Some of these chapters are good, many of them filled with love and joy . . . Others are inflicted with pain and sometimes deep suffering.
We must experience all these Chapters of Life before we can move forward on the karmic wheel. . . In this volume we will learn
A coming new world leader. . . The many mansions and dimensions of the universe. . . A world we all must visit . . . How to close and open a chapter in your life. . .Finding out if Astral is for YOU? . . .Its all here in the CHAPTERS OF LIFE.
About the Author T. Lobsang Rampa is an eastern born Tibetan who told over the mind and body of a less than noble British gentleman. He is one of the world's first "Walk Ins" His books have sold over l8 million copies in many languages, and include.
The Third Eye. . . The Cave of the Ancients . . .Feeding the Flame . . .The Hermit . . .Twilight . . .My Visit to Venus. . . The Rampa Story . . .Visit to Agharta . . .The Saffron Robe
The most important element of this volume in the Rampa series is the concentration on meditation techniques. Rather than simply regurgitating a story of his own, Lobsang Rampa introduces the concept of safe practices in meditation and breathing, discerning the difference between helpful self-development and extraneous interference.
As within fiction many a truth is conveyed, so the attempts of this writer to help the public at large to learn how to find their own way continues.
Kind of strange... I read about Rampa by other various sources and people claim he is just a koook. So who knows? But while reading this book, I realized you can believe you are anything if you choose to.
I am just embarking on reading this for the first time although I read more than a few of Rampa’s books back in the day over 45 years ago. And I can say just from the first page of “To Thank…” this will be a delightful read (no matter what heights or depths of human experience it takes me to). That dedication (of sorts) is worth the price of admission alone. Whatever happened to humor after all… we live in such a Kali Yuga.
Rampa is actually a pretty good descriptive writer. He sometimes gets bogged down in the weeds (and fairly often makes outrageous statements and claims), but for a Buddhist he is certainly outside the box, and so provides a mind altering challenge to all we might think we know.
Again a book I read in 1975,managed to get this book recently to start reading again,I am enjoying it finding and remembering the writings of this man.It can answer many question we might have.