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Is There Life Before Death? - Excerpts and Reviews

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DESCRIPTION:

This anthology is filled with short stories and essays, poems and quotes that can touch your heart, turn your head, clarify your vision, and tickle your fancy. A glance at the contents reveals the wide range of living touched on: tears and laughter, wisdom and foolishness, dreaming and action, knowledge and ignorance, thinking and feeling, loving and purpose, anguish and gratitude, separation and connection, mistakes and perfection, certainty and mystery, good and evil, aging and dying, mind and spirit. All of these are stepping stones on the path of discovering what it means to be a fully human being.



EXCERPTS:

Choose life-
Only that
And always
And at whatever risk.

To let life leak out
To let it wear away
By the mere passage of time
To withhold giving it and spreading it
Is to choose nothing.

--Sister Mary Corita Kent


Napoleon and the Furrier

During Napoleon's invasion of Russia, his troops were battling in the middle of yet another small town in that endless wintry land, when he was accidentally separated from his men. A group of Russian Cossacks spotted him, and began chasing him through the twisting streets. Napoleon ran for his life, and ducked into a little furrier's shop on a side alley. As Napoleon entered the shop, gasping for breath, he saw the furrier and cried piteously, "Save me, save me! Where can I hide?" The furrier said "Quick, under this big pile of furs in the corner," and covered Napoleon up with many furs.

No sooner had he finished when the Russian Cossacks burst in the door, shouting "Where is he? We saw him come in." Despite the furrier's protests, they tore his shop apart trying to find Napoleon. They poked into the pile of furs with their swords, but didn't find him. Soon they gave up and left.

After some time, Napoleon crept out from under the furs, unharmed, just as Napoleon's personal guards came in the door. The furrier turned to Napoleon and said timidly, "Excuse me for asking this question of such a great man, but what was it like to be under those furs, knowing that the next moment would surely be your last?" Napoleon drew himself up to his full height, and said to the furrier indignantly, "How could you ask such a question of me, the emperor Napoleon!! Guards, take this impudent man out, blindfold him, and execute him. I, myself, will personally give the command to fire!"

The guards grabbed the poor furrier, dragged him outside, stood him up against a wall, and blindfolded him. The furrier could see nothing, but he could hear the movements of the guards as they slowly shuffled into a line and prepared their rifles. He could hear the soft ruffling sound of his clothing in the cold wind, and he felt it tugging gently at his clothes and chilling his cheeks, and the uncontrollable trembling in his legs. Then he heard Napoleon clear his throat and call out slowly, "Ready,...aim...." In that moment, knowing that even these few sensations were about to be taken from him forever, a feeling that he couldn't describe welled up in him, and tears poured down his cheeks.

After a long period of silence, the furrier heard footsteps approaching him, and the blindfold was stripped from his eyes. Still partially blinded by the sudden sunlight, he saw Napoleon's eyes looking deeply and intently into his own--eyes that seemed to see into every dusty corner of his being. Then Napoleon said softly, "Now you know."

--Steve and Connirae Andreas (with thanks to Greg Brodsky)

Heaven and Hell

The old monk sat by the side of the road. With his eyes closed and his legs crossed and his hands folded in his lap, he sat. In deep meditation, he sat.

Suddenly his zazen was interrupted by the harsh and demanding voice of a samurai warrior. "Old man! Teach me about Heaven and Hell!"

At first, as though he had not heard, there was no perceptible response from the monk. But gradually, he began to open his eyes, the faintest hint of a smile playing around the corners of his mouth as the samurai stood there waiting ... impatient ... growing more and more agitated with each passing second.

"You would know the secrets of Heaven and Hell?" replied the monk at last. "You who are so unkempt. You whose hands and feet are covered with dirt. You whose hair is uncombed, whose breath is foul, whose sword is all rusty and neglected. You who are ugly and whose mother dresses you funny. You would ask me of Heaven and Hell?"

The samurai uttered a vile curse. He drew his sword and raised it high above his head. His face turned to crimson, the veins on his neck stood out in bold relief as he prepared to sever the monk's head from its shoulders.

"That is Hell," said the old monk gently, just as the sword began its descent.

In that fraction of a second, the samurai was overcome with amazement, awe, compassion, and love for this gentle being who had dared to risk his very life to give him such a teaching. He stopped his sword in mid-flight and his eyes filled with grateful tears.

"And that," said the monk, "is Heaven."

--Father John W. Groff, Jr.


REVIEWS:

"The perfect book for the '90s. You can read it all in one sitting or, if you are as busy as I am this decade, a bit at a time. Some of it will delight you, some of it will move you. Like reading the I Ching, you'll find just the gem of wisdom or solace you need whenever you pick it up."
Bill O'Hanlon, therapist and author

"I loved this book. I find myself going back to it over and over for new insights and awareness. It has taken up permanent residence on the night stand next to my bed."
Jack Canfield, co-author, Chicken Soup for the Soul

"Ninety percent of the selections in this book you will not find in any other anthology. If you love anthologies--or if you are even mildly tolerant of them--you have no choice but to buy this book."
Hugh and Gayle Prather, authors, I Will Never Leave You and A Book for Couples

"This new book is a humble yet profound offering to us all--humble in the sense that it draws not only on the author's wisdom, but celebrates the truth that 'No one is smarter than all of us,' and profound in his rich and varied selections of inspiring wisdom from around the world and across the ages."
Dan Millman, author, Way of the Peaceful Warrior and The Laws of Spirit

"Steve Andreas' gift is to see the essence and then embrace it. In this book he opens his arms to share with us what he has found. And what you will find on every page is the beat of the human heart."
David Gordon, author, Therapeutic Metaphors

"This is an absolutely gorgeous book. The mosaic of selections weaves a tapestry of beauty and encouragement, and wipes away the dust of everyday living."
Stephen Gilligan, author, Therapeutic Trances



AUTHOR'S BIOGRAPHY:

Steve Andreas has been involved in the human potential movement since the early 1960s, when he studied with Abraham Maslow, and later Fritz Perls and Gestalt Therapy. In the 1970s he and his wife Connirae began to learn about Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). Over the past twenty years they have written three books about NLP and edited four others by the original co-developers, Richard Bandler and John Grinder. They have developed a number of NLP patterns, for helping people reach greater well-being and wholeness. They live in the foothills of the Colorado mountains with their three teenage sons.



AUTHOR'S COMMENTS:

In the cliff dwellings of the desert southwest, the red sandstone walls and ceilings often bear muddy handprints, mute testimony to the people who labored there a thousand years ago. Protected from wind and rain--the messengers of time-each detail is as clear as if the hands had placed them yesterday. Why did someone pause from bonding stone with mud to leave these prints?

In the white limestone caves of Lascaux, in France, are outlines of hands made by spraying pigment through a straw while a hand was held flat against the wall. These hands paused not from building walls, but from creating marvelous images of the large animals that sustained their lives--horses, deer, and bison. Working by torchlight, deep underground, why did these hands pause to leave images of themselves, some 30,000 years ago? Although we can only guess, perhaps those handprints are saying quietly, "I was here; I lived."

The handprints in this book are made with words, rather than mud or pigment. Before I move on, I want to leave behind some bits of what I have learned, and to preserve the words of others that have moved me and sustained me on my journey--in the hope that those who come after might find some of them useful. Buckminster Fuller said it well:

"What do I know about what I am, what each of us is? And I went back very quickly to the realization of humanity being born naked, helpless, ignorant--being hungry and thirsty and curious, to drive us to learn by trial and error. We have to make an enormous number of mistakes to get anywhere. We haven't any idea how long it took to get words, so that we could help each other with information that we had been learning from our mistakes. It was only about 8,000 years ago that writing was invented so that those who were dead could tell the living what they had found out."

I chose the title for this book over twenty years ago, and I have been collecting favorite stories, quotes, and poems for at least twice that span. One of the nicest compliments I've received was when a friend of mine said, "I think of you as my bloodhound; the things you sniff out have usually been things I want to know about." When I have not found others' words to speak for me, I have done my best to set down my own thoughts. The words in this book are those that have touched me, opened me to beauty, or reminded me of truths forgotten. As Barry Lopez writes, in Crow and Weasel:

"The stories people tell have a way of taking care of them. If stories come to you, care for them. And learn to give them away where they are needed. Sometimes a person needs a story more than food to stay alive. That is why we put these stories in each other's memory. This is how people care for themselves. One day you will be good storytellers. Never forget these obligations."

 

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Reframing using a different scope (excerpt from chapter 7, How scope influences category)
“Crazy” Recategorization (excerpt from chapter 13, Higher level recategorization)
Hidden Negation (excerpt from chapter 2, Negation)
Recursion (excerpt from chapter 5, Self-reference)

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