Mark Gerzon
|
Leading Through Conflict: How Successful Leaders Transform Differences into Opportunities
—
published
2006
—
4 editions
|
|
|
The Reunited States of America: How We Can Bridge the Partisan Divide
—
published
2016
—
7 editions
|
|
|
Listening to Midlife: Turning Your Crisis into a Quest
—
published
1996
—
3 editions
|
|
|
Global Citizens: How our vision of the world is outdated, and what we can do about it
—
published
2010
—
5 editions
|
|
|
American Citizen, Global Citizen: How Expanding Our Identities Makes Us Safer, Stronger, Wiser - And Builds a Better World
—
published
2010
—
4 editions
|
|
|
A Choice Of Heroes * The Changing Faces Of American Manhood
—
published
1982
—
9 editions
|
|
|
A House Divided
—
published
1996
—
4 editions
|
|
|
Coming into Our Own
—
published
1992
—
4 editions
|
|
|
The Whole World is Watching
—
published
1969
—
6 editions
|
|
|
A Childhood for Every Child: The Politics of Parenthood
—
published
1973
|
|
“But what the measured prose of psychiatrists and the carefully calculated statistics of social scientists rarely capture is the experience of inner struggle. These "significant changes" do not occur automatically. In fact, they must often fight against our resistance. In this sense, midlife is a drama more worthy of a playwright than a scholar. We are characters in the play, caught at the opening of the second act, and we do not know what will happen next.”
― Listening to Midlife: Turning Your Crisis into a Quest
― Listening to Midlife: Turning Your Crisis into a Quest
“In the second half of life, our old compasses no longer work. The magnetic fields alter. The new compass that we need cannot be held in our hand, only in our heart. We read it not with our mind alone, but with our soul.
Now we yearn for wholeness. We yearn to remember the parts of ourselves that we have forgotten, to nourish those that we have starved, to express those we have silenced, and to bring into the light those we have cast into the shadows. On this quest for wholeness, we must let go of cliches of adult life, both positive and negative . . . Using the best information available , each of us must find his own way.
To varying degrees, all of us are trying to break out of . . . the "life structure" that we have built during the first part of our lives.”
―
Now we yearn for wholeness. We yearn to remember the parts of ourselves that we have forgotten, to nourish those that we have starved, to express those we have silenced, and to bring into the light those we have cast into the shadows. On this quest for wholeness, we must let go of cliches of adult life, both positive and negative . . . Using the best information available , each of us must find his own way.
To varying degrees, all of us are trying to break out of . . . the "life structure" that we have built during the first part of our lives.”
―
“If you want to change your stereotypes, seek first-hand experience. Do not believe everything you are told. Find out for yourself. Talk”
― American Citizen, Global Citizen: How Expanding Our Identities Makes Us Safer, Stronger, Wiser - And Builds a Better World
― American Citizen, Global Citizen: How Expanding Our Identities Makes Us Safer, Stronger, Wiser - And Builds a Better World
Is this you? Let us know. If not, help out and invite Mark to Goodreads.





