In this groundbreaking book, leading self-help author Jonathan Gibbons pushes back against the idea that all our ‘problems’ are fixable and that we can perfect everything.
The truth is that we can’t fix it all. Fortunately, we don’t need to.
This practical guide explains how we can engage with our experience intelligently and turn our attention toward what can be fixed in our our attitude.
The Way of Acceptance …
- deconstructs our habitual reactions to difficulties
- distills the most relevant insights of Eastern thought
- shows us how to eliminate destructive mental tendencies
- reveals how we can embrace everything we experience
- explains mindfulness techniques to help us develop our acceptance
The Way of Acceptance will not show you how to fix all your problems or make you enlightened. It will, however, give you the tools to disengage from obsessive negative thinking, teach you how to live more mindfully, and show you how acceptance can change your life.
Jonathan spent a decade in India practicing Zen meditation, studying Buddhism and Eastern philosophy, doing every self-improvement course available, and trying to get his body into excruciatingly painful yoga postures before realizing that this was not the most direct way to find contentment in life. So he went in search of a more direct route that didn’t involve endless contemplation, esoteric knowledge, or complicated practices. He finally emerged from months of silent retreat in the depths of the forest, returned to the “real world”, and began leading an informal meditation group. Inspired by the questions he encountered there, he began to teach a simple, pragmatic approach to dealing with the inevitable challenges and frustrations of our increasingly frenetic lives. And so The Way of Acceptance was born.
Over the course of his colorful life, Jonathan has played bass in rock, pop, blues & jazz bands in the UK, traveled extensively in Asia, taught in the Middle East and South America, played classical guitar on the streets of Europe, and set up a recording studio in a converted cowshed in the foothills of the Indian Himalaya, where he produced three albums, including a groundbreaking album of Tibetan rock with local musicians.
Jonathan recently returned to the UK after an absence of 28 years. He spends his time teaching, writing, playing guitar, and practicing meditation.
For more information on Jonathan and “The Way of Acceptance” please visit: www.wayofacceptance.com
This is much more than a self-help book, a genre I generally tend to be wary of. This is simple but powerful stuff. The author throws light at life’s problems and offers what seem to be obvious and simple suggestions for dealing with them in a way that can only improve our lives. He systematically offers various examples from the real world, sometimes his own world, which makes it all feel very genuine and down to earth. It reads like a friend’s soothing voice guiding you from chapter to chapter. It also covers mindfulness skills, breathing techniques, drawing on both Eastern and Western practices. "The Way of Acceptance" shows us how we already possess the tools within us to cope with life’s adversities and how to best apply a good dose of resignation to everything. The concept of “acceptance” reads more like “embracing” every single aspect of life. A single and superficial reading of the book will not be enough. It is a practical guide, like a collection of successful recipes (there are some practical breathing and emotion-focused exercises suggested at different points of the book) but it requires attentive re-reading, stopping, reflecting and putting those ingredients into practice. As I worked though it and read on, I found myself surrendering to things that before seemed impossible. Thank you, Jonathan Gibbons! I strongly recommend this book!
Enjoyed it and defo learned things from it, but kind of felt a bit overly complicated at times. Like it was flooded with examples and things about how to be accepting and how to 'do acceptance correctly' and how lots of people 'do acceptance wrong' which is helpful to see how its put into practice, but it was kinda to the point where I was just a bit confused...
For anyone having a hard time, loss, or life challenges, this book is a treasure of self reflection, helping the reader gain perspective on the experience of life, and accepting the reality of the present moment, for it is the only thing that truly exists. Could not recommend it enough.