This book explores how by learning to maintain a calm, clear mind, we will gradually transform our greed, anger, and ignorance into compassion and equanimity. It is so important that we do this because our current thoughts are leading to consequences that are affecting not only ourselves but our environment and even our world and all the beings in it.
I suppose this is a good introduction to the principles of Buddhism but a lot of those just don't stick for me. It reads in this book that a central tenet is the concept that our suffering in this life is due to our bad karma from wrongdoings in previous lives. That seems to be 'paying for the sins of the father' logic that I don't agree with morally but morals aside seems completely unrealistic.
I was hoping to get more out of reading this than I did, though I guess it just means Buddhism isn't for me and that's fine.
I did find the last 10-20 pages of the book on climate change to be really insightful and have some really good arguments though. This part almost didn't seem to fit with the rest of the book's theories. I think it's very true we have major cognitive dissonance between the reality of what is happening, the levels of consumption we need and our own contribution to the climate disaster. Im some ways this book challenged my usual catastrophic thinking about the future by theorising that depleted resources may lead us to living less globalised but more community driven lives, this doesn't sound terrible so perhaps it isn't all bad.
Good simplified reminders of the principles of Buddhist life, thought and being. Will be reading this each year. Last 40 pages or so on climate change can be skipped for those well versed on the issue and how it is a manifestation of our collective karma.
Brilliant book that makes you really think about what the author is saying. It made me sad in parts as I connected with the themes and applied it to my own thoughts and life. It's written in easy to understand language yet it still makes you think.