Synopses & Reviews
Paul Pearsall wrote the first edition of this book (previously titled Making Miracles) ten years ago, "just after Maui had breathed the sacred ha, the breath of life, back into my body." A clinical psychologist and best-selling author, Pearsall told of his total recovery from Stage IV bone cancer, claiming it a medical miracle. Many of his colleagues considered his recovery a mere statistical fluke and refused to accept this account of how "natural laws are sometimes suspended" and miracles happen. In the interim he has lived with his improbable miracle and has come to realize "that there is something immensely greater and wiser than ourselves, and that we do not have to choose between science and spirituality." Here Pearsall updates his extraordinary best seller and gives a new perspective on his groundbreaking theories, which Gary Zukav has claimed "[show] the need for a New Science that recognizes...the central role of intention in the creation of physical reality."
Synopsis
In this moving account, the author shows that miracles happen when we realize that we are a manifestation of God's presence in everything, that we make miracles by choosing a miraculous point of view, when we understand that nothing is certain, including our own deaths, and that in the absence of certainty, there is always hope.