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Tim Burkett

    Il viaggio letterario di questo autore è iniziato in gioventù, profondamente immerso nella nascente comunità buddista Zen della California settentrionale. La sua scrittura attinge da incontri diretti con venerati maestri Zen, traducendo profondi insegnamenti nel tessuto dell'esistenza quotidiana. Attraverso narrazioni, arte e parabole, illumina l'interconnessione di tutte le cose, rivelata nelle nostre azioni più piccole. Il suo lavoro incoraggia i lettori ad abbracciare il momento presente con una profonda gioia, trovando significato e realizzazione nelle semplici commedie e tragedie della vita.

    Enlightenment Is an Accident
    The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book
    Nothing Holy About It
    Zen in the Age of Anxiety
    • Zen in the Age of Anxiety

      • 170pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      Best Spiritual Books of 2018 - Spirituality & Practice Zen wisdom for identifying the causes of mental and emotional anxiety epidemic in today's world and for finding the path to a peaceful heart in the midst of them--a path that leads directly though the center of the anxiety we're trying to escape. Wrestling with fear doesn’t have to be a negative experience. This book offers an approach to life that unlocks a new way of thinking and being in the world, one that leads directly through the center of the anxieties we seek to avoid. Written in the style of an owner’s manual, a guide to being human, Burkett focuses on areas of pain and anxiety as they tend to manifest for modern people: feelings of unworthiness, and issues surrounding sex, money, failure, and even death. Providing wisdom from Zen (channeled through his many experiences as a psychotherapist) and using language and metaphors from popular culture, he takes anxiety and teaches us to turn those fears into the building blocks of a fulfilling life.

      Zen in the Age of Anxiety
    • Nothing Holy About It

      • 292pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      When Bodhidharma, the legendary first ancestor of Zen, was asked about the main principle of his holy teaching, he’s said to have replied: “A vast emptiness—with nothing holy about it!” A millennium-and-a-half later, Tim Burkett finds that the answer still applies: you don’t need to go looking for something holy—buddha nature is right here in front of you. The concise summary of Zen teaching he presents in this book is expressed precisely in terms of what he found right in front of him: beginning with the delightful non-holiness he experienced in the presence of his original teacher, Shunyru Suzuki, and continuing through a lifetime of further teaching experiences.

      Nothing Holy About It
    • Featuring more than 45 recipes from a cross section of the best of the independent food scene including Tim Hart and Matthew O'Callaghan OBE, The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book celebrates the culinary diversity of the counties from the small affluent villages to the vibrant city centre.

      The Leicestershire & Rutland Cook Book
    • Enlightenment Is an Accident

      • 208pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      A warm-hearted guide to Buddhist practice for those ready to contend with the reality that enlightenment—the realization of non-self—can’t be achieved by the self. A well-known spiritual saying goes, “Enlightenment is an accident. But we can make ourselves more accident-prone.” As an authentic American Zen takes shape, enlightenment continues to be misunderstood as a project to be completed, a goal to be achieved, or a prize to be awarded. Tim Burkett’s new book unhooks enlightenment from the hot air balloon of ego and brings it back down to earth. Drawing on stories of his first teacher, the Zen master Shunryu Suzuki (author of Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind), and Burkett’s decades of practice and teaching, he reveals how to live in the world with a deep joy that comes from embracing the work and play of this very moment. With the wisdom and humor of a seasoned practitioner familiar with all manner of eccentric fixations and silly dead-ends, he offers views and practices we can use to support the paradoxical process of letting enlightenment happen on its own.

      Enlightenment Is an Accident