Classics in the Field of Conscious Aging

SUGGESTED READING:  CLASSICS IN THE FIELD OF CONSCIOUS AGING

Prisms: Reflections on this Journey We Call Life by James Hollis

“Late essays” about the second half of life by James Hollis, Ph. D., leading Jungian Analyst and author of sixteen books including the classics Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life: How to Finally, Really Grow Up and What Matters Most: Living a More Considered Life. This culminating work suggests that instead of being driven by the search for happiness, one asks the seminal question: “What wants to enter the world through me?

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On the Brink of Everything by Parker J. Palmer

Visionary educator and octegenarian Parker J. Palmer has just published his tenth book On the Brink of Everything: Grace, Gravity and Getting Old.

“Age brings diminishments, but more than a few come with benefits.  I’ve lost the capacity for multitasking, but I’ve discovered the joy of doing one thing at a time. My thinking has slowed down a bit, but experience has made it deeper and richer.  I’m done with big and complex projects, but more aware of the loveliness of simple things: a talk with a friend, a walk in the woods, sunsets and sunrises, a night of good sleep.”

To access the conversation, click HERE 

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The Grace in Aging by Kathleen Dowling Singh

Kathleen Dowling Singh’s The Grace in Aging:  Awaken As You Grow Older.  Singh, of blessed memory, is a Dharma practitioner and psychotherapist, who understands how and why we fall for letting our wounds define us.  Then she’s written a whole book about what can come next, if we’re willing to do the courageous work of truth-telling, humility, forgiveness and radical leaps of faith that true spirituality asks of us. It is, as Dowling puts it, a matter of awakening—even from the dream of our own serious and well-intentioned introspection.

To access the conversation, click HERE

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Living Between Worlds, Finding Personal Resilience in Changing Times by Dr. James Hollis.

This important and timely book guides us to consider just how did we get to this crossroads in history? And will we make it through―individually and as a species? Dr. Hollis points the way to grow large enough to contain what threatens to destroy us.  James Hollis, Ph. D. is Executive Director of the Jung Center of Houston, TX, a practicing Jungian Analyst and author of eleven books including the classics Finding Meaning in the Second Half of Life: How to Finally, Really Grow Up and What Matters Most: Living a More Considered Life.

For Carol Orsborn’s blog inspired by the book and to join the virtual book club conversation, click HERE

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John C. Robinson’s Mystical Activism: Transforming a World in Crisis. Covid-19 is but a wake-up call for sweeping social, political and spiritual changes as our generation of elders are being called to a radical transformation of consciousness.

For provocative questions , Click HERE

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Still Here by Ram Dass.

Beloved spiritual teacher Ram Dass’ stroke forced him to face his worst fears.  But while there were painful losses, there were also unexpected gifts.  In Still Here: Embracing Aging, Changing, and Dying he teaches that the greatest blessing was the wearing away of the effects of his Ego—the attachment to how others perceived him, to expectations about what kind of life he deserved, even to what we had thought was the meaning of life, itself.

As Ram Dass describes it:  “Behind the machinations of our brilliant, undependable minds is an essence that is not conditional, a being that aging does not alter, to which nothing can be added, from which nothing is taken away…This is not an abstract concept; it is as real as the breath moving in and out of your body, and real as the spirit that animates you.  The greater your mindfulness, the more you will come to know this truth, and to rest in it when painful thoughts threaten to hide it from view.” (p. 49.)

To access the conversation, click HERE

Please support our local independent book stores, and to order your book club books from Parnassus Books, click HERE

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Angelica’s Last Breath by Carol Orsborn

Angelica’s Last Breath, a novel by Carol Orsborn, tells the story of a celebrated self-help guru, facing a mortal illness.  Inspired by Tolstoy’s The Death of Ivan Ilyich, the book inspires us to ask whether it could be possible to make peace with not only our death, but our past, present and future earlier than one’s last breath— with time to spare?

To Read About the Book, click HERE

To Read an Excerpt of the Book, click HERE

To Access the Reader’s Guide, click HERE

To access the Online Conversation about the Book, click HERE

Please support our local independent book stores, and to order your book club books from Parnassus Books, click HERE

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ADDITIONAL BOOK SUGGESTIONS POSTED IN OUR ARCHIVES

Journal of a Solitude, May Sarton

Are You Still Listening? 1969 Stories and Essays, Brent Green and 8 authors including Carol Orsborn

The Three Secrets of Aging, John C. Robinson

The Gift of Years, Joan Chittister

The December Project, Sara Davidson

Living an Examined Life, James Hollis

The Spirituality of Age, Robert L. Weber and Carol Orsborn

Upstream Mary Oliver

The Force of Character, James Hillman

Aging: An Apprenticeship by Nan Narboe

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