| A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose |  | Author: Eckhart Tolle Publisher: Dutton Adult 2005 Category: Book
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Avg. Customer Rating: 1170 reviews Sales Rank: 2786773
Format: Import Media: Paperback Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.3 x 1.1
ISBN: 0718148576 EAN: 9780718148577 ASIN: 0718148576
Publication Date: 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New! Immediate Shipment!
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Exclusive Content Click on the image below to download an exclusive essay by Eckhart Tolle, in .pdf format. More From Eckhart Tolle  The Power of Now |  Practicing The Power of Now |  Stillness Speaks |  Living a Life of Inner Peace Unabridged Audio CD |  Gateways to Now (Inner Life Series) Audio CD |  Eckhart Tolle's Findhorn Retreat: Stillness Amidst the World Unabridged Audio CD |
Product Description A spiritual classic. A number-one New York Times bestseller. An international phenomenon. The Power of Now established Eckhart Tolle as one of today's leading spiritual thinkers. And now his long-awaited new book takes his inspiring message to the next level of understanding.
Unabridged CDs - 6 CDs, 7 12 hours
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1165 more reviews...
A New Earth July 25, 2008 This is a GREAT book I really enjoyed the message. It really makes you THINK. It's helped change my life. The way I look at things and the way I handle everyday things. I recommend this audio book !!
Looking for a Few Nuggets? July 25, 2008 I said once in an essay that I've spent my life preparing for destiny and not much wading through the sands of it. I meant I'd spent all my energy searching and gobbling up hoards of incessant words and thoughts of someone I thought had more of an insight than I was capable of coming up with, gurus' books and self help outlines. Finally, jaded with definitions of ego and managing thought patterns, I find the books no longer hold my attention. I did read A New Earth, disregarding my 25 page rule (if a book doesn't do anything for you in the first 25 pages, discard it) because I didn't want to miss anything so highly advertised. I found a few nuggets. Something can be gleaned from almost all books, and this one does trigger an awareness of the present moment and being, even if all of it doesn't resonate. "The more shared past there is in a relationship, the more present you need to be; otherwise, you will be forced to relive the past again and again." "Being one with life you realize you don't live your life, life lives you. Life is the dancer, we are the dance." "When you shift from thinking to awareness, an intelligence begins to operate in your life." "Your personal history which is no more than a story, a bundle of thoughts and emotions, no longer forms the basis of your identity. You are being, an awareness that is prior to and deeper than thought and emotion." "The greater part of most people's thinking is involuntary, automatic, and repetitive... mental static. Thinking happens to you." "If you are content with being nobody in particular..., you align yourself with the power of the universe." "Non-resistance, non-judgment, and non-attachment are the three aspects of true freedom and enlightened living." "Nothing ever happened in the past that can prevent you from being present now; and if the past cannot prevent you from being present now, what power does it have?" The story of the math professor's surrender to severe limitation was touching and toward the end, Three Modalities made sense. But overall, I found the book complex and parts even offensive: the pain-body feeds on negative thoughts and awakens hungry when it is time to replenish, a psychic parasite. "The Return of the Pain-Body" chapter sounds like it was extracted from some old time religion evangelist's sermon about demons. Simply stating, you might say that what psychiatrists define as ego is just varying degrees of sensitivity. It seems that those suffering less from thoughts and emotions are those who are less conscious. Tolle says there are no random events, that causes are virtually infinite. How can anyone be sure of that? The book is alarmingly narcissist, as it deals only with the first person in lieu of what you can do for other people, which in my opinion, is the simple key to a healthy mind. By all means, give it a try, but you might take the author's own advice, "Don't seek the truth. Just cease to cherish opinions." When you delve into 300 pages of trying to treat the symptoms and not the cause, you start meeting yourself coming, start sounding contradictory. For every thousand words that mean nothing to us, are a few carefully chosen ones that through the writer's intelligence and skill inspire us to great heights. Recommend: The Thrill of Hope, Concepts to Ponder. Amazon.com The bottom line is that this is my opinion and response. Everyone has one.
Sacrament of the Present Moment : rewritten, but without the love. July 25, 2008 In short: traditional Catholic spirituality rewritten in the current vocabulary. The evidence? Eckhart Tolle (pg.225): (1) non-resistance (2) non-judgment, (3) non-attachment Ignatian Banners of Christ (in the Spiritual Exercises) (1) vulnerability (2) humility (3) poverty Or take Eckart's sense of Presence and the Now. Here's a quote from "The Sacrament of the Present Moment" by Jean Pierre Caussade, a humble eighteenth century priest " And so we leave God to act in everything, reserving for ourselves only love and obedience to the present moment. For this is our eternal duty. This compelling love, steeped in silence, is required of every soul...Pure, simple and sure, it is a straight path along which souls walk with courage and faith, looking neither to the right nor to the left, unconcerned with everything else. " Or page 78 in "A New Earth" "This is why we call it Presence. The ultimate purpose of human existence, which is to say, your purpose, is to bring that power into this world." Isn't this a rephrasing of what it means to be in Christ? To be alive with the Holy Spirit in Christ? There are many such examples. What is strange is Eckhart's explicit anti-Catholicism. On page 70, for example, he draws a parallel between the Catholic Church, in the first paragraph, and Pol Pot, in the second. I didn't uncover any of his own opinions which seemed at odds with Catholic tradition, although there is much that is missing - and vital - a concern with social justice being chief here, or a respect for the discipline of communal life. I would say that the Catholic antidote to the ego is living in a web of relationships which we call community, where we learn to respond to God's love in the present moment. Eckhart Tolle's antidote to ego seems to be rather more solitary and less loving.
Way Out of Suffering & Into Peace July 24, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
"A New Earth" offers unique insights into suffering and the way to peace. Much of the material relates to a Buddhist perspective but the message is universal. Unlike his previous book "The Power of Now," which was focused strictly on personal transformation, this book takes a broader perspective. This book is about transforming the self and the world.
The message can be life-changing with insights on suffering, peace, beauty and social interaction. A must-read for a broad perspective on suffering and peace.
Another book that you have to read is "Nexus: A Neo Novel." "Nexus" offers an experiential story of suffering, and finding love and peace.
life-changing July 24, 2008 If this book doesn't change your outlook on life, nothing will. I bought the book and the audiobook, but if you're deciding between the two, I recommend the audiobook. It's read by the author and his warm and friendly voice, tone, and inflection really helped me absorb his powerful lessons.
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