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A**R
Sardello writes to the Soul itself.
An amazing book. Sardello speaks directly to the soul and how to free it. I first read this a number of years ago and couldn't really grasp it because I was trying to do so with only my intellect. I could understand the words, but I couldn't 'get' what was under them and between them. Now as I read it again for the 3rd time, something this book lends itself to quite well, I can read it through the deeper layers of my awareness and with the nuances of body wisdom. As I 'do' the exercises, I find I am freeing my soul from fear. I have a lot of fear having experienced great trauma at an early age. I am grateful Sardello does what he does and shares what he knows.
L**N
Indepensible guide
This is a study that can be read over and over. Every exercise helps staying awake, healing, and strengthening.
J**M
A wise man. Very wise.
Sardello is the man for the 21st century. Read and know his wisdom.
J**Y
I highly recommend it.
This is the most original work with fear I have experienced. I highly recommend it.
L**N
lackluster
Robert Sardello seems to be using the process of writing a book to fulfill a deep questioning in his soul. It proved frustrating and difficult understand his point in many instances.
M**E
Freeing the Soul is an apt title!
It has been a tremendous help with the nagging fear of a lifetime. Research based and believable and touching. It has "touched" my soul.
J**K
Fear as an Agent of Love
As I read this book, I began to feel several difficult feelings. The first arose from Dr. Sardello's report of a prediction made by Rudolph Steiner (p.155) in 1917. He predicted that children of the future would increasingly experience a kind of invisible companion who would urge them to do destructive things. I read this at the time of a trial of a boy in Detroit who is charged with murder. Immediately after I read this a teenage friend approached me about an uncanny experience she had lying down in her apartment and feeling the presence of "someone." She had the unnerving feeling of someone coming up behind her as she lay paralyzed in bed and lying next to her back. By a huge effort of will she wrenched herself upright and it went away.Sardello calls this presence "the double" following the lead from literature. We are being told that a new presence is in the world that is not reducible to external "causes" but is nonetheless very real and influencing the actions of our children. The only way to perceive this presence of Fear is through the organ of the soul and everything Sardello says in his book can only be understood if the reader accepts an "epistemology of the soul" that is to say, the imagination as a legitimate way of knowing the world. By the way, this way of knowing reigned supreme until the Age of Science which systematically seeks to excise any shred of imagination from observation on the false grounds that imagination is merely subjective.If the reader can accept the reality of the soul as a way of knowing the world objectively-once the method of observation has been learned of course, as in science-then the problems facing us today in our lives yield to astonishing and fresh insight in this book.This book is about Fear in the world and the organ of the soul teaches us that this Fear is an autonomous presence in the world, invisibly influencing even determining events in the world. Sardello's approach, rooted in his Spiritual Psychology concludes that modern therapies search fruitlessly for psychological causes to this fear, as rooted in experiences in the past (p.151ff). Instead we need to perceive Fear as an actual presence in the world which can enter us and affect our body and senses, as he describes in great detail in the first chapters of the book. The way to deal with Fear according to Sardello is to become conscious of how it affects us now, rather than to seek causes in the past. We can become so conscious if we can exercise and develop the capacities of the human soul.This book is concerned with fear and Sardello does not shrink from giving us the facts about fear according to the epistemology of the soul. This also makes difficult and yet necessary reading. Yet, none of this "facing reality" is intended merely to frighten or to sensationalize. On the contrary, I understand the whole premise of the book to be that Fear is in the world is a necessary agent to wake us up to the profound absence of Love in the world today. Once woken up, we no longer need to continually feed our fears. Instead Sardello gives throughout the book, systematic meditative exercises designed to strengthen the capacity of the soul to love. As Sardello says Love casts out Fear.So this book, which does not flinch from describing the reality of a fear-filled world is after all primarily a book of Love, teaching us how to develop the capacity of love for the sake of a world bereft of love. Fear then becomes a strange and disturbing visitor who brings us the important news that we must bend to the task of creating Love for the sake of our future on this earth.
S**L
One for the bookshelf, one to lend
(c) 20000 Sheridan HillSardello's new book is the kind you must buy two of: one to keep safely on the bookshelf for your own pleasure, and one to lend your friends.In Freeing the Soul From Fear, Sardello carefully explores the fragmenting effects of fear and describes how we might meet it with its only antidote -- love. Sardello, whose perspective grows from a 20-year practice as a depth psychologist, maintains that the real power of fear lives in our wish to avoid it. By repressing our fear, we give it power to take hold.There is a gentle quality about the book, as the author takes a fresh look at love; introduces a strange, fear-based behavior called "doubling"; and weaves in the unearthly ideas of anthroposophist Rudolph Steiner.Sardello's premise is that the soul is not an entity but a capacity, and freeing it involves participating in fear, not naively, but with the greatest intensity of consciousness and attention we are able to muster.The ability to raise good questions is also one of Sardello's gifts. In his previous book, Love and the Soul, one question he asks is, How can I love you in a way that frees you? In this book, he explores questions that range from interesting (How do we love the unpleasant aspects of another person?), to difficult (What does consciousness consist of?), and those that are nearly unanswerable (Why are we here?).A chapter on artistic living reminds readers that bringing the arts into our lives integrates the physical with soul and spirit. Musicians, writers, and artists, who work toward truth in a bodily way, show us that our feelings are not our possessions: the colors and sounds of an average day are loaded with feeling. Poets show us how to "jump into the abyss of not knowing, and there let language come to us and speak through us."Sardello chaired the psychology department at the University of Dallas and co-founded the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture, where he worked closely with James Hillman and Thomas Moore in the 1980s.In 1993, Sardello co-founded the School of Spiritual Psychology, which offers courses throughout the U.S., Canada, and England, and can be reached at [email protected] Hill, a freelance writer in North Carolina, can be reached at [email protected]
L**A
Four Stars
Working through this - thank you!
C**L
Outstanding
This is an outstanding book, written about Love, even though the title suggests Fear and yet is all about Reality.
M**D
One Star
Poorly written and not at all interesting
A**R
Weird
This is tough going, its not the kind of book you can just dip in and out of, it takes full concentration to get to grips with all the suggestions made, some of which are quite esoteric. I've struggled through it and get the general premise of what is portrayed, however application of the same is not on my agenda.
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