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Spirituality

Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche

The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche

Compassion and mindfulness are emphasized numerous times by Sogyal rinpoche. Readers can find tools that will help them face the inevitable truth that we are all going to die, at some point. The author skillfully shares his own wisdom, that of other masters, and anecdotal evidence of what may happen when we physically die, and the stages we may go through during the process.

Broken Open by Lesser

Broken Open by Elizabeth Lesser

The author offers a humanistic understanding of what it means to seek, grow, evolve and endure until we can each transform. She illustrates how difficult times really can help us grow.

The Undiscovered Self by Dr. Carl Jung

The Undiscovered Self by C.G. Jung

Carl Jung asks for an awareness of the uniqueness of the individual that can be understood neither by generalizations nor by statistics.

How to Know Higher Worlds by Rudolf Steiner

How to Know Higher Worlds

The book charts a meditative path that leads both to inner peace and to enhanced powers of soul, and finally to the lifting of that veil. It offers an introduction to the inner life and to an inner discipline that can heal and transform us profoundly.

Journey of Souls by Dr. M. Newton

Journey of Souls by Dr. Michael Newton

In this book Dr. Michael Newton shares the discourses with 29 subjects who, while in deep hypnosis, describe what has happened to them between their former reincarnations on earth.

Religions

Short Summary of Religions

There are two world traditions, which have formed the cultural and ethical basis of the world, as we know it. And both have an unbroken history going back thousands of years.

Notes on the Bhagavad Gita by Subba Row

Notes on The Bhagavad Gita

In the Bhagavad Gita Krishna presents three main concepts for achieving enlightenment– renunciation, selfless service, and meditation.

Yoga Sutras by Patanjali

The Yoga Sutras by Patañjali

While modern science tends to regard mind and consciousness as the expression and manifestation of matter, yoga claims that matter is controlled by mind, not mind by matter.