To Life brings to paper the authors thirty-year journey of inner and outer exploration. It aims to support the readers toward the way back home and to ultimately contribute to humanity and our planet. The author recognises that it is only by means of each individual coming home that personal lives can be enriched and bettered and that hope can be brought to todays troubled world and humanity. To Life asks the essential questions about life, humanity, and individual existencequestions that must be asked if we are to live consciously, meaningfully, joyfully, and fully and be whole and at peace with ourselves, with each other, and with all life on this planet. To Life is not only inspirational but also practical. The nature of an inner journey with its potential joys and trials unveils as the author takes the readers by the hand, supports, encourages, and guides them toward taking the steps required to make their own discoveries and to realise who they are at essence as human beings and as the individuals they are. Indeed, they are shown the path back home. These steps include the unveiling of the human condition with its gifts and pitfalls, the discovery of ones centre and learning how to stay with it, the unveiling of the mystery of lifes experiences, of ones feelings and thoughts and learning how to be with them, and the realisation of the true power, freedom, and love within.
Religion and Judaism From A Different Perspective were written for people of all faiths as well as for people of no faith. It was not written for people of the Jewish faith only. Religion and Judaism From A Different Perspective offer the answers so desperately needed to turn around the wheels of our ‘broken’ world – A world where suffering is (and has been) inflicted by humans on each other in the name of religion and ‘God’ as well as in the name of ‘no religion’ and ‘no God’. The author – Rachel Angel-Sussman - invites you to join her on a journey… The first part of the journey – Religion From A Different Perspective – is a journey into self. It aims to prompt personal insights, realizations, and re-connection with one’s core of being, with the truth of who we each are, and with the truth about the nature of religion and how it can fail and transform its ‘music’ to an ‘unbearable noise’. The second part of the journey – Judaism From A different Perspective – is a journey into Judaism. However, the process and principles of exploration employed apply to all religions and non-religions, and the reflections and messages apply to us all by means of our shared humanity. Each reader is invited to apply this process, principles, reflections, and messages to themselves and to the religion they either practice or reject. The author believes that not only our inner (personal) and outer (collective) peace, but also the future of the human race, are subject to the willingness to take this journey and come Home – to our Soul and our Humanity…
To Life brings to paper the authors thirty-year journey of inner and outer exploration. It aims to support the readers toward the way back home and to ultimately contribute to humanity and our planet. The author recognises that it is only by means of each individual coming home that personal lives can be enriched and bettered and that hope can be brought to todays troubled world and humanity. To Life asks the essential questions about life, humanity, and individual existencequestions that must be asked if we are to live consciously, meaningfully, joyfully, and fully and be whole and at peace with ourselves, with each other, and with all life on this planet. To Life is not only inspirational but also practical. The nature of an inner journey with its potential joys and trials unveils as the author takes the readers by the hand, supports, encourages, and guides them toward taking the steps required to make their own discoveries and to realise who they are at essence as human beings and as the individuals they are. Indeed, they are shown the path back home. These steps include the unveiling of the human condition with its gifts and pitfalls, the discovery of ones centre and learning how to stay with it, the unveiling of the mystery of lifes experiences, of ones feelings and thoughts and learning how to be with them, and the realisation of the true power, freedom, and love within.
Religion and Judaism From A Different Perspective were written for people of all faiths as well as for people of no faith. It was not written for people of the Jewish faith only. Religion and Judaism From A Different Perspective offer the answers so desperately needed to turn around the wheels of our ‘broken’ world – A world where suffering is (and has been) inflicted by humans on each other in the name of religion and ‘God’ as well as in the name of ‘no religion’ and ‘no God’. The author – Rachel Angel-Sussman - invites you to join her on a journey… The first part of the journey – Religion From A Different Perspective – is a journey into self. It aims to prompt personal insights, realizations, and re-connection with one’s core of being, with the truth of who we each are, and with the truth about the nature of religion and how it can fail and transform its ‘music’ to an ‘unbearable noise’. The second part of the journey – Judaism From A different Perspective – is a journey into Judaism. However, the process and principles of exploration employed apply to all religions and non-religions, and the reflections and messages apply to us all by means of our shared humanity. Each reader is invited to apply this process, principles, reflections, and messages to themselves and to the religion they either practice or reject. The author believes that not only our inner (personal) and outer (collective) peace, but also the future of the human race, are subject to the willingness to take this journey and come Home – to our Soul and our Humanity…
The Marriage of Minds examines the implications of the common Victorian claim that novel reading can achieve the psychic, ethical, and affective benefits also commonly associated with sympathy in married life. Through close readings of canonical texts in relation to the histories of sympathy, marriage, and reading, The Marriage of Minds begins to fill a long-standing gap between eighteenth-century philosophical notions of sympathy and twentieth-century psychoanalytic concepts of identification. It examines the wide variety of ways in which novels were understood to educate or reform readers in the mid-nineteenth century. Finally, it demonstrates how both the form of the Victorian novel and the experience supposed to result from that form were implicated in ongoing debates about the nature, purpose, and law of marriage.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.