Als Spiegel der Weisheit ermöglicht das Enneagramm dem Betrachter, tief in sich hineinzuschauen und Verborgenes sichtbar zu machen. Eli Jaxon-Bear stützt sich auf die unverfälschte Überlieferung der Neunerfigur und ihres symbolischen Gehalts. Wirkungsvoll und präzise können wir mit dem Enneagramm Gedankenmuster, Gefühle und Verhaltensweisen analysieren. Die eigenen Fixierungen werden sichtbar, verständlich – und lösbar.
3.5 stars Unfortunately there's a bit of unevenness in describing the Enneagram types and the exemplars used. But there are some profound points and observations as well.
As I read more and more about the Enneagram, I realized I was no longer satisfied just reviewing my life and identifying all the aspects of my fixation in my personal history. I wanted something that would help me move beyond it. This book is the best I've found so far. It has helped me so much. The part at the end about black holes delivers on the promise of the title. It's so difficult to go against your own conditioning and experience emotions from which you have unconsciously protected yourself. I am still working with this. If you are looking to break out of the now-familiar cycles of suffering perpetuated by your fixation, I highly recommend this book.
This very accessible treatment of the insights of the Enneagram makes use of the Buddhist, Sufi and Hindu traditions. The subtypes are differentiated more clearly than in other authors I have run across, which gives more breadth and variation to the forms each of the Nine Types can take. Outstanding presentation of the possibilities and potentialities awaiting anyone who is willing to seriously face one's type (or fixation) and move into and beneath it to the depths of being. Connections are apparent to this reader with the work of Marshall B. Rosenberg (Nonviolent Communication) and Wilson Van Dusen (The Natural Depth in Man). Also with Bernadette Roberts and the No-Self.
The Enneagram of Liberation by Eli Jaxon-Bear is the first book I have read in English. I read it fifteen years ago. I bought it at a satsang held by Eli Jaxon-Bear in the small town of Kisslegg in Germany. It took some time for me to read it, because English is not my mother tongue and I didn’t even study English at school. Actually, I am self-taught in English. Starting from The Enneagram of Liberation, I have been reading more and more books in English, and now I am an author of books written in English. As for Eli Jaxon-Bear’s The Enneagram of Liberation, I still remember its content, even though fifteen years have gone by since I met Eli. He tried to simplify and make it easy to understand the enneagram which is an old symbol representing nine types of human characters. Before describing the psychological types of the enneagram, the author analyzes the structure of the Ego which consists of three elements: personality, character, and essence. Personality and character can change in the course of life, but the essence doesn’t change. It is an interesting book to know ourselves more in order to break our old patterns. Ettore Grillo, author of these books: - A Hidden Sicilian History - The Vibrations of Words -Travels of the Mind
This is the most useful book on the enneagram that I've read, and the clearest in helping me figure out what type I am. I especially like the suggestions to help us get past our fixations.
a very insightful book to the enneagram system, though I think that the descriptions of each type were a bit unequal in depth and perhaps the last part of the book was slightly underdeveloped
Not as good as "Deep Living" I just reviewed, but helpful; doesn't sound very mystical in the tone, nice to read. It includes the instinctual variants of each type, which is good. Although, I did not manage to type myself accurately with this one...
I’ve been reading about the enneagram for about two years now, and have read the “suggested books” on this topic. This book is the ideal for how the enneagram should be used and all other books on enneagram personality are just better ways of describing ego-fixation. Most books are good tools in understanding our character fixation, but this book is about how to transcend these aspects. Beautiful book and a wise teacher. I’m skeptical of modern day gurus, but Eli Jaxon-Bear is not that. Incredibly wise book.
A more in-depth look at the neuroses of the 9 types of the Enneagram. Jaxon-Bear takes the high view of the system being not about personality types, but "character fixations", which is less cutesy, and (thankfully) less agreeable to the often materialistic Western approach to self-help. His conclusions on how to work with our particular fixations are a bit "cosmic". I thought this part of the book was underdeveloped and the little he did offer could have been more down-to-earth.
Indispensable. There are so many huge keys in this book, if one is ripe for it. I will be referencing its practical guidance in particular again and again.