Rude Awakening
The rude truths about the myths, misconceptions, fairy tales and illusions encountered by the spiritual seeker on their journey.
The rude truths about the myths, misconceptions, fairy tales and illusions encountered by the spiritual seeker on their journey.
The rude truths about the myths, misconceptions, fairy tales and illusions encountered by the spiritual seeker on their journey.
Religion, Zen
We live in the Golden Age of publishing for spiritual, esoteric, and new age books of all conceivable stripes (and then there is the Internet). Amongst this wild proliferation of available information there has occurred a cheapening effect, in which many teachings have been watered down to make them palatable for a public with diminishing attention spans and suffering from information overload. For the sincere spiritual seeker there needs to be an awareness of the various ways we can go astray on the path, or fall off the path altogether. The whole idea of spirituality is to be awake, yet it is all too easy to simply end up in yet another dream world, thinking that we have found some higher truth. Rude Awakening: Perils, Pitfalls, and Hard Truths of the Spiritual Path is dedicated to examining, under a sharp light, the many ways our spiritual development goes wrong, or disappears altogether in the sheer crush of books and the routine grind of daily life.
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I am fortunate to have several friends who are atheists and for all that they can be a bit rude about respecting my beliefs, they provide a welcome counter-agent to some of the more absurd aspects of spirituality. Being spiritual does not mean leaving your brains on the floor. It is never a good idea to follow someone -- even a God/dess -- blindly. Nor do you have to accept all practices as valid. Meditation may be perfectly useful way to calm the 'monkey brain' caused by so much media distraction in our (typical) daily lives, but practicing it does not mean you need to also attempt out of body experiences, yoga, finding the snake-people aliens among us, chakra cleansing, lucid dreaming, past-life regressions, or even mapping Atlantis. Mistlberger came of age during the wild and whacky new age movement of the 60s and he has no patience with the flaky aspects of self-transformation. On the contrary, he is a transpersonal therapist who believes, strongly, that it is exceedingly rare and difficult to truly succeed at positive self-transformation. It is not a matter, he argues, of resolving karmic debt or finding the key to crop circles. Mistlberger offers a persuasive argument that the artificial divisions we create (or are taught) between our normal lives and our spiritual ones are what is keeping us from reaching our true potential. He argues that we need to move beyond the 'popular' culture which keeps us unobservant and divided. He argues that we are 'built' to self-deceive and we are extremely good at creating distractions that increase our suffering. (These arguments feel very Buddhist to me, in that they agree that the world is a place of suffering, and to move beyond it requires achieving awareness.) In his opinion, most spiritual paths are full of crap that distracts and divides, actively pulling us away from spiritual fulfillment and the joy that accompanies communion with the Divine. This is not a book for a newcomer exploring his/her spirituality. It will feel too offensive, and perhaps even scary. However, for a person who has done some Work, gathered a taste of the Divine, and is looking to do more Work to achieve it again . . . Rude Awakening is a gift of honesty and clarity. ~ Lisa Mc Sherry, Facing North.net
For all the books on spiritual practice, few have explored the real difficulties involved in becoming enlightened or even just sane through a psychospiritual process. P.T. Mistlberger provides a much needed road-map to the basics of spiritual myopia, idealism, inflation, and narcissism. Because the spiritual path is so—well, spiritual—too many people assume that it is also literal and linear and speaks for itself. But it is not a replacement for living clearly, and critically considering every activity, not only in an absolute sense but in terms of one’s own tendencies of evasion. Mistlberger serves as a good spiritual therapist and coach.
~ Richard Grossinger, author of Planet Medicine and The Bardo of Waking LifeAn insightful distillation of decades of hard-won spiritual experience. There are few seekers, I suspect, who will not resonate with its message and benefit from its advice.
~ Richard Smoley, author of The Dice Game of Shiva and Inner Christianity