Selected Product: | The Way of the Labyrinth: A Powerful Meditation for Everyday Life Paperback Author: Helen Curry Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Release Date: 2000-10-01 ISBN-10: 014019617X ISBN-13: 9780140196177 List Price: $17.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Exploring the Labyrinth: A Guide for Healing and Spiritual Growth ISBN-10: 0767903560 ISBN-13: 9780767903561 List Price:$15.95 Walking a Sacred Path: Rediscovering the Labyrinth as a Spiritual Practice ISBN-10: 1594481814 ISBN-13: 9781594481819 List Price:$14.00 The Sacred Path Companion: A Guide to Walking the Labyrinth to Heal and Transform ISBN-10: 1594481822 ISBN-13: 9781594481826 List Price:$14.00 Labyrinths for the Spirit ISBN-10: 1856752615 ISBN-13: 9781856752619 List Price:$17.95 Praying the Labyrinth: A Journal for Spiritual Exploration ISBN-10: 0829813438 ISBN-13: 9780829813432 List Price:$14.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Way of the Labyrinth: A Powerful Meditation for Everyday Life by Helen Curry (ISBN-10: 014019617X, ISBN-13: 9780140196177). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Way of the Labyrinth: A Powerful Meditation for Everyday Life by Helen Curry (ISBN-10: 014019617X, ISBN-13: 9780140196177). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The first time Helen Curry walked a labyrinth she was moved to tears and then "was filled with peace and possibilities." Here, she shares her years of experience with labyrinth meditation and shows how others can find serenity and guidance by adopting this increasingly popular practice. Unlike mazes, which force choices and can create fear and confusion, labyrinths are designed to "embrace" and guide individuals through a calming, meditative walk on a single circular path. The Way of the Labyrinth includes meditations, prayers, questions for enhancing labyrinth walks, guidelines for ceremonies, instructions for finger meditations, and extensive resources. This enchanting, practical, and exquisitely packaged guide helps both novice and experienced readers enjoy the benefits of labyrinth meditation, from problem-solving to stress reduction to personal transformation.
Includes a foreword by Jean Houston, the renowned author and leader in the field of humanistic psychology, who is considered the grandmother of the current labyrinth revival. wonderful book!! | Customer Rating: | This is an amazing book! It gives a great overview of the history and uses of the Labyrinth, and it helps you get started with walking and making them :). This book has really changed my life. I bought a wonderful wooden double fingerlabyrinth that I use every morning and evening, and in between when I'm upset, and I realized that the town that I have been living in for 12 years now (Nijmegen in the Netherlands) has quite a big stone labyrinth outside on the public street, made by an artist years ago, that can be walked anytime, so now I'm walking it now and then :). You can see pictures of it here on the artist's site: [...] | Mrs. T.'s review | Customer Rating: | I purchased this book because a young man built a large, paved labyrinth on the property of our retreat center as his Eagle Scout project. The labyrinth is 40 feet in diameter. It was not being used because people did not know how to walk the labyrinth. I purchased this book so I could write a short guide for people to use for prayer and meditation as they walked the labyrinth. Now the labyrinth is being used a great deal. The book was most helpful, providing very specific instructions, and also providing an excellent history of the labyrinth. I recommend this book highly. | Very helpful tool | Customer Rating: | This book was my introduction to labyrinths - I didn't even know that labyrinths weren't mazes before reading "The Way of the Labyrinth". Reading this book was a valuable experience for me. I found the tone very agreeable and it helped me make my way through the book at a comfortable pace that was a nice complement to the material. The whole "labyrinth concept" is sort of a personal experience and a lengthy intellectual document would have missed the point entirely. I read it one or two pages a day and every time I picked it up it was like continuing a interesting conversation.
Reflecting on and meditating with labyrinths is a process of carefully and peacefully reflecting on life with something tangible, labyrinths. It was surprising to me how relevant some of the aspects of labyrinths were to issues I was thinking through. A labyrinth, as opposed to a maze, is a path you can follow which winds you around till you get to the center - always. There are no dead ends, and no choices (other than the choice to keep walking forward). This book outlines a few famous historical labyrinths and discusses basic lessons that people have relearned every time they incorporate labyrinths into their society: focus, patience and reflection among many more. The method in which labyrinths focuses people on these lessons shows how powerful a symbol labyrinths are. Its sort of like how you can't help thinking about the future (or the past!) when you see funeral.
There are many personal experiences that Helen shares about her experience with labyrinths. They are a nice guide to what to what you might think about when walking a labyrinth - or even just thinking about labyrinths. Helen seems to be sort of new-agey and religious and I'm not in to new age stuff. Also, I don't have any concrete feelings about religion - I don't even pray. So, any reflections on religious aspects of labyrinths could have been distracting; but they weren't. Her religious reflections were sort of offered as her experience, not something you had to think was part of the labyrinth experience. I could see how they would be helpful for people who were thinking about religion while walking labyrinths.
I really was able to take from this book a set of insights into labyrinths and how this very old meditative tool can help guide your thinking in a secular, non-new-age manner. So, for all you out there who see the word "christian" or "self development" printed in reviews of other labyrinth books, don't get scared away from labyrinths because you think it has something to do with any organized religion or new age philosophy. The reason that people have religious reflections on labyrinths is clear to me - as it will be to you if you know about labyrinths or decide to read up on them. But religion does not have to be a part of your understanding of labyrinths.
I think that meditating is something everyone has tried at some point in their lives (usually when they are teenagers) and that most give it up as life gets more complicated. Part of the problem with keeping with it, I think, is that there's usually this feeling when you try to meditate, that you have to "do" all these things - clear your mind, focus on your breathing, think of a white light, focus on your energy, sit still for 15 minutes, blah blah blah. As we all know if somethings hard, people just won't keep doing it. But, my experience has been that the labyrinth concept gives you a tangible tool for meditating that takes a huge burden off of you. Since reading this book 2 years ago the concept of the labyrinth pops into my head at least once a week and helps me think through things more easily. I know it sounds crazy, but the basic concepts I pulled from the book have helped me lead a calmer, more comfortable life - and I'm not even one the hardcore "labyrinth walkers" that Helen refers to throughtout the book.
In fact, I have yet to actually walk a single labyrinth (aside from tracing the labyrinths in the book) - but the concepts are concrete enough that I have taken something valuable from this book. If I have the opportunity, I will walk a labyrinth and am sure that I will notice things I haven't thought of yet.
I now believe there are real, meaningful reasons the concept of the labyrinth has been a helpful meditative tool for people for thousands of years and I believe it is worth a read for everyone else to find out about labyrinths for these reasons. This book was a nice way to get in touch with that information for me and I suggest it to everyone with an open mind. | The Journey toward God | Customer Rating: | | Finished THE WAY OF THE LABYRINTH, and, dear friend, you are certainly doing "the work," as you would say. You've put together a book rich in history, experience, and possibilities, and you have made this time-honored meditation tool easily accessible to others. That is, after all, what we are all here to do -- to help each other as we each journey toward God. |
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