pohaikawahine said:
I am usually in the process of reading about 20 books, seldom do I read one at a time .... and I usually read from back to front (don't know why, but I have always done this) ....
Haha, meeeeee too.
I've been a little bit better about it lately, though. A little bit.
Here's what's currently on my plate:
The Twelve Wild Swans: Rituals, Exercies, & Magical Training in the Reclaiming Tradition by Starhawk and Hilary Valentine
>>>This has slowed down my reading some, actually. Not that it's a bad book, not at all. It's just a bit different than the books that I've been reading lately, and different than Starhawk's
Dreaming the Dark, which is what propelled me into reading this book.
Wild Swans is based on a fairy tale about a girl named Rose and her twelve brothers, who were turned into wild swans by an ill wish on their mother's part. The book shortly narrates the fairy tale, in which Rose embarks on a difficult quest to find and save her brothers. The rest of the book is devoted to exploring the fairy tale and encouraging the reader to apply it to her/his life as a template for magical and transformative work.
Exploring the Crack in the Cosmic Egg: Split Minds & Meta-Realities by Joseph Chilton Pearce
>>>Just started reading this one last night. It has sat on my shelf for about two years, and I think I know why.
Big words. The book is written in a style that is one of my pet peeves: the author uses complex and relatively difficult words to create complex and relatively difficult sentences to get across a point that could be said in much simpler language. Perhaps the book
should have been entitled:
Exploring the Crack in My Cosmic Ego Trip. Ultimately an interesting book, I'm not sure if I will be able to read it due to series of sentences like:
"
In the following chapters I will show how culture forces each of us to create this 'pseudoreality' structured around the semantic effect of language, and how culture 'substitutes' a semantic reality for a direct reality interaction. Culture's word-built world acts as a stimulus substitute that replaces, changes, curtails, or mutates stimuli from a real world. What we experience as acculturated people is never the free interaction with our life flow, that for which we are designed by our 'primary programming.' Rather, we experience a life flow filtrered through an ideation scheme sharply altering our real world."
I mean, damn.
Why not just say: "We are disconnected from true, immediate reality by the constructs of culture." He'd still get to use some big phrases
and get his point across in a more concise way. Egghead.
The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching: Transforming Suffering into Peace, Joy, and Liberation by Thich Nhat Hanh
>>>My Buddhist friends and I have been reading this one for quite a while now. We meet for coffee, tea, muffins, bagels, and scones on Friday mornings and talk about the various chapters, like 'Right Livelihood,' 'Realizing Well-Being,' 'The Noble Eightfold Path,' and many more. Good times, good times.