The bestselling author of Wealth Without Risk now presents a toolbox of repeatable strategies and success responses for almost any situation--from achieving goals to eliminating fears.
Christopher Dines has profound experience of recovery and personal growth; he struggled with drug addiction for most of his young adult life, and came into recovery in 2004, after a career as a music producer and well-known electronic house DJ. In this book, he shares insights, epiphanies and practical strategies for anyone struggling with their wellbeing, but most particularly those in recovery from addiction, those in toxic relationships or those with destructive lifestyles and behaviours. Covering such resonant themes as feelings of unworthiness, the need for gentle compassion and the power of authentic relationships, this book offers an abundance of exercises to unlock a deeper understanding, and nearly 200 questions to enable a true self-appraisal. This is self-care at its most profound, resonant and visceral level - as more than just a regular yoga habit, Super Self Care offers a chance to rewrite the script that ties us to co-dependency, addictive behaviours and shame.
One of the most powerful of the Seth Books, this essential guide to conscious living clearly and powerfully articulates the furthest reaches of human potential, and the concept that we all create our own reality according to our individual beliefs. Having withstood the test of time, it is still considered one of the most dynamic and brilliant maps of inner reality available today. “The Seth books present an alternate map of reality with a new diagram of the psyche . . . useful to all explorers of consciousness.” — Deepak Chopra “Seth was one of my first metaphysical teachers. He remains a constant source of knowledge and inspiration in my life.” — Marianne Williamson “I would like to see the Seth books as required reading for anyone on their spiritual pathway. The amazing in-depth information in the Seth books is as relevant today as it was in the early ’70s when Jane Roberts first channeled this material.” — Louise Hay
A two-book volume of aphoristic philosophy comprising the hitherto separately published titles Notable Thoughts and Quotable Thoughts, the pair of which are introduced by an almost essayistic preface which sets the stage, as it were, for what follows with by now the author's familiar combinations of discursive and intensely logical thought. In short, a summational culmination of his two-pronged approach to thinking which neatly rounds-off his decades-long philosophical adventure. – A Centretruths editorial
This is without doubt the crowning glory of John O'Loughlin's philosophical quest to nail things as comprehensively and logically as possible, and in that respect it even surpasses his loose trilogy of 'Thoughts', from Notable Thoughts and Quotable Thoughts to Final Thoughts that preceded it, thereby concluding his thinking on the most comprehensively exacting of logical and structural terms, compared to which he has no peers, least of all in the English-speaking world into which he fits rather uncomfortably as an intellectual and spiritual outsider who has never compromised his way of thinking or sought the approval of the intellectual establishment, or so-called intelligentsia, for whom, in any case, he has nothing but contempt. – A Centretruths editorial
An original aphoristic philosophy project divided into two substantive parts, the first of which, entitled 'Quotable Thoughts', is less technically sophisticated and altogether more concise than the second, entitled 'Unquotable Thoughts', which is quasi-essayistic in character, albeit still written within a loosely aphoristic framework the contents of which would, given their average length, be difficult if not impossible to memorize, or quote. Finally, this eBook is rounded off with an essayistic appendix and a fairly brief biographical sketch of the author. Following on from Notable Thoughts (2022), this is John O'Loughlin's most advanced and logically definitive text, which should reward those who are really keen to learn how things comprehensively 'stack up' on a variety of levels, both negatively and positively, on terms which considerably expose the misleading and possibly expedient nature of common usage in respect of what he holds to be crass generalizations. – A Centretruths Editorial
It was in 1942 that the late Dr. V.S. Sukthankar was engaged to deliver four lectures on the 'Meaning of the Mahabharata' under the auspices of the University of Bombay. However, the fourth and last lecture was not delivered on account of his sad sudden demise on the morning of the day fixed for it. The Manuscript (Ms.) of these lectures-a veritable treasure to cherish had remained lost to the world of scholars for the long period of fifteen years. It bore the title "Four Lectures on the Meaning of the Mahabharata." This rather heavy-looking title has been abridged here in publication into the substantial title "On the Meaning of the Mahabharata." In a great many places, sentences or paragraphs have been placed in rectangular brackets in pencil. This bracketed material has been retained in the body of this book. Secondly, an alternative word or phrase is occasionally found written with a pencil in the margin along with an underscoring of the relevant word or words in the text. It is thought advisable to retain the text of the script as it stands, leaving such marginal alternatives alone. However, there is one exception: Dr. Sukthankar had rewritten in pencil almost a whole para at the end of the third lecture. This pencil-script is incorporated in the body of the book. A facsimile of this page is reproduced as the frontispiece. An English rendering of the German quotation from OLDENBURG is given in an Appendix for the convenience of the general reader. In Index, I Sanskrit quotations are printed in Devanagari for the benefit of those not quite conversant with the transliteration.