Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Recommended Reading

Dhammapada
Upanishads
Bhagavad Gita
Tao Te ChingHafiz (persian poet)



There are so many great books, because there are so many great teachers. I am well aware that there are many, many titles not on this list.

Every book contains information. The question is, will the book serve to help our transformation to a higher level of consciousness.

A book is a transmission of spirit from the author to the reader. The books I list here have served me well as textbooks for a lifelong course in higher consciousness. Most of them I have read and reread a number of times. My wish is that this list serves you in raising your own consciousness. Not everyone will resonate with every book. Just take a look, either in a bookstore or on the internet, and see if you feel drawn to any particular author or title.

Marshall Rosenberg  Non Violent Communication
Louise Hay            You Can Heal Your Life
The Dalai Lama    The Art of Happiness

          Joel Goldsmith-any title you find by him

Most of these folks have lots of other great works out there in addition to the titles I mention.
Ram Dass     Be Here Now
Aldous Huxley     The Perennial Philosophy
Emmanuel     Emmanuel’s Book  
Thich Nhat Hanh     The Miracle of Mindfulness
Jacob Needleman     Money and the Meaning of Life
Carolyn Myss     Anatomy of the Spirit
Emmet Fox    The Sermon on the Mount
Bernard Gunther      Energy Ecstasy
Christian Science Testimonials of Healing


THE MIND
NLP The New Technology of Achievement
Meeting the Shadow a collection of essays


Reincarnation
Gladys V. Jones     The Flowering Tree
Gina Cerminara     Many Mansions


PHYSICAL  body and food
Stephen Chang     Internal Exercises
Thomas Hanna     Somatics
Macrobiotics-lots of books out there
Yoga- pick the style that suits you
William Dufty     Sugar Blues
Bob Anderson     Stretching
50 Simple Things You Can Do to Save the Earth

This is cut and pasted from my website. I'm not computer literate enough to know how to reformat, and i'm not ready to retype the whole thing (i'm a very slow typist), but the books are worth reading. I've just listed a few, trying for a manageable set of basics, rather than an exhaustive list.

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