HomeSelf-HelpIn Each Moment: A New Way to Live
Skip to product information
1 of 1

In Each Moment: A New Way to Live

paperbackOctober 10, 1998
Regular price $49.89 USD
Regular price Sale price $49.89 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9780968410905 ISBN-10: 0968410901
Publisher
Brand: Looking Glass Pr
Binding
paperback
Published
October 10, 1998
Weight
0.7 lbs
Dimensions
20.30×1.90×14.60 cm

About this book

In Each Moment: A New Way to Live by Lowe, Paul. paperback edition. ISBN: 9780968410905.

"In Each Moment" offers a practical approach to discovering a depth of joy and possibility in life that most people have never known. It leads the way to replacing the stress of insecurity, jealousy, anger and fear with delight, wisdom, an expanded intelligence and deep fulfillment. Can the path of personal fulfillment lead to the attainment of freedom and spiritual awakening, is a question that often arises for people interested in spiritual matters. Paul Lowe, a well-respected pioneer in the field of consciousness and spiritual development, has explored this question thoroughly. He has spent more than 30 years integrating western psychological perspectives with eastern spiritual traditions and practices. His journey has taken him from the intoxicating days of the California human potential movement in the 1960s to ascetic 18 hour days of meditation in India. He now concludes that no approach to enlightenment works. Yet, something IS possible. Something that can include and go beyond all the techniques. Something so simple yet radical that people find it hard to believe it can work. IN EACH MOMENT explores the paradox that although we cannot DO anything to become free and more awake, we can make ourselves available to that possibility; while at the same time, inviting greater joy and a ordinary, rich spirituality into our daily lives. IN EACH MOMENT is a welcome antidote to the volumes dedicated to self-improvement. Working to become a "better person" has become one of the most common modern addictions. Well-intentioned as it may be and far more benign than alcohol, drugs or smoking, the self-improvement fervor has also prevented people from experiencing themselves as they truly are.