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A follow-up to the perennial best-seller "There Is Nothing Wrong with You", this book gives readers the opportunity to pinpoint the practices in their lives that hinder their happiness and success and replace them with practices that will enhance their well-being. Examples of everyday issues - and the accompanying, unconscious practices - that can weigh a person down, such as weight gain, sleeplessness, trouble at work, and family life, are addressed with clarity and humour. Employing the tools and techniques of Zen awareness, this guide helps readers make their lives better by freeing themselves from the barrage of repetitive thoughts that constantly besiege the average person.
This book combines the psychological concept of acceptance with
ancient Buddhist teachings about the chain of interdependent
origination, which provides immediately usable tools for looking at
how suffering happens and how to let that go. Stressing the theme
of accepting what life brings, it reveals what acceptance is and
what stands in the way of being able to accept life's ups and
downs. Four steps for combating resistance are also provided.
Employing the tenets of Zen Buddhist awareness practice, the book provides numerous exercises and self-help tools for working through problems with resistance, revealing how resistance operates in everyday life and guiding readers to consider how they can be free of it. The teachings in this book show how to recognize resistance in its many forms, not take it personally, and be free of its control. The platform is that the voice of resistance—thoughts such as I'll do it later—is not personal; everyone has it. Instead, it is the voice of a survival system that can take people from commitment to inaction in a matter of seconds. Then, self-hating voices level internal accusations for not having followed through, including thoughts of failure, shame, and lack of self-discipline.
Chosen for impact, clarity, and humour, these one-per-day quotations come from a wide variety of sources: Zen masters; Christian and Sufi mystics; Eastern and Western philosophers; poets ancient and modern; and living artists, writers, and comedians. Each entry also contains a question to prompt self-examination, making the calendar a year-long course in fending off destructive thoughts and finding inner certainty.
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