When things fall apart Heart advice for difficult times

Pema Chödrön

Book - 1997

Traditional Buddhist wisdom for working with suffering shows how to use all situations, even painful ones, as a means for discovering the kind of peace that is utterly indestructible.

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2nd Floor 294.3444/Chodron Due Nov 29, 2024
2nd Floor 294.3444/Chodron Due Dec 4, 2024
Subjects
Published
Boston : Shambhala 1997.
Language
English
Main Author
Pema Chödrön (-)
Physical Description
148 p.
ISBN
9781611803433
9781570629693
9781590302262
9781570623448
9781570621604
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1. Intimacy with Fear
  • 2. When Things Fall Apart
  • 3. This Very Moment Is the Perfect Teacher
  • 4. Relax As It Is
  • 5. It's Never Too Late
  • 6. Not Causing Harm
  • 7. Hopelessness and Death
  • 8. Eight Worldly Dharmas
  • 9. Six Kinds of Loneliness
  • 10. Curious about Existence
  • 11. Nonaggression and the Four Maras
  • 12. Growing Up
  • 13. Widening the Circle of Compassion
  • 14. The Love That Will Not Die
  • 15. Going against the Grain
  • 16. Servants of Peace
  • 17. Opinions
  • 18. Secret Oral Instructions
  • 19. Three Methods for Working with Chaos
  • 20. The Trick of Choicelessness
  • 21. Reversing the Wheel of Samsara
  • 22. The Path Is the Goal
  • Afterword to the 20th Anniversary Edition
  • Bibliography
  • Resources
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Pema Chodron, a student of Chogyam Trunpa Rinpoche and Abbot of Gampo Abbey, has written the Tibetan Buddhist equivalent of Harold Kushner's famous book, When Bad Things Happen to Good People. As the author indicates in the postscript to her book: "We live in difficult times. One senses a possibility they may get worse." Consequently, Chodron's book is filled with useful advice about how Buddhism helps readers to cope with the grim realities of modern life, including fear, despair, rage and the feeling that we are not in control of our lives. Through reflections on the central Buddhist teaching of right mindfulness, Chodron orients readers and gives them language with which to shape their thinking about the ordinary and extraordinary traumas of modern life. But most importantly, Chodron demonstrates how effective the Buddhist point of view can be in bringing order into disordered lives. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved