I give this book a four star rating. I gave it this rating because the author does a good job explaining and articulating his feelings, thought process. I took a star off because he addresses complex topics and can get confusing quickly.
The book is very well articulated and Dan Millman is very good at painting a picture in my mind or opening my eyes, in a way. In this book Millman talks about life in a way the reader may not have thought of. He talks about the 4 paradoxes of life and explains that life may be eternal but we have to live like it is not and that our actions may be already laid out for us but we have to live like they are not. These explanations changed my views on life even when I thought they would not. In this part he writes “From a transcendent perspective, your choices and actions emerge as a natural and inevitable consequence of all the historic, genetic, and environmental forces that have shaped you,”(206) and later writes “You may grasp this insight now, then you may forget, then remember. In those moments of remembering, when this transcendent truth penetrates your heart, you realize who you truly are—and you attain eternal life,”(209). These pieces of knowledge help the reader understand what Millman believes and convinces many to believe the same.
In the book he also encounters and experiences things that change his perspective on life to lead him to the point of transcendence. This helps the reader understand how everyones’ life journey is different and that understanding this is necessary to have a full life. Understanding that everyone has different values, experiences, and beliefs is key to unlocking true understanding and internal peace. Trusting your inner self is another big part of this book. Millman is walking up a path trying to find Socrates’ journal when he hits a choice, a split in the path. “Then I remember Socrates telling me, ‘Your analytical skills are useful. So is your intuitive sense of trusting your inner knower. Use both analysis and intuition—but not at the same time,’”(86). Dan Millman uses his intuition to choose the path and ends up being correct. This is an exaggerated example of how you should learn how to use your intuition to your benefit but the point still stands.
This book teaches the reader many life skills, lessons, and outlooks. The author never forces anything upon the reader but instead guides us to an outlook which we may or may not believe. As he finds Socrates’ journal in a cave he recounts some moments and feelings. “I allowed myself to savor a few moments of elation, of fulfillment. I knew that such moments do not last. ‘Emotions pass like the weather,’ Soc had once reminded me. That sense of pure joy persisted for about ten seconds,”(93). This conveys that we should choose to live in the happy moments when they come because they go “‘Like the weather,’”.
A star is missing because the complex topics can sometimes be lost like when Millman recalls Socrates’ words. “‘Consciousness is not in the body, Dan: the body is in consciousness. And you are that consciousness,’”(291). Ths quote can take a few times to read to undertsnad what Dan is trying to say. It took me several times of reading this and the context to know how to apply this to my own views.
My favorite quote is when Millman is talking to a man named Papa Joe. “It’s good to hear that you have feelings, nieto. That’s how you know you’re alive and that you care about something. But feelings must not run your life or mine. I no longer care for the dramas of this world. I’ve seen them played out in many forms. Now I await my death when I shall see once again as I do in my dreams,’”(34). This is my favorite quote because it explores another point of view. The point of view of someone very different from me. Sometimes my feelings overwhelm me and control behaviors I wish they did not. I believe everyone struggles with this one way or another, whether that's mourning a loss or anger. This advice Papa Joe gives Dan is easily applied to mine and many others' lives. I like the quote because again it does not force a belief onto the reader but merely presents it as a valid option.
In the book Dan Millman has come back from his journey in Hawaii and finds a note in his bag. The note is from his mentor Socrates and tells Dan of a journal hidden in the desert. It tells how Socrates had a fever and wrote the secrets of life, death and rebirth. He tells Dan to find it and expand on his thoughts, and study at some hidden school. Dan goes to Nevada where he finds someone named Papa Joe and then Ama. Ama tells Dan of Soc’s visit to her fathers infirmary. She gives him information that Socrates said in his feverish state. Little of this helps until he finds a tour guide named pajro. Pajro and Dan spend little time together when Pajro leaves unexpectedly. Dan then goes on a hike near Los Vegas, there he finds a cave opening on the side of a cliff. After using his acrobatic experience to maneuver his way in he finally finds the journal. With the journal in hand Dan barely escapes the cave when he sees Pajro. Pajro threatens Dan he takes what he believes to be the journal and runs. Later Dan is in China where he finds a woman named Hua Chi who sent him off to a martial arts school in the woods, the hidden school. Here he studies martial arts and teaches gymnastics. After a while of teaching, learning and writing he is finally ready to return to the outside world. Leaving the farm he goes to find Socrates and share the work he’s completed, and study martial arts.