Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
An effective new approach to Buddhist practice that combines the rigor of traditional meditation and study with the psychological support necessary for practice in lay life.
Zen teacher Jules Shuzen Harris argues that contemporary American Buddhists face two primary challenges- (1) spiritual bypassing, which means avoiding or repressing psychological problems in favor of pretend Enlightenment, and (2) settling for secularized forms of Buddhism or mindfulness that have lost touch with the deeper philosophical and ethical underpinnings of the religion. Drawing on his decades of experience as a Zen practitioner, teacher, and psychotherapist, Harris writes that both of these challenges can be met through the combination of a committed meditation practice, a deep study of Buddhist psychological models, and tools from a psychotherapeutic method known as Mind-Body Bridging. Using this unique approach, students can do the real work of awakening without either denying their embodied emotional life or missing out on the rich array of insights offered by Buddhist psychology and the Zen practice tradition.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
An effective new approach to Buddhist practice that combines the rigor of traditional meditation and study with the psychological support necessary for practice in lay life.
Zen teacher Jules Shuzen Harris argues that contemporary American Buddhists face two primary challenges- (1) spiritual bypassing, which means avoiding or repressing psychological problems in favor of pretend Enlightenment, and (2) settling for secularized forms of Buddhism or mindfulness that have lost touch with the deeper philosophical and ethical underpinnings of the religion. Drawing on his decades of experience as a Zen practitioner, teacher, and psychotherapist, Harris writes that both of these challenges can be met through the combination of a committed meditation practice, a deep study of Buddhist psychological models, and tools from a psychotherapeutic method known as Mind-Body Bridging. Using this unique approach, students can do the real work of awakening without either denying their embodied emotional life or missing out on the rich array of insights offered by Buddhist psychology and the Zen practice tradition.