This humorous and insightful journey through a place where few would ever go to attain enlightenment shows that we can find ourselves anywhere, even in a place where we would rather not be.
Most of us go through life barely skimming the surface. If we took time to enjoy each moment fully,we could gain tremendous insights and enjoy ourselves at the same time. We are all intuitive...it's our natural gift, but we have ignored this gift.James Twyman gives us a wonderful opportunity to look at the 'mundane' things and see what is really there at a more sublime level. Thanks to him, others can be guided to see a broader perspective.Everything is from the ONE source....so it is all spiritual.Spirituality should be lived every moment,whatever we are doing.
Look for the hidden meaning in every event
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Is the question of enlightenment important to you? Have you been reading books or attending seminars that could help you along the path to enlightenment? Have you entertained the thought that you are already enlightened? Is it possible that we can find enlightenment anywhere, at any time and even in the shopping mall? Is it possible that the last person you would think of as your teacher - a person serving coffee or mending shoes or cleaning the office - could be the one who brings you the message of enlightenment? Could it be that we don't have to go to expensive seminars but that we can find enlightenment in our everyday life? Could it be that everyday events occur that we just brush off but which if properly understood could help to remove the veil covering our eyes? This book is all about how we experience day-to-day events in our ordinary environment and that enlightenment is right there waiting for us if only we take the time to step back and be open to seeing events for what they really are. Let me touch on a few items in Lessons 1 and 2 so that you can determine for yourself whether this book might be of help to you.Surprisingly, Twyman tells us that the mall can be a very spiritual place if you look at it in the right way. With the wrong attitude all you see is commercial crap and people walking around as if asleep. Change the intent and everything changes; it is like being at a retreat at a monastery. "They're all angels in here teaching me about God, and truth, and enlightenment." "When most people need a break or a spiritual retreat, they go to the mountains, or the desert, or to a monastery, to pray for a week. I've decided to spend a week at the mall and see what spiritual insights come to me."Twyman was raised a Christian, once studied to be a priest and focussed on how he was different from everyone else. He had different beliefs from a Buddhist and focussed on differences to separate rather than bring together. Now he chooses to focus on things in which we are the same - peace for example. We all want to live lives of peace - whether we are Christian, Jew or Hindu. Focusing on that, the differences melt away. Being a Christian he focuses on what Jesus taught and not His personality. Jesus taught peace and compassion, just like Buddha or any other enlightened individual. At the shoe repair shop, the old Oriental man told him that he thinks of his work as being very much like life. People bring their worn, dull shoes and expect him to bring them back to life like a healer. Shoes are vastly underrated; if they hurt your feet they are worthless, no matter how well shined. If they are comfortable you go through the day happy and with a smile. Feet determine the direction not only of your step but also of your mood. Shoes are a metaphor for life. We are all healers. But nothing can happen until we are ready. Till then life just passes us by. Attention and love go so far. This man who had repaired shoes all his life following the tradi
An ordinary book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
When I began to read this book at first I thought, "What is this man doing?" I tend to be a heavy reader and read heavy works. James Twyman's "Ten Spiritual Lessons" is sheer lightweight. Reading further I realized there isn't anything wrong with that. I've hit an exceptionally heavy time of my life watching my mother slowly lose her life to Alzheimer's Disease. Sometimes I can't concetrate on anything else but my mother and my usual deep studies are just too much. Why Twyman's book caught my attention I didn't know at the time, but his uncomplicated writing style and vignettes took me away from difficult places and I actually had a hard time putting the book down. I even started to look at some of the most ordinary people and situations in my own life for the innate spiritual presence that truly exists everywhere. How silly the whole book seems, as I found myself often shaking my head. A retreat in the mall of all places. Did he write this because he had a deadline and he needed something simple? Well, I know I needed something simple for now--and I came away from his book energized and not so saddened by the seriousness that life takes at times, or by its appearance of superficiality. That is the paradox of the book: Its lightweight approach brings the reader to a deeper sense of compassion for the most ordinary of people and places. For what he set out to do I have to give it a five.If you're looking for heavy reading, this isn't it. If your life is heavy and you need a reprieve, you've come to the right place. I thank Jim for that reprieve.
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