The wise heart A guide to the universal teachings of Buddhist psychology

Jack Kornfield, 1945-

Book - 2008

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Subjects
Published
New York, N.Y. : Bantam Books 2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Jack Kornfield, 1945- (-)
Physical Description
x, 429 p. ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780553382334
9780553803471
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Who Are You Really?
  • 1. Nobility: Our Original Goodness
  • 2. Holding the World in Kindness: A Psychology of Compassion
  • 3. Who Looks in the Mirror? The Nature of Consciousness
  • 4. The Colorings of Consciousness
  • 5. The Mysterious Illusion of Self
  • 6. From the Universal to the Personal: A Psychology of Paradox
  • Part II. Mindfulness: The Great Medicine
  • 7. The Liberating Power of Mindfulness
  • 8. This Precious Human Body
  • 9. The River of Feelings
  • 10. The Storytelling Mind
  • 11. The Ancient Unconscious
  • Part III. Transforming The Roots Of Suffering
  • 12. Buddhist Personality Types
  • 13. The Transformation of Desire into Abundance
  • 14. Beyond Hatred to a Non-Contentious Heart
  • 15. From Delusion to Wisdom: Awakening from the Dream
  • Part IV. Finding Freedom
  • 16. Suffering and Letting Go
  • 17. The Compass of the Heart: Intention and Karma
  • 18. Sacred Vision: Imagination, Ritual, and Refuge
  • 19. Behaviorism with Heart: Buddhist Cognitive Training
  • 20. Concentration and the Mystical Dimensions of Mind
  • Part V. Embodying The Wise Heart
  • 21. A Psychology of Virtue, Redemption, and Forgiveness
  • 22. The Bodhisattva: Tending the World
  • 23. The Wisdom of the Middle Way
  • 24. The Awakened Heart
  • Related Readings
  • Permissions
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Author, psychologist and pioneering Buddhist teacher Kornfield writes his best book yet (and his previous ones were pretty good). His newest uses the same sweet narrative voice, provides convincing and illustrative anecdotes and stories, and reaches into world traditions and literature as well as contemporary scientific research. This book offers a systematic and well-organized view of Buddhist psychology, complete with occasional diagrams. Concepts and practices are placed in a framework that explains and connects them. It's all done with an eye toward application; most chapters end with exercises. Kornfield has been practicing Buddhism for close to 40 years, a lasting discipline that has produced this masterful book and a seasoned view of life that acknowledges a lot of oopses. As a mediator and psychologist, he has also witnessed some serious angst, including his own, and draws on it for illustrative power. Not everything here is new, least of all the title, but then the Buddha isn't either. The best is left for last: joy you can seek for yourself and others. Just keep your meditative seat, and this book by your bed. Kornfield comes across as the therapist you wish you'd had. (Apr. 29) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Introduction Last year I joined with Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh to co-lead a conference on mindfulness and psychotherapy at UCLA. As I stood at the podium looking over a crowd of almost two thousand people, I wondered what had drawn so many to this three-day gathering. Was it the need to take a deep breath and find a wiser way to cope with the conflict, stress, fears, and exhaustion so common in modern life? Was it the longing for a psychology that included the spiritual dimension and the highest human potential in its vision of healing? Was it a hope to find simple ways to quiet the mind and open the heart? I found that I had to speak personally and practically, as I do in this book. These conference participants wanted the same inspiration and support as the students who come to Spirit Rock Meditation Center near San Francisco.Those who enter our lightfilled meditation hall are not running away from life, but seeking a wise path through it.They each bring their personal problems and their genuine search for happiness. Often they carry a burden of concern for the world, with its continuing warfare and everdeepening environmental problems.They wonder what will be left for their children's generation.They have heard about meditation and hope to find the joy and inner freedom that Buddhist teachings promise, along with a wiser way to care for the world. Forty years ago, I arrived at a forest monastery in Thailand in search of my own happiness. A confused, lonely young man with a painful family history, I had graduated from Dartmouth College in Asian studies and asked the Peace Corps to send me to a Buddhist country. Looking back, I can see that I was trying to escape not only my family pain but also the materialism and suffering-so evident in the Vietnam War-of our culture at large.Working on rural health and medical teams in the provinces along the Mekong River, I heard about a meditation master, Ajahn Chah, who welcomed Western students. I was full of ideas and hopes that Buddhist teachings would help me, maybe even lead me to become enlightened. After months of visits to Ajahn Chah's monastery, I took monk's vows. Over the next three years I was introduced to the practices of mindfulness, generosity, loving-kindness, and integrity, which are at the heart of Buddhist training. That was the beginning of a lifetime journey with Buddhist teachings. Like Spirit Rock today, the forest monastery received a stream of visitors. Every day, Ajahn Chah would sit on a wooden bench at the edge of a clearing and greet them all: local rice farmers and devout pilgrims, seekers and soldiers, young people, government ministers from the capital, and Western students.All brought their spiritual questions and conflicts, their sorrows, fears, and aspirations. At one moment Ajahn Chah would be gently holding the head of a man whose young son had just died, at another laughing with a disillusioned shopkeeper at the arrogance of humanity. In the morning he might be teaching ethics to a semi-corrupt government official, in the afternoon offering a meditation on the nature of undying consciousness to a devout old nun. Even among these total strangers, there was a remarkable atmosphere of safety and trust. All were held by the compassion of the master and the teachings that guided us together in the human journey of birth and death, joy and sorrow.We sat together as one human family. Ajahn Chah and other Buddhist masters like him are practitioners of a living psychology: one of the oldest and most welldeveloped systems of healing and understanding on the face of the earth.This psychology makes no distinction between worldly and spiritual problems.To Ajahn Chah, anxiety, trauma, financial problems, physical difficulties, struggles with meditation, ethical dilemmas, and community conflict were all forms of suffering to be treated with the medicine of Buddhist t Excerpted from The Wise Heart: A Guide to the Universal Teachings of Buddhist Psychology by Jack Kornfield 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.