A good and interesting work. It is not mind blowing or revolutionary by any means. Many of the notions presented here are common, New Age-type ideas. They are presented like little snacks for thought. My main criticism is not that they are platitudes, empty concepts, or cheesy nonsensical notions for those undergoing an existential crises. It is the lack of argument and rigor. Perhaps it is my roots, and perhaps I should read the original text (I realize it is a bunch of excerpts; if this was the actual work itself it would only get 2 stars), but I do not see any foundation or basis for many of the claims presented here. I am not asking for strict, hardcore verifiability, but a little more ground to go on. Secondly, many of the ideas presented here are in fact notions like 'surrender the ego' and so on - stuff which at one time was rich and very strong, but has become reduced to charlatanism (i.e., Eckhart Tolle and the second-rate Marjoe Gortner who wrote the Alchemist). Here is an example, contained in this section 'Time'
"When you have learned to look on everyone with no reference at all to the past, either his or yours as you perceive it, you will be able to learn from what you see now."
I get the general point, and at first it looks quite profound. When you think about it just a little bit closer you realize it is impossible and nonsensical. It is not because I have a huge ego that I think this is impossible (well I probably do, but that's not the point) it is because experience isn't constructed that way. We cannot be free of the past, any more than we are free of the future. If we took this advice to heart, you would not even recognize your own mother; which is, of course, impossible. Or
"Illusions only battle with themselves"
I have no idea what that means.
There are some interesting points when taken superficially. Some of these ideas are applicable and do have merit. So it is not totally wrong. I just don't want to be taught to get rid of my illusions by a book which has many illusions. And illusions they are, because what at once seems profound and insightful is really basic and simple. Kind of like a cognitive magic trick. Once you see how the trick is made, you can never un-see it.