Synopses & Reviews
Fear comes at us from politics, war, work, relationships, strangers, movies, and television. It keeps us from behaving intelligently, since the mind's first reaction to fear is to ignore danger, hoping it will go away. When fear takes over, it drives us to extremes of manic happiness or fits of rage; it pushes us to destroy relationships instead of letting relationships help us defeat it. When fear wins the battle, viciousness sets in, and we have miserable lives in a miserable world. Most important, fear keeps us from the one thing that could stop its taking over: becoming present.
Robert Sardello, an exceptionally powerful writer who Larry Dossey deems "one of the few modern thinkers who genuinely senses how to deal with the barrenness of modern life," argues that the soul's greatest enemy is fear. It is only when we can look honestly at every fearfrom insecurity at work to existential angstthat we may fulfill its potential for kindness, love, and compassion.
This book is at once an inspiring manual for dealing with fear and a call to arms to change our situation and thereby change the world. It is a rich combination of theory, anecdote, exercises for strengthening the soul, and the wisdom of a great student of the soul.
Review
"Robert Sardello is one of the most creative thinkers I know. He writes from a combination of breathtaking originality and heartfelt compassion." Thomas Moore
Review
Whatever Sardello touches breaks open with startling new meaning. (James Hillman, author of The Soul's Code)
Review
One of the few modern thinkers who genuinely sense how to deal with the barrenness of modern life. (Larry Dossey, M.D.)
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Innovative ideas. (Publishers Weekly)
Review
Encourage[s] the reader to bring love into the world at large. (Greensboro News & Record)
About the Author
Robert Sardello is a pioneer figure in the study of the soul. He is the author of two previous books, and the cofounder of the School for Spiritual Psychology, which conducts programs worldwide. Sardello is a frequent lecturer at the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Sciences, and across the United States. He lives in Massachusetts.