Like in the movie The Sixth Sense, the end of the book seems to turn many things upside down: A world of seeming problems becomes revealed as a world absent of evil and problems at all.
On your second reading, you get to see how I purposely dig in and agitate the reader a bit in the beginning, without that purposely agitated reader being you.
A supposed message of love and unity is useless if it lacks a deep honest palpable acknowledgment of the pain, anger, agitation, anxiety, violence, and horror in our world of seeming problems.
I often feel the biggest obstacle to implementing a movement based on true love and positivity is fake love and toxic positivity.
There are many false paths. One is to seek the elimination of pain, anger, fear, and so on, which is futile. Perhaps more dangerously enticing is the false path that seeks to deny them entirely, as if to bury one's head in the sand.
The irony of the comfort zone in which so many find themselves trapped is that really it is no more comfortable than these lands of happy freedom you find once you leave the comfort zone. You can't escape discomfort, but you can escape the comfort zone and free yourself of the addiction to comfort itself. You can have freedom, meaning spiritual freedom, meaning happy free-spiritedness.
But you cannot accept that it is what it is if you dishonestly deny what it is.
We must cry to be truly happy. True happiness isn't holding in your tears. It's being happy even when they fall. Because they will fall. You can run from it, whether with escapism or dishonest denial, but you won't succeed. Lies don't change the truth, and you can't escape the inescapable.
While many futilely seek to escape or dishonestly delusionally deny the existence of the inescapable water, we can instead learn to swim.
You don't need my book to learn to swim, but whether you are already on that path or looking for it, I hope my book helps you.
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The book is available for purchase from all major book retailers in both ebook and hardcover format.
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"The mind is a wonderful servant but a terrible master."
I believe spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline) manifests as bravery, confidence, grace, honesty, love, and inner peace.
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