The Mind Itself Is a Digression: Poems, Reflections, and Dialogues of Restless Seeker
Uitgelicht
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11,10 |
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11,10 |
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11,50 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
The mind itself is a digression - or so I am told.Somewhere between a poem scribbled past midnight and a four-hour phone call about God, China, and the meaning of it all, this book was born. It is a collection for the seekers, the misfits, the over-thinkers, and the quietly restless - the "slightly weird folks" who have spent a lifetime chasing the Truth, only to be told that whatever the mind understands is still not it.D. Samarender Reddy writes from that beautiful, maddening edge. Across more than a hundred pieces - original poems, candid confessions, and probing philosophical dialogues - he moves with disarming honesty between the sacred and the absurd, the sublime and the everyday. One moment he is arguing with God ("As I see it, it is all your fault"); the next he is sitting in silent reverence before the teachings of Ramana Maharshi, J. Krishnamurti, and the Upanishads.This is a book about the spiritual life as it is actually lived - not the polished version. It asks the questions most of us are too busy to ask: - Does companionship help or hinder the search for the Self?- Is the relentless pursuit of "more and more" the root of our suffering?- What remains when thought finally falls silent?- Can one be deeply devoted to the inner path and still ache with love, loneliness, and longing?Drawing on Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, Western philosophy, and world poetry - from Wordsworth and Neruda to Frost, Rimbaud, and Nietzsche - Reddy weaves Eastern wisdom and Western thought into a single, intimate conversation. His poems range from the tender to the irreverent; his reflections from razor-sharp clarity to playful self-mockery. Throughout, there is the warmth of a fellow traveller who refuses to pretend he has arrived.For readers of Rumi, Kahlil Gibran, Mary Oliver, and Nisargadatta - and for anyone who has ever felt out of step with the world and wondered whether the fault lies with them or with the world.If you have ever marched to a different drummer, if silence speaks to you louder than words, if you suspect that happiness was never "out there" to begin with - this book was written for you.Take heart. You are not alone.
The mind itself is a digression - or so I am told.Somewhere between a poem scribbled past midnight and a four-hour phone call about God, China, and the meaning of it all, this book was born. It is a collection for the seekers, the misfits, the over-thinkers, and the quietly restless - the "slightly weird folks" who have spent a lifetime chasing the Truth, only to be told that whatever the mind understands is still not it.D. Samarender Reddy writes from that beautiful, maddening edge. Across more than a hundred pieces - original poems, candid confessions, and probing philosophical dialogues - he moves with disarming honesty between the sacred and the absurd, the sublime and the everyday. One moment he is arguing with God ("As I see it, it is all your fault"); the next he is sitting in silent reverence before the teachings of Ramana Maharshi, J. Krishnamurti, and the Upanishads.This is a book about the spiritual life as it is actually lived - not the polished version. It asks the questions most of us are too busy to ask: - Does companionship help or hinder the search for the Self?- Is the relentless pursuit of "more and more" the root of our suffering?- What remains when thought finally falls silent?- Can one be deeply devoted to the inner path and still ache with love, loneliness, and longing?Drawing on Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, Western philosophy, and world poetry - from Wordsworth and Neruda to Frost, Rimbaud, and Nietzsche - Reddy weaves Eastern wisdom and Western thought into a single, intimate conversation. His poems range from the tender to the irreverent; his reflections from razor-sharp clarity to playful self-mockery. Throughout, there is the warmth of a fellow traveller who refuses to pretend he has arrived.For readers of Rumi, Kahlil Gibran, Mary Oliver, and Nisargadatta - and for anyone who has ever felt out of step with the world and wondered whether the fault lies with them or with the world.If you have ever marched to a different drummer, if silence speaks to you louder than words, if you suspect that happiness was never "out there" to begin with - this book was written for you.Take heart. You are not alone.
AmazonPagina's: 267, Paperback, Independently published
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