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Paperback Learning to Breathe: One Woman's Journey of Spirit and Survival Book

ISBN: 0452295351

ISBN13: 9780452295353

Learning to Breathe: One Woman's Journey of Spirit and Survival

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

THE NATIONAL BESTSELLER An extraordinary spiritual memoir about the will to survive, one breath at a time, with a foreword by the Dalai Lama While traveling in Laos on a winding mountain road, the bus that award-winning photojournalist Alison Wright was riding in collided with a logging truck. As she waited fourteen hours for proper medical care-in excruciating pain, certain she was moments from death, she drew upon years of meditation practice and...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

this story will knock you down to the ground

Feeling a little low, a little defeated, down on your luck? Read this woman's miraculous story of survival and you'll wonder what you were whining about. I couldn't put it down, I read it straight through. It's a prime example of how the human body is fragile and tough in equal parts, and how spirit can transcend the physical. I was making my way through a very trying illness when I read this book and it inspired me to keep pushing.

AGONY AND ECSTASY

When photojournalist Alison Wright celebrated the Millenium with champagne and her fun-loving friends in Northern Thailand, she had no premonition that less than two days later she would be lying torn, broken, bleeding, and close to death on the side of a road in Laos. This book is about her almost accidental survival from a horrific bus accident, her struggle to win her way back to life, and her eventual return to the high-flying career that took her all over the world, from the North Pole to the South, the bottom of the ocean to Tibet, and always with her camera to record the essential message of what it means to be human. Her book is a compulsive read, interweaving the glamorous episodes of her life as a National Geographic and UNICEF photographer -- meeting Richard Gere, the Dalai Lama, Aung San Suu Kyi and other world leaders -- with the painstaking business of her recovery. Every step of the way we feel we are with her, unable to put her book down, taking it in with a single gulp -- from the frightened Laotian boy doctor trying to stitch up her lacerated arm with an upholstery needle and thread, to the diffcult tests she put herself through afterwards, some of them impossibly brave. Our attention is a given, our admiration is wholehearted. Like her many friends, we can only wonder what she is made of? What drives a person to defy every threat and toss eight out of her nine lives away in order to bring back pictures of humankind that may make the world care just a little more? We can only guess, in this profoundly personal account, by glimpsing the world through her own eyes. The spiritual side of her voyage is present -- she is a committed Buddhist and a meditator -- but it is personal courage that dominates the book. I will give copies to the people I know will enjoy it and only wish that perhaps it had some more of her photographs -- there are certainly some good ones -- and that another, fuller edition lies ahead and gets the attention it truly deserves.

Powerful and Inspiring!

Author Alison Wright's book "Learning to Breathe: One Women's Journey of Spirit and Survival" is more than just a personal story - it speaks of the greater self and our ability to find courage and power within. I was truly touched by reading her inspiring story. She takes what happens to her and moves past the pains and the potential hardships and learns something much greater about her own self. The reader is taken along on this spiritual journey of discovery. Alison is able to communicate her experiences not only in the physical sense of what was happening but also from a point of view that allows the reader to fully sense what she was feeling and thinking. The real story is her inner journey and that is what makes her work so much more powerful. I bought this book for my older sister to read as a birthday gift and will gift other women in my life with copies as well. I feel that women need to see and read about strong courageous women; and to me, Alison Wright truly represents what a true hero is. She faced her pain and fears and through her will power and determination she met her future dreams with success. This book is both inspirational and entertaining and will be hard to put down. I read it though in one sitting because I wanted to know the full story and how she came out. The book earns The American Authors Association's highest book rating of FIVE STARS. This book also gets my personal endorsement and fullest recommendations. This book is no doubt one of the top 10 best inspirational books of the last decade.

Outstanding Book

This is a book everyone should read - very inspirational whether you need it or not!

Never give up!

"Learning to Breathe" is a memoir by San Francisco-based photojournalist Alison Wright who flat-lined while on the operating table following a horrendous bus crash in Laos. Her doctors told her she should be dead, would never walk normally again, and recommended she put away her cameras and do something else with her life. Ms. Wright responded by climbing Africa's tallest peak, Mt. Kilimanjaro, and publishing several photo books. At one point, Ms Wright recalls someone asking, "What are you willing to give up to find what you are looking for?" What indeed!
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