Synopses & Reviews
"In Seasons of Grace, Alan Jones and John ONeil show us how to receive the Grace we have already been given. A must-read book for anyone who wants to live a full life."
Rachel Naomi Remen, M.D., author of Kitchen Table Wisdom and My Grandfathers Blessings
By taking the time to give thanks and experience gratitude for lifes everyday pleasures and surprises, we open ourselves to joy and wonder and plant the seeds for spiritual renewal.
Offering a cornucopia of practical advice, astute reflections, and beautiful excerpts from literary and spiritual works, Seasons of Grace will release you from stress by showing you how easy it is to practice gratitude in your daily life. Through inspiring real-life stories from the authors lives and those of their friends and the people theyve helped in their work, youll discover that gratitude isnt just etiquette or one more thing to do. Rather, it is a spontaneous response that will restore peace, awe, and a sense of well-being in your life. Seasons of Grace traces gratitude through the metaphor of the four seasons, charting the many hallmark occasions and often-surprising opportunities to practice gratitude throughout the year:
- Spring: a season of rebirth and a time to appreciate the gift of creation, your family and heritage, and the importance of spring cleaning in every sense of the term;
- Summer: a season to give thanks for being alive, explore gardens filled with beautiful flowers, meet your fears, appreciate the healing power of play and the magic of your five senses, and experience healing rest;
- Autumn: a season to reflect on what it means to be alive, discover authenticity, enjoy transformative journeys, feed your mind and spirit, and find your own true life story;
- Winter: a season to gather around the table with loved ones, celebrate lifes bounty, enjoy the holidays with friends, do what you can to change the world, and be grateful for being a mortal creature who is alive right now.
A grateful heart is vital to realizing a fully human life. Discover the transformative power of gratitude in your own life with the inspirational guidance of Seasons of Grace, a book destined to become a spiritual classic.
Review
Gratitude, Cicero observed, is more than just a virtue; it is the parent of all the other virtues. In
Seasons of Grace: The Life-giving Practice of Gratitude, Alan Jones and John O’Neil explore the spiritual practice of gratitude, which can be expressed in acts as simple as writing a thank-you note, cleaning the house or meditating in the garden. Although the authors do not draw explicitly on Naikan Buddhism, their approach is astoundingly similar to Naikan, which emphasizes gratitude as the key to compassionate living. The book is beautifully organized into sections around the four seasons: spring is a time to appreciate the gift of a renewed creation; summer a season of frolicking in nature and enjoying some rest; autumn a contemplative period of introspection; and winter an interval of gathering with loved ones. Each chapter closes with “gratitude practices,” offering concrete ideas of ways to cultivate and express gratitude. (
Publishers Weekly, January 27, 2003)
"What do you say?"
"Thank you."
Maybe it's because we're always reminding our children to say it, or because our parents kept reminding us to say it, but we rarely stop and think about those two little words we use all the time.
Thank you.
Don't just say it. Feel it. Try this. Close your eyes. Sit up straight. Take deep breath. As you exhale think . . . thank you.
Do it again, please.
Thank you.
Who were you thanking? God? The Universe? Yourself? No one in particular? It doesn't really matter. It feels good no matter who you're thanking -- especially when it's for nothing, or everything.
"Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all the others."
Cicero said that and so do the Rev. Alan Jones, the dean of Grace Cathedral, and John O'Neil, the president of the Center for Leadership Renewel, in a simple and wise new book called "Seasons of Grace -- The Life-Giving Practice of Gratitude". (SF Chronicle, January 26, 2003)
Synopsis
A religious leader and a leadership expert offer fresh strategies for spiritual renewal
In this beautifully written and necessary book, two prominent authors the Dean of San Francisco s Grace Cathedral and the President of the Center for Leadership Renewal deliver a timely antidote to the stressed-out, spiritually barren lives that too many people accept as the price of success. Their message is simple: by taking time out to give thanks for life s everyday pleasures and surprises, we open ourselves to joy and wonder and plant the seeds for spiritual renewal. Organized around themes inspired by the four seasons of the year, the book starts with spring, exploring the gifts of creation, nature, family, and the importance of spring cleaning in every sense of the term. We move to summer, where we read about the healing power of play, the beauty of our five senses, and the importance of rest. In the autumn section, the authors discuss finding our own life story, feeding our minds, and taking transformative journeys. Finally, with winter, we read about the holiday table, friendship, changing the world, and ultimately, gratefully facing the reality of being mortal creatures who are alive now. "Seasons of Grace "offers a cornucopia of practical advice, astute reflections, beautiful excerpts from literary and spiritual works, and moving true-life stories. It is destined to become a spiritual classic.
Alan Jones, PhD (San Francisco, CA), an Episcopal priest and the Dean of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, is a well-known speaker and the author of many previous books, including "Living the Truth," "Passion for Pilgrimage," and "Soul Making."
John ONeil (San Francisco, CA), President of the Center for Leadership Renewal, has worked with clients such as AT& T, Accenture, and the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation, and is a fellow of the World Economic Forum. His previous books include "The Paradox of Success."
Diana Landau is a freelance writer.
Synopsis
Praise for Seasons of Grace
"In this beautifully written book, Alan Jones and John ONeil deliver a timely antidote to the stressed-out, spiritually barren lives that too many of us accept as the price of success. This is a book that may both comfort and challenge you to change your life and the world for the better."
Dean Ornish, M.D., author of Dr. Dean Ornishs Program for Reversing Heart Disease and Love & Survival
"I love this book. It is packed with inspirational stories from the lives of the authors and their friends that illustrate how feelings of gratitude for even the smallest gifts and kindnesses and joys help us to live each day to the full. Reading Seasons of Grace will help you to cope with the hard times, to find the silver linings. It is a splendid, joyous, and enriching recipe for life."
Jane Goodall, author of Reason for Hope and The Ten Trusts
"Most people are grateful because theyre happy; wise people are happy because they're grateful. Thank you, Alan Jones and John ONeil, for reminding us of this happy fact."
Roger Walsh, M.D., Ph.D., author of Essential Spirituality: The 7 Central Practices to Awaken Heart and Mind
"As gentle as it is wise, Seasons of Grace shows us everyday life as a joyous spiritual art: the art of receiving, day by day, the life we are givenevery last bit of it."
Jacob Needleman, author of The American Soul
Synopsis
Includes bibliographical references (p. 239-242) and index.
Synopsis
Praise for Seasons of Grace
"In this beautifully written book, Alan Jones and John O'Neil deliver a timely antidote to the stressed-out, spiritually barren lives that too many of us accept as the price of success. This is a book that may both comfort and challenge you to change your life and the world for the better."
-Dean Ornish, M.D., author of Dr. Dean Ornish's Program for Reversing Heart Disease and Love & Survival
"I love this book. It is packed with inspirational stories from the lives of the authors and their friends that illustrate how feelings of gratitude for even the smallest gifts and kindnesses and joys help us to live each day to the full. Reading Seasons of Grace will help you to cope with the hard times, to find the silver linings. It is a splendid, joyous, and enriching recipe for life."
-Jane Goodall, author of Reason for Hope and The Ten Trusts
"Most people are grateful because they're happy; wise people are happy because they're grateful. Thank you, Alan Jones and John O'Neil, for reminding us of this happy fact."
-Roger Walsh, M.D., Ph.D., author of Essential Spirituality: The 7 Central Practices to Awaken Heart and Mind
"As gentle as it is wise, Seasons of Grace shows us everyday life as a joyous spiritual art: the art of receiving, day by day, the life we are given-every last bit of it."
-Jacob Needleman, author of The American Soul
About the Author
ALAN JONES, Ph.D., is an Episcopal priest and Dean of Grace Cathedral in San Francisco as well as an author of several books, including Soul Making, Exploring Spiritual Direction, The Soul’s Journey, and Passion for Pilgrimage. His sermons are regularly delivered on the internet through gracecathedral.org.
JOHN O’NEIL is President of the Center for Leadership Renewal and an advisor to leadership teams, a director of numerous company and foundation boards, and the author of The Paradox of Success and other books.
DIANA LANDAU is a freelance writer.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Gratitude and "Going Live".
PART I: SPRING;
OPENING TO WONDER.
1. The Unexpected Gift.
2. Singing Creation.
3. Meeting Nature in the Flesh.
4. Celebrating Our Genes.
5. Cleaning House.
PART II: SUMMER;
THE FLOWERING OF THANKS.
6. Cultivating Gardens of Gratitude.
7. Thanking Our Dragons.
8. Playing Live.
9. Living in the Realm of the Senses.
10. Sweet Rest.
PART III: AUTUMN;
THE GRATEFUL SELF.
11. Going for Authentic Life.
12. Your Sustaining Narrative.
13. Feeding Your Mind.
14. Journeys of the Soul.
15. Entering the Spirit.
PART IV: WINTER;
LIVING INTO GRATITUDE.
16. The Host and the Guest.
17. Grateful Connections.
18. Repairing the World.
19. Mortal Gratitude.
Bibliography and Recommended Reading.
Index.