A new earth Awakening to your life's purpose

Eckhart Tolle, 1948-

Book - 2005

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Subjects
Published
New York, N.Y. : Dutton/Penguin Group c2005.
Language
English
Main Author
Eckhart Tolle, 1948- (-)
Physical Description
315 p. ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 311-313).
ISBN
9780525948025
9780452289963
  • Chapter 1. The Flowering of Human Consciousness
  • Evocation
  • The Purpose of This Book
  • Our Inherited Dysfunction
  • The Arising New Consciousness
  • Spirituality and Religion
  • The Urgency of Transformation
  • A New Heaven and a New Earth
  • Chapter 2. Ego: The Current State of Humanity
  • The Illusory Self
  • The Voice in the Head
  • Content and Structure of the Ego
  • Identification with Things
  • The Lost Ring
  • The Illusion of Ownership
  • Wanting: The Need for More
  • Identification with the Body
  • Feeling the Inner Body
  • Forgetfulness of Being
  • From Descartes's Error to Sartre's Insight
  • The Peace That Passes All Understanding
  • Chapter 3. The Core of Ego
  • Complaining and Resentment
  • Reactivity and Grievances
  • Being Right, Making Wrong
  • In Defense of an Illusion
  • Truth: Relative or Absolute?
  • The Ego Is Not Personal
  • War Is a Mind-set
  • Do You Want Peace or Drama?
  • Beyond Ego: Your True Identity
  • All Structures Are Unstable
  • The Ego's Need to Feel Superior
  • Ego and Fame
  • Chapter 4. Role-playing: The Many Faces of the Ego
  • Villain, Victim, Lover
  • Letting Go of Self-Definitions
  • Pre-established Roles
  • Temporary Roles
  • The Monk with Sweaty Palms
  • Happiness as a Role Vs. True Happiness
  • Parenthood: Role or Function?
  • Conscious Suffering
  • Conscious Parenting
  • Recognizing Your Child
  • Giving Up Role-playing
  • The Pathological Ego
  • The Background Unhappiness
  • The Secret of Happiness
  • Pathological Forms of Ego
  • Work-With and Without Ego
  • The Ego in Illness
  • The Collective Ego
  • Incontrovertible Proof of Immortality
  • Chapter 5. The Pain-Body
  • The Birth of Emotion
  • Emotions and the Ego
  • The Duck with a Human Mind
  • Carrying the Past
  • Individual and Collective
  • How the Pain-Body Renews Itself
  • How the Pain-Body Feeds on Your Thoughts
  • How the Pain-Body Feeds on Drama
  • Dense Pain-Bodies
  • Entertainment, the Media, and the Pain-Body
  • The Collective Female Pain-Body
  • National and Racial Pain-Bodies
  • Chapter 6. Breaking Free
  • Presence
  • The Return of the Pain-Body
  • The Pain-Body in Children
  • Unhappiness
  • Breaking Identification with the Pain-Body
  • "Triggers"
  • The Pain-Body as an Awakener
  • Breaking Free of the Pain-Body
  • Chapter 7. Finding Who You Truly Are
  • Who You Think You Are
  • Abundance
  • Knowing Yourself and Knowing About Yourself
  • Chaos and Higher Order
  • Good and Bad
  • Not Minding What Happens
  • Is That So?
  • The Ego and the Present Moment
  • The Paradox of Time
  • Eliminating Time
  • The Dreamer and the Dream
  • Going Beyond Limitation
  • The Joy of Being
  • Allowing the Diminishment of the Ego
  • As Without, So Within
  • Chapter 8. The Discovery of Inner Space
  • Object Consciousness and Space Consciousness
  • Falling Below and Rising Above Thought
  • Television
  • Recognizing Inner Space
  • Can You Hear the Mountain Stream?
  • Right Action
  • Perceiving Without Naming
  • Who Is the Experiencer?
  • The Breath
  • Addictions
  • Inner Body Awareness
  • Inner and Outer Space
  • Noticing the Gaps
  • Lose Yourself to Find Yourself
  • Stillness
  • Chapter 9. Your Inner Purpose
  • Awakening
  • A Dialogue on Inner Purpose
  • Chapter 10. A New Earth
  • A Brief History of Your Life
  • Awakening and the Return Movement
  • Awakening and the Outgoing Movement
  • Consciousness
  • Awakened Doing
  • The Three Modalities of Awakened Doing
  • Acceptance
  • Enjoyment
  • Enthusiasm
  • The Frequency-holders
  • The New Earth Is No Utopia
  • Notes
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

According to Tolle, who assumes the role of narrator as well, humans are on the verge of creating a new world by a personal transformation that shifts our attention away from our ever-expanding egos. This idea is well realized through Tolle's remarkably well-paced narration. Naturally, the author understands his material so thoroughly that he is able to convey it in an enjoyable manner, but Tolle's gentle tone and dialect begs his audience's attention simply through its straightforward approach. Something about this reading just seems profoundly important, whether one agrees with the material or not, and listeners' attention is sure to be captured within seconds of listening to Tolle's take on the universe in which we live. Originally released in 2005, both book and audiobook were reissued when Oprah Winfrey chose the title for her book club this year. A Penguin paperback. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Tolle follows up his successful The Power of Now-it's sold two million copies worldwide since 1997-with a plea to reject egotistic ways for a new form of consciousness. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

The Flowering of Human Consciousness Evocation Earth, 114 million years ago, one morning just after sunrise: The first flower ever to appear on the planet opens up to receive the rays of the sun. Prior to this momentous event that heralds an evolutionary transformation in the life of plants, the planet had already been covered in vegetation for millions of years. The first flower probably did not survive for long, and flowers must have remained rare and isolated phenomena, since conditions were most likely not yet favorable for a widespread flowering to occur. One day, however, a critical threshold was reached, and suddenly there would have been an explosion of color and scent all over the planet--if a perceiving consciousness had been there to witness it. Much later those delicate and fragrant beings we call flowers would come to play an essential part in the evolution of consciousness of another species. Humans would increasingly be drawn to and fascinated by them. As the consciousness of human beings developed, flowers were most likely the first thing they came to value that had no utilitarian purpose for them, that is to say, was not linked in some way to survival. They provided inspiration to countless artists, poets, and mystics. Jesus tells us to contemplate the flowers and learn from them how to live. The Buddha is said to have given a "silent sermon" once during which he held up a flower and gazed at it. After a while, one of those present, a monk called Mahakasyapa, began to smile. He is said to have been the only one who had understood the sermon. According to legend, that smile (that is to say, realization) was handed down by twenty-eight successive masters and much later became the origin of Zen. Seeing beauty in a flower could awaken humans, however briefly, to the beauty that is an essential part of their own innermost being, their true nature. The first recognition of beauty was one of the most significant events in the evolution of human consciousness. The feelings of joy and love are intrinsically connected to that recognition. Without our fully realizing it, flowers would become for us an expression in form of that which is most high, most sacred, and ultimately formless within ourselves. Flowers, more fleeting, more ethereal, and more delicate than the plants out of which they emerged, would become like messengers from another realm, like a bridge between the world of physical forms and the formless. They not only had a scent that was delicate and pleasing to humans, but also brought a fragrance from the realm of spirit. Using the word "enlightenment" in a wider sense than the conventionally accepted one, we could look upon flowers as the enlightenment of plants. Any life-form in any realm--mineral, vegetable, animal, or human--can be said to undergo "enlightenment." It is, however, an extremely rare occurrence since it is more than an evolutionary progression: It also implies a discontinuity in its development, a leap to an entirely different level of Being and, most importantly, a lessening of materiality. What could be heavier and more impenetrable than a rock, the densest of all forms? And yet some rocks undergo a change in their molecular structure, turn into crystals, and so become transparent to the light. Some carbons, under inconceivable heat and pressure, turn into diamonds, and some heavy minerals into other precious stones. Most crawling reptilians, the most earthbound of all creatures, have remained unchanged for millions of years. Some, however, grew feathers and wings and turned into birds, thus defying the force of gravity that had held them for so long. They didn't become better at crawling or walking, but transcended crawling and walking entirely. Since time immemorial, flowers, crystals, precious stones, and birds have held special significance for the human spirit. Like all life-forms, they are, of course, temporary manifestations of the underlying one Life, one Consciousness. Their special significance and the reason why humans feel such fascination for and affinity with them can be attributed to their ethereal quality. Once there is a certain degree of Presence, of still and alert attention in human beings' perceptions, they can sense that there is more there than the mere physical existence of that form, without knowing that this is the reason why he or she is drawn toward it, feels an affinity with it. Because of its ethereal nature, its form obscures the indwelling spirit to a lesser degree than is the case with other life-forms. The exception to this are all newborn life-forms--babies, puppies, kittens, lambs, and so on. They are fragile, delicate, not yet firmly established in materiality. An innocence, sweetness and beauty that are not of this world still shine through them. They delight even relatively insensitive humans. So when you are alert and contemplate a flower, crystal, or bird without naming it mentally, it becomes a window for you into the formless. There is an inner opening, however slight, into the realm of spirit. This is why these three "en-lightened" life-forms have played such an important part in the evolution of human consciousness since ancient times; why, for example, the jewel in the lotus flower is a central symbol of Buddhism and a white bird, the dove, signifies the Holy Spirit in Christianity. They have been preparing the ground for a more profound shift in planetary consciousness that is destined to take place in the human species. This is the spiritual awakening that we are beginning to witness now. The Purpose of This Book Is humanity ready for a transformation of consciousness, an inner flowering so radical and profound that compared to it the flowering of plants, no matter how beautiful, is only a pale reflection? Can human beings lose the density of their conditioned mind structures and become like crystals or precious stones, so to speak, transparent to the light of consciousness? Can they defy the gravitational pull of materialism and materiality and rise above identification with form that keeps the ego in place and condemns them to imprisonment within their own personality? The possibility of such a transformation has been the central message of the great wisdom teachings of humankind. The messengers--Buddha, jesus, and others, not all of them known--were humanity's early flowers. They were precursors, rare and precious beings. A widespread flowering was not yet possible at that time, and their message became largely misunderstood and often greatly distorted. It certainly did not transform human behavior, except in a small minority of people. Is humanity more ready now than at the time of those early teachers? Why should this be so? What can you do, if anything, to bring about or accelerate this inner shift? What is it that characterizes the old egoic state of consciousness recognized? These and other essential questions will be addressed in this book. More important, this book itself is a transformational device that has come out of the arising new consciousness. The ideas and concepts presented here may be important, but they are secondary. They are no more than signposts pointing toward awakening. As you read, a shift takes place within you. This book's main purpose is not to add new information or beliefs to your mind or to try to convince you of anything, but to bring about a shift in consciousness, that is to say, to awaken. In that sense, this book is not "interesting." Interesting means you can keep your distance, play around with ideas and concepts in your mind, agree or disagree. This book is about you. It will change your state of consciousness or it will be meaningless. It can only awaken those who are ready. Not everyone is ready yet, but many are, and with each person who awakens, the momentum in the collective consciousness grows, and it becomes easier for others. If you don't know what awakening means, read on. Only by awakening can you know the true meaning of that word. A glimpse is enough to initiate the awakening process, which is irreversible. For some, that glimpse will come while reading this book. For many others who may not even have realized it, the process has already begun. This book will help them recognize it. For some, it may have begun through loss or suffering; for others, through coming into contact with a spiritual teacher or teaching, through reading The Power of Now or some other spiritually alive and therefore transformational book--or any combination of the above. If the awakening process has begun in you, the reading of this book will accelerate and intensify it. An essential part of the awakening is the recognition of the unawakened you, the ego as it thinks, speaks, and acts, as well as the recognition of the collectively conditioned mental processes that perpetuate the unawakened state. That is why this book shows the main aspects of the ego and how they operate in the individual as well as in the collective. This is important for two related reasons: The first is that unless you know the basic mechanics behind the workings of the ego, you won't recognize it, and it will trick you into identifying with it again and again. This means it takes you over, an imposter pretending to be you. The second reason is that the act of recognition itself is one of the ways in which awakening happens. When you recognize the unconsciousness in you, that which makes the recognition possible is the arising consciousness, is awakening. You cannot fight against darkness. The light of consciousness is all that is necessary. You are that light. Excerpted from A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose by Eckhart Tolle All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.