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A raw, intensely personal memoir of spiritual exploration from one of the world’s great commentators on religion.
After seven years in a convent, which she left, dismayed by its restrictions, an experience recounted in ‘Through the Narrow Gate’, Karen Armstrong struggled to establish herself in a new way of life, and became entrapped in a downward spiral, haunted by despair, anorexia and suicidal feelings.
Despite her departure from the convent she remained within the Catholic Church until the God she believed in 'died on me', and she entered a ‘wild and Godless period of crazy parties and numerous lovers’. Her attempts to reach happiness and carve out a career failed repeatedly, in spectacular fashion. She began writing her bestseller ‘A History of God’ in a spirit of scepticism, but through studying other religious traditions she found a very different kind of faith which drew from Christianity, Judaism and Islam and, eventually, spiritual and personal calm.
In her own words, her ‘story is a graphic illustration – almost an allegory – of a widespread dilemma. It is emblematic of a more general flight from institutional religion and a groping towards a form of faith that has not yet been fully articulated but which is nevertheless in the process of declaring itself’. Her lifelong inability to pray and to conform to traditional structures of worship is shared by the many who are leaving the established churches but who desire intensely a spiritual aspect to their lives.
‘The Spiral Staircase’ grapples with the issue of how we can be religious in the contemporary world, and the place and possibility of belief in the 21st-century.
338 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2004

Jesus said, 'Do unto others as you would have done unto you,' didn't he?" I asked, stirring my large mug of milky coffee.
Traditional boundaries and markers had come down, and many lacked a clear sense of identity. In America such people followed Jerry Falwell or Pat Robertson; in Iran they turned to Ayatollah Khomeini. In Britain they voted for Margaret Thatcher...
"Karen! You are not in England now. There is no need to be a polite English lady here in Israel. We are not formal people. There is no point to speak if there is nothing to say."
"Do not be a polite English lady. If you think I am unreasonable, tell me to get lost, to shut up- whatever you like!"
"And I did not want to nourish myself. What was the point of feeding my body, when my mind and heart had been irreparably broken?"
"as I was after the divorce"
"Just as I was prevented from becoming an academic, so too I have never been able to achieve a normal domestic existence, and this, like my epilepsy, had also ensured that I remained an outsider in a society in which coupledom is the norm"
"oh do stop feeling sorry for yourself!"
"perhaps you are just unloveable"
"Do not do to others as you would not have done unto you"
"It takes more discipline to refrain from doing/saying harm to others than to be a do-gooder and project your needs and desires onto other people."