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I Don't Want To, I Don't Feel Like It: How Resistance Controls Your Life and What to Do About It

I Don't Want To, I Don't Feel Like It: How Resistance Controls Your Life and What to Do About It

Current price: $12.00
Publication Date: May 1st, 2013
Publisher:
Keep It Simple Books
ISBN:
9780961475499
Pages:
225
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

Employing the tenets of Zen Buddhist awareness practice, the book provides numerous exercises and self-help tools for working through problems with resistance, revealing how resistance operates in everyday life and guiding readers to consider how they can be free of it. The teachings in this book show how to recognize resistance in its many forms, not take it personally, and be free of its control. The platform is that the voice of resistance—thoughts such as I'll do it later—is not personal; everyone has it. Instead, it is the voice of a survival system that can take people from commitment to inaction in a matter of seconds. Then, self-hating voices level internal accusations for not having followed through, including thoughts of failure, shame, and lack of self-discipline.

About the Author

Cheri Huber is the founder of the Zen Center in Palo Alto, California, and the Zen Monastery Peace Center in Murphys, California. She is the author of There Is Nothing Wrong with You; Transform Your Life; What You Practice Is What You Have; and When You’re Falling, Dive. She lives in Murphys, California. Ashwini Narayanan is a student of Cheri Huber, has cofacilitated and created workshops with her, and currently runs the operations of the two nonprofits that Cheri founded. She lives in Cupertino, California.

Praise for I Don't Want To, I Don't Feel Like It: How Resistance Controls Your Life and What to Do About It

"Huber challenges us to see our resistances and to accept our conditioned thoughts and behaviors—to live in the present moment with awareness."  —Spirituality and Health Magazine

"Read this book with magic-marker in hand; every page contains some gem-clear dewdrop of wisdom that you'll want to highlight, return to, and savor again and again."  —Don Morreale, editor, The Complete Guide to Buddhist America, on Sweet Zen