profoundly powerful. Derek Lin, translator/annotator, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained A spiritual banquet ... to heal our psyches and awaken our hearts. Helps us open to the unconditional love that is intrinsic to both Christianity and Buddhism. Tara Brach, clinical psychologist; author, Radical Acceptance Both a moving personal story and a source of valuable insight for all those who are wrestling with questions of suffering in their lives. It is a serious book that is also fun to read. Phillip Moffitt, founder and president of the Life Balance Institute; author, Dancing With Life Meets our contemporary struggles with refreshing clarity and power. Peerman's understated humor in relating ordinary life encounters frequently had me weeping with the laughter of self-recognition. Marjorie J. Thompson, author, Soul Feast: An Invitation to the Christian Spiritual Life Exceptional . With uncommon vulnerability, engaging humor, and sure-footed counsel, Gordon Peerman invites us to hear and make our own a far vaster story arising from deep sources of wisdom East and West, whose language conveys the liberating spaciousness of being truly awake, aware and alive. John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal A guide to freedom from fear, filled with stories to make us laugh, sigh, cry, and wake up to compassion for ourselves and all the world. Margaret McGee, author, Sacred Attention: A Spiritual Practice for Finding God in the Moment Remarkable. A spiritual exploration that unites centuries of Buddhist teachings with Christian wisdom. [The] approach is not only inspired, but also eminently practical yet profoundly powerful. Derek Lin, translator/annotator, Tao Te Ching: Annotated & Explained Gordon Peerman is an Episcopal priest and psychotherapist in private practice and an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt Divinity School, where he teaches seminars in Buddhist-Christian dialogue. He also teaches Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction at the Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health. For over 2,000 years, Buddhists have studied and dealt with the challenges and benefits of human suffering. In the process, they have also explored happiness, generosity, kindness, equanimity, and compassion. Peerman has spent 25 years in what he calls a dual citizenship in Christianity and Buddhism. In this enlightening book, he opens the door of freedom for us so we can leave fear and all its companion stories behind. Peerman shares many of his retreat experiences and presents nine practices that address the problem of human suffering: The Three-Minute Breathing Space The Work The Practice of Inquiry The Sacred Breath Working with RAIN Nonviolent Communication (NVC) The Practice of Beginning Anew The Five Remembrances Compassion Practice On a contemplative kayaking retreat in the wilderness of southern Alaska, Peerman confronts the grasping of his small mind, organized around me and mine, and revels in the openness of the big mind which knows the truth of impermanence. In his probes on suffering, he comes to see that it is a waste of time to try to find out the cause of suffering better to focus on a way to follow when suffering comes. The Buddhist wisdom teachers proclaim that it is our resistance to what is that is the source of all our problems. Peerman does a fine job of explaining how the Work of Byron Katie is helpful in questioning our thoughts and stories about reality. Further explication comes with his comments on the ten believed thoughts that lead to suffering identified by Tara Bennett-Goleman. In an interesting chapter on Quiet Ambition, the author examines his external need to be seen and recognized as special, one who is immensely accomplished, along with his internal fears of not being good enough. Peerman holds this tension in his awareness and comes to a deeper realization of his reactivity. He brings the same mindfulness to anger and the option of transforming it into compassion and peace. On another retreat, Peerman deals with his own spiritual edge through the process of Nonviolent Communication espoused by Marshall Rosenberg. He uses the Beginning Anew ceremony developed by Thich Nhat Hanh with his wife and deals with his grief over the death of his father by bowing to the moment. Peerman closes with his involvement in a Mobile Loaves and Fishes project which enables him to practice compassion. He calls it a softening of the heart: Our work, our inner work, is to transform anger into justice, hurt into compassion, suffering into wisdom. --Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat Spirituality & Practice (11/20/2008) Gordon Peerman is an Episcopal priest and psychotherapist in private practice and an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt Divinity School, where he teaches seminars in Buddhist-Christian dialogue. He also teaches Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction at the Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health.For over 2,000 years, Buddhists have studied and dealt with the challenges and benefits of human suffering. In the process, they have also explored happiness, generosity, kindness, equanimity, and compassion. Peerman has spent 25 years in what he calls a dual citizenship in Christianity and Buddhism. In this enlightening book, he opens the door of freedom for us so we can leave fear and all its companion stories behind. Peerman shares many of his retreat experiences and presents nine practices that address the problem of human suffering: The Three-Minute Breathing Space The Work The Practice of Inquiry The Sacred Breath Working with RAIN Nonviolent Communication (NVC) The Practice of Beginning Anew The Five Remembrances Compassion PracticeOn a contemplative kayaking retreat in the wilderness of southern Alaska, Peerman confronts the grasping of his small mind, organized around me and mine, and revels in the openness of the big mind which knows the truth of impermanence. In his probes on suffering, he comes to see that it is a waste of time to try to find out the cause of suffering better to focus on a way to follow when suffering comes.The Buddhist wisdom teachers proclaim that it is our resistance to what is that is the source of all our problems. Peerman does a fine job of explaining how the Work of Byron Katie is helpful in questioning our thoughts and stories about reality. Further explication comes with his comments on the ten believed thoughts that lead to suffering identified by Tara Bennett-Goleman. In an interesting chapter on Quiet Ambition, the author examines his external need to be seen and recognized as special, one Author InformationGordon Peerman is an Episcopal priest and psychotherapist in private practice, and an adjunct faculty member at Vanderbilt Divinity School, where he teaches seminars in Buddhist-Christian Dialogue. He also teaches Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction at the Vanderbilt Center for Integrative Health, as well as mindfulness practices to Vanderbilt Law School and Vanderbilt Medical School students. He and his wife, Kathy Woods, lead a weekly meditation with the Nashville Mindfulness Meditation Group. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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