How to wake up A Buddhist-inspired guide to navigating joy and sorrow

Toni Bernhard

Book - 2013

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Subjects
Published
Boston : Wisdom Publications [2013]
Language
English
Main Author
Toni Bernhard (-)
Physical Description
viii, 231 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-218) and index.
ISBN
9781614290568
  • Introduction: Ten Thousand Joys, Ten Thousand Sorrows
  • Cultivating Wisdom
  • 1. Change, Change, Change
  • 2. Self as Ever-Shifting Flow
  • 3. Can't Get No Satisfaction
  • 4. Want/Don Want: The Unquenchable Thirst
  • 5. Looking More Deeply at Suffering and Dissatisfaction
  • 6. Five Habits of Mind that Are Obstacles to Waking Up
  • Cultivating Mindfulness
  • 7. The Mindfulness Path
  • 8. Tools for Sharpening Your Mindfulness Skills
  • 9. From Multiple Hindrance Attack to Five-Minute Mindfulness
  • 10. Choiceless Awareness
  • 11. Awakening to the Body through Mindfulness
  • 12. Death Awareness Practice
  • Cultivating an Open Heart: Kindness, Compassion, Appreciative Joy, and Equanimity
  • 13. The Psychological States of Awakened Beings
  • 14. To Cultivate an Open Heart, Set Aside Judging
  • 15. Kindness and Friendliness
  • 16. Compassion: Start with Yourself
  • 17. Appreciative Joy: An Antidote to Envy and Resentment
  • 18. Equanimity: Fully Engaging This Life as It Is
  • 19. Intentionally Turning Your Mind to the Sublime States
  • In the End...
  • 20. Onward Down the Path
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Expanding on the lessons of mindfulness and meditation found in her well-received How to Be Sick (2010), Bernhard switches gears to focus on the venerable and often intimidating idea of awakening. The author begins with the core idea that life is a string of experiences engendered by and producing suffering. From here Bernhard walks her readers through the concepts used in Buddhism to accept and engage this state of being and, in doing so, hopefully become more awake to the reality of life. The book is organized around three fundamental tenets of the Buddha's teachings wisdom, mindfulness, and open-mindedness with each section broken into chapters that examine these ideas and offer practices that help incorporate them into daily life. Bernhard presents all of this in an easy, straightforward manner that will reassure readers who are less familiar with Buddhist tradition. While this is an ideal book for people beginning to explore Buddhism or alternative methods to handling life's difficulties, this is also a useful book for the more experienced Buddhist or spiritual practitioner looking to revisit fundamental concepts of their practice.--Lagodzinski, Taina Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Drawing inspiration from the Buddha's awakening, Bernhard addresses this ancient tradition's core ideas in a wise, gentle guide to reducing suffering. Her previous book (How to Be Sick) described her efforts to adapt skillfully to a chronic, life-changing illness. Here she explores Buddhism's heart to show how "we have the potential to awaken to a peace and well-being that are not dependent on whether a particular experience is joyful or sorrowful." With assurance the author blends clear explanations, examples, and easy practices (such as the "tracing exercise" to identify the source of dissatisfaction) from her circumscribed life to explore how wisdom, mindfulness, and open-heartedness can improve well-being. The relevance of classic topics such as the three marks of existence (impermanence, no fixed self, and suffering) is deftly investigated. Her discussion of "tanha" (desire) teases out the difference between wholesome aspirations and harmful craving, a sometimes thorny topic for students of Buddhism. While the market is saturated with good introductions to Buddhism, Bernhard excels at demonstrating from personal knowledge that the Buddha's promises to ease suffering aren't just empty words. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved