genre: non-fiction, religion, spirituality
I picked this up because it was highly recommended by a therapist I have worked with and truly admire. I've experienced a religious deconstruction over the past several years and I got the impression that there were ideas here that could help me. I was both correct and not correct. There ARE good and important ideas here, especially about the True Self and the False Self. Thinking about this dichotomy has been a good exercise and one I'd like to continue. There are thoughts here about the concept of "sin" and "moralism" that rang very true to where my own spirituality resides right now. But in other ways, the very heavy emphasis on Jesus Christ as being completely necessary to a spiritual life - almost the entire core of its purpose - did not fill the holes inside me. My faith in nearly everything has collapsed and so I personally need a different starting point to rebuild that doesn't even require the idea of a Heavenly Parent God. I need more feminism and more inner work than what is offered here - although I will grant that there is a lot more expansive thinking in the author's words than in the Mormonism that I was raised with. The trinity, God-inside-you and that Love is the biggest and first source of Truth - all of this was really good to let my brain simmer on.
For the first non-fiction, non-memoir book I've read specifically on spirituality by an author not associated with Mormonism, it was an interesting - if imperfect - start for me on my journey.