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 · 4,825 ratings  · 267 reviews
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Jeff Maziarek
Jan 31, 2010 rated it really liked it
Anthony DeMello is my favorite spiritual teacher, so I'll admit to having a bit of bias in his favor. This is a nice little book with lots of wisdom shared in DeMello's usual frank, no-nonsense style. Here's one of my favorite quotes from it:

"Whenever you are insecure about what may happen in the future, just remember this: In the past six months or one year you were so insecure about events which when they finally came you were able to handle somehow. Thanks to the energy and the resources that

Anthony DeMello is my favorite spiritual teacher, so I'll admit to having a bit of bias in his favor. This is a nice little book with lots of wisdom shared in DeMello's usual frank, no-nonsense style. Here's one of my favorite quotes from it:

"Whenever you are insecure about what may happen in the future, just remember this: In the past six months or one year you were so insecure about events which when they finally came you were able to handle somehow. Thanks to the energy and the resources that that particular present moment gave you, and not to all the previous worrying, which only made you suffer needlessly and weakened you emotionally.

So say to yourself: If there is anything I can do about the future, right now, I shall do it. Then I'm going to just leave it alone and settle down to enjoy the present moment, because all the experience of my life has shown me that I can only cope with things when they are present, not before they occur. And that the present always gives me the resources and the energy I need to deal with them."

...more
Coen
Dec 04, 2011 rated it it was amazing
What a book. This scared and terrified the shit out of me on several occasions. What an astounding thing to do. I've read my share of books on spirituality, but for some reason, this one really got to me. Or maybe it's just the current stage I'm experiencing in my life. I was ready to hear and absorb the ideas/principles/etc it was trying to tell me. It has shaken me up. It has challenged every single thing I believe and hold true. I love challening my beliefs. I love deprogramming. I loved this What a book. This scared and terrified the shit out of me on several occasions. What an astounding thing to do. I've read my share of books on spirituality, but for some reason, this one really got to me. Or maybe it's just the current stage I'm experiencing in my life. I was ready to hear and absorb the ideas/principles/etc it was trying to tell me. It has shaken me up. It has challenged every single thing I believe and hold true. I love challening my beliefs. I love deprogramming. I loved this book. He's now one of my favorite authors. Before this, I read his other book: "Awareness". Recommend it as well. ...more
Shane Parrish
Feb 10, 2020 rated it it was amazing
The most important things in life can be learned but not taught. "You can get someone to teach you things mechanical or scientific or mathematical like algebra or English or riding a cycle or operating a computer. But in the things that really matter, life, love, reality, God, no one can teach you a thing. All they can do is give you formulas. And as soon as you have a formula, you have reality filtered through the mind of someone else. If you take those formulas you will be imprisoned. You will The most important things in life can be learned but not taught. "You can get someone to teach you things mechanical or scientific or mathematical like algebra or English or riding a cycle or operating a computer. But in the things that really matter, life, love, reality, God, no one can teach you a thing. All they can do is give you formulas. And as soon as you have a formula, you have reality filtered through the mind of someone else. If you take those formulas you will be imprisoned. You will wither and when you come to die you will not have known what it means to see for yourself, to learn." ...more
Christopher Maricle
If you read Anthony de Mello, you will find yourself nodding. And then you will have to read it again. The concepts can challenging, because it's not your typical Christian spirituality. de Mello will make you face the hardest questions about your one needs, fears, motives and beliefs. And it will change you. If you read Anthony de Mello, you will find yourself nodding. And then you will have to read it again. The concepts can challenging, because it's not your typical Christian spirituality. de Mello will make you face the hardest questions about your one needs, fears, motives and beliefs. And it will change you. ...more
David Blynov
This book is a mix of Eastern philosophy and psychoanalysis, framed together by New Testament scripture.

Theologically speaking, I did not find myself agreeing with many of the underlying assumptions that de Mello made. After a bit of research, I found out that the Catholic church is also a lil weary of de Mello's theological teachings. Nevertheless, this book has so much beautiful wisdom that it would be a shame to discredit it all together. So many profound ideas are explored by de Mello that

This book is a mix of Eastern philosophy and psychoanalysis, framed together by New Testament scripture.

Theologically speaking, I did not find myself agreeing with many of the underlying assumptions that de Mello made. After a bit of research, I found out that the Catholic church is also a lil weary of de Mello's theological teachings. Nevertheless, this book has so much beautiful wisdom that it would be a shame to discredit it all together. So many profound ideas are explored by de Mello that it is impossible not to occasionally find yourself in a state of awe as you are reading this book.

A few of my favorite quotes and ideas:

"What makes you happy or unhappy is not the world and the people around you, but the thinking in your head."

"So spend some time seeing each of the things you cling to for what it really is, a nightmare that causes you excitement and pleasure on the one hand but also worry, insecurity, tension, anxiety, fear, unhappiness on the other."

"If you just enjoy things, refusing to let yourself be attached to them, that is, refusing to hold the false belief that you will not be happy without them, you are spared all the struggle and emotional strain of protecting them and guarding them for yourself."

"Attachments can only thrive in the darkness of illusion."

"To be in the state called love you must be sensitive to the uniqueness and beauty of every single thing and person around you."

"You must choose between your attachment and happiness. You cannot have both."

"Life is infinitely greater than this trifle your heart is attached to and which you have given the power to so upset you."

"If you hold on to an idea about someone, then you no longer love that person but your idea of that person."

"The moment you are aware of your holiness it goes sour and becomes self-righteousness. A good deed is never so good as when you have no consciousness that it is good - you are so much in love with the action that you are quite unselfconscious about your goodness and virtue."

"Spend some time in becoming aware of the fact that all the virtue that you can see in yourself is no virtue at all but something that you have cunningly cultivated and produced and forced on yourself."

"The rose has a gift that you lack: It is perfectly content to be itself."

"The question to ask is not, "What's wrong with this person?" but "What does this irritation tell me about myself?""

"It is only inasmuch as you see someone as he or she really is here and now and not as they are in your memory or your desire or in your imagination or projection that you can truly love them, otherwise it is not the person that you love but the idea that you have formed of this person, or this person as the object of your desire not as he or she is in themselves."

"Happy events make life delightful but they do not lead to self-discovery and growth and freedom. That privilege is reserved to the things and persons and situations that cause us pain."

"The present moment, no matter how painful, is never unbearable."

"People mistakenly assume that their thinking is done by their head; it is done actually by the heart which first dictates the conclusion, then commands the head to provide the reasoning that will defend it."

4.4/5

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Jovana Đurić
I usually write quotes, and this one made me write - a lot. First of all, I liked some parts of a book, he really gives us good advices. But I also have a lot of negative comments:
1. He says that we shouldn't look at things through our beliefs and there he goes he wrote it through Bible quotes and believes.
2. Humans are social beings, we live in certain culture, and sorry buddy, but we can't just excuse ourselves from it.
3. I kinda got a felling that all he wants to say is that you can't be ha
I usually write quotes, and this one made me write - a lot. First of all, I liked some parts of a book, he really gives us good advices. But I also have a lot of negative comments:
1. He says that we shouldn't look at things through our beliefs and there he goes he wrote it through Bible quotes and believes.
2. Humans are social beings, we live in certain culture, and sorry buddy, but we can't just excuse ourselves from it.
3. I kinda got a felling that all he wants to say is that you can't be happy as long as you are attached with someone - sorry again we all have parents and that's our first connection with world, we can't just throw it away, our friends, partners, pets,...
4. I think that if we actually lived the way he advices us we would never be happy. We would be alone separated from anyone who certainly made us feel happy, we would be flegmatic towards anything - meeeh it's the way it is I can change it.
5. Feelings ARE OK, it's ok to feel angry, to feel sad, or however we want to feel, feelings make us change and progress! You can't just ignore it it's like: ,,My parent just died, I feel sad, oh no, that's my attachment I got to get out of that, yeey and now I'm happy".
6. I agree we shouldn't compare ourselves with other people, but we need to compare us with ourselves! Otherwise we would be the same - again, no progress!
7. Our wishes, imaginations, believes, relationships make us go foward (healthy ones), and yes, when we complete them we feel a short-time happiness, but that's why we need to change our goals, and wishes all the time to keep us moving, and developing whatever we want!
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Sara Jovanovic
I think this is one of those books that should be read more than once. Sometimes you'll relate to author's wise words and take to heart his meaningful advice, but I think most of this needs a right moment to make an impact. But it's helpful. And I appreciate that. I think this is one of those books that should be read more than once. Sometimes you'll relate to author's wise words and take to heart his meaningful advice, but I think most of this needs a right moment to make an impact. But it's helpful. And I appreciate that. ...more
Widyarini
Nov 14, 2012 rated it it was amazing
This pure, sincere observation about life can only be done by someone holy.
Read this with open heart and it will lead you to taste sweetness of enlightenment.
Most priests will interpret bible though what they learn in theology, through the ideas that lived in their mind for years planted by society and religion. De Mello is one of a kind priest.
I'm so grateful for him and his love.
This pure, sincere observation about life can only be done by someone holy.
Read this with open heart and it will lead you to taste sweetness of enlightenment.
Most priests will interpret bible though what they learn in theology, through the ideas that lived in their mind for years planted by society and religion. De Mello is one of a kind priest.
I'm so grateful for him and his love.
...more
Sean Goh
Probably the most paradigm-shifting book I've read in a long long while (definitely this year, maybe my whole uni life). Despite being written by a Jesuit priest, the ideas expressed are reminiscent of Buddhism (non-attachment), with a distinct Christian lens. Reminded me of the book I read by Osho recently as well (Book of Living and Dying).

If you read only one book a decade, do yourself a favour and make it this one.

Attachment
Attachment - how is an attachment formed?
First comes the contact wi
Probably the most paradigm-shifting book I've read in a long long while (definitely this year, maybe my whole uni life). Despite being written by a Jesuit priest, the ideas expressed are reminiscent of Buddhism (non-attachment), with a distinct Christian lens. Reminded me of the book I read by Osho recently as well (Book of Living and Dying).

If you read only one book a decade, do yourself a favour and make it this one.

Attachment
Attachment - how is an attachment formed?
First comes the contact with something that gives you pleasure: a car, an attractively advertised modern appliance, a word of praise, a person's company. Then comes the desire to hold on to it, to repeat the gratifying sensation that this thing or person caused you. Finally comes the conviction that you will not be happy without this person or thing, for you have equated the pleasure it brings you with happiness. You now have a full-blown attachment; and with it comes an inevitable exclusion of other things, an insensitivity to anything that isn't part of your attachment. Each time you leave the object of your attachment, you leave your heart there, so you cannot invest it in the next place you go to. The symphony of life moves on but you keep looking back, clinging to a few bars of the melody, blocking your ears to the rest of the music, thereby producing disharmony and conflict between what life is offering you and what you are.

There is only one thing that blocks out entry into that world (of love) and the name of that thing is Attachment. It is produced by the lusting eye that excites craving within the heart and by the grasping hand that reaches out to hold, possess and make one's own, and refuses to let go. It is this eye that must be gouged out, this hand that must be cut off if love is to be born.

Mostly the discontent that you feel comes from not having enough of something- you are dissatisfied because you think you do not have enough money or power or success or fame or virtue or love, or holiness. This is not the discontent that leads to the joy of the kingdom. Its source is greed and ambition and its fruit is restlessness and frustration. The day you are discontented not because you want more of something but without knowing what it is you want; when you are sick at heart of everything that you have been pursuing so far and you are sick of the pursuit itself, then your heart will attain a great clarity, an insight that will cause you mysteriously to delight in everything and in nothing.

Make a list of all your attachments and desires and to each of them say these words: "Deep down in my heart I know that even after I have got you I will not get happiness." And ponder on the truth of those words. The fulfilment of desire can, at the most, bring flashes of pleasure and excitement. Don't mistake that for happiness.

"I am not really attached to you at all. I have merely cheated myself into the belief that without you I will not be happy."

But the light must shine uninterruptedly if it is to be effective. Attachments can only thrive in the darkness of illusion. The rich man cannot enter the kingdom of joy not because he wants to be bad but because he chooses to be blind.

"I leave you free to be yourself ... "In saying those words you have set yourself free. You are now ready to love. For when you cling, what you offer the other is not love but a chain by which both you and your beloved are bound.
Love can only exist in freedom. The true lover seeks the good of his beloved which requires especially the liberation of the beloved from the lover.

Now think of yourself listening to an orchestra in which the sound of the drum is so loud that nothing else can be heard. To enjoy the symphony you must be responsive to every instrument in the orchestra. To be in the state called love you must be sensitive to the uniqueness and beauty of every single thing and person around you. You can hardly be said to love what you do not even notice; and if you notice only a few beings to the exclusion of others, that is not love at all, for love excludes no one at all; it embraces the whole of life; it listens to the symphony as a whole, not to just one or the other of the musical instruments.

You falsely think that your fears protect you, your beliefs have made you what you are and your attachments make your life exciting and secure. You fail to see that they are actually a screen between you and life's symphony.

Love
So this is the first quality of love: its indiscriminate character.

The final quality of love is its freedom. The moment coercion or control or conflict enters, love dies. Think how the rose, the tree, the lamp leave you completely free. The tree will make no effort to drag you into its shade if you are in danger of a sunstroke. The lamp will not force its light on you lest you stumble in the dark.
Think for a while of all the coercion and control that you submit to on the part of others when you so anxiously live up to their expectations in order to buy their love and approval or because you fear you will lose them. Each time you submit to this control and this coercion you destroy the capacity to love which is your very nature, for you cannot but do to others what you allow others to do to you. Contemplate, then, all the control and coercion in your life and hopefully this contemplation alone will cause them to drop. The moment they drop, freedom will arise. And freedom is just another word for love.
As a matter of fact, they have convinced you that if you ever broke free of them, you would become an island-solitary, bleak, unloving. But the exact opposite is true. How can you love someone
whom you are a slave to ? How can you love someone whom you cannot live without? You can only desire, need, depend and fear and be controlled. Love is to be found only in fearlessness and freedom. How do you achieve this freedom? By means of a two-pronged attack on your dependency and slavery. First, awareness. It is next to impossible to be dependent, to be a slave, when one constantly observes the folly of one's dependence. But awareness may not be enough for a person whose addiction is people. You must cultivate activities that you love. You must discover work that you do, not for its utility, but for itself.

If it is love that you truly desire then set out at once on the task of seeing, take it seriously and look at someone you dislike and really see your prejudice. Look at someone you cling to or something you cling to and really see the suffering, the futility, the unfreedom of clinging and look long and lovingly at human faces and human behaviour. Take some time out to gaze in wonder at Nature, the flight of a bird, a flower in bloom, the dry leaf crumbling to dust, the flow of a river, the rising of the moon, a silhouette of a mountain against the sky. And as you do this the hard, protective shell around your heart will soften and melt and your heart will come alive in sensitivity and responsiveness. The darkness in your eyes will be dispelled and your vision will become clear and penetrating, and you will know at last what love is.

Love springs from awareness. It is only inasmuch as you see someone as he or she really is here and now and not as they are in your memory or your desire or in your imagination or projection that you can truly love them, otherwise it is not the person that you love but the idea that you have formed of this person, or this person as the object of your desire not as he or she is in themselves.

The secret is to renounce nothing, cling to nothing, enjoy everything and allow it to pass, to flow.

Contrary to popular beliefs, the cure for lovelessness and loneliness is not company but contact with Reality. The moment you touch this Reality you will know what freedom and love are. Freedom from people -and so the ability to love them.

Virtue
Spend some time in becoming aware of the fact that all the virtue that you can see in yourself is no virtue at all but something that you have cunningly cultivated and produced and forced on yourself. If it were real virtue you would have enjoyed it thoroughly and would feel so natural that it wouldn't occur to you to think of it as a virtue. So the first quality of holiness is its unselfconsciousness.

There is another more subtle way in which the innocence of childhood is lost: when the child is infected by the desire to become somebody. Contemplate the crowds of people who are striving might and main to become, not what Nature intended them to be-musicians, cooks, mechanics, carpenters, gardeners, inventors-but somebody: to become successful, famous, powerful; to become something that will bring, not quiet self-fulfilment, but self-glorification, self-expansion. You are looking at people who have lost their innocence because they have chosen not to be themselves but to promote themselves, to show off, even if it be only in their own eyes.

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Celeste
Jan 02, 2020 rated it it was amazing
The most important book that brought me on a journey throughout the past week, when I first opened it at the hairdressers, making me reflect on my top 3 attachments; the next day I experienced those moments that can only be described as a "state of grace", seeing parents and children play in Fuxing Park and seeing the sunlight filter through the windows and cast shadows on the books in the Sinan Mansions bookstore; discussions on depression with my Chinese teacher on Monday; an overall roller co The most important book that brought me on a journey throughout the past week, when I first opened it at the hairdressers, making me reflect on my top 3 attachments; the next day I experienced those moments that can only be described as a "state of grace", seeing parents and children play in Fuxing Park and seeing the sunlight filter through the windows and cast shadows on the books in the Sinan Mansions bookstore; discussions on depression with my Chinese teacher on Monday; an overall roller coaster journey that opened up deep seated insecurities in work, love and life.

This book that was heavily pushed to me by my sister thrice I have probably recommended to literally everyone in my circle, with the main pronouncement that the most important relationship we will have in this world is the relationship we have with ourselves. Like the quote at Breakfast at Tiffany's to a Holly Golightly who was always on the run: No matter where you run, the only person you will run into is yourself.

The main principles are clear: see things and people as they are, and not through the labels, filters and projections we make on them. Love them for who they are — and more importantly, love ourselves for who we are instead of nitpicking on our flaws. It is the ego that gives rise to all this inner strife and knot-tying within us, the ego who relies on external validation, who always wants to be better if not the best, whose vanity suffers at the slightest word or action from someone else.

In a world where rationality is prized, but in the name of it so many layers of hardening is wrapped around oneself, one has to learn to unravel all of them and feel the innocence and pure love of a child again. And it is only when one learns to love herself or himself for its own sake can one love others properly.

To end off, this was at the very beginning of the book that got me hooked:

"Recall the kind of feeling you have when some­ one praises you, when you are approved, accepted, applauded. And contrast that with the kind of feeling that arises within you when you look at the sunset or the sunrise or Nature in general, or when you read a book or watch a movie that you thoroughly enjoy. Get the taste of this feeling and contrast it with the first, namely, the one that was generated within you when you were praised. Understand that the first type of feeling comes from self-glorification, self-promotion. It is a worldly feeling. The second comes from self-fulfillment, a soul feeling."

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Jaivignesh Venugopal
This was very difficult for me to go through because almost everything that was written either felt like common sense or just completely wrong. A friend recommended this book to me, so I took the extra effort to not put the book down too quickly. But woah, this was pretty bad. Ratings are above 4, so I guess I might be the odd one out here but I really wonder what people enjoyed by reading this. To each his own I guess.

Most of his concepts were so repetitive and most of the time, the chapter ti

This was very difficult for me to go through because almost everything that was written either felt like common sense or just completely wrong. A friend recommended this book to me, so I took the extra effort to not put the book down too quickly. But woah, this was pretty bad. Ratings are above 4, so I guess I might be the odd one out here but I really wonder what people enjoyed by reading this. To each his own I guess.

Most of his concepts were so repetitive and most of the time, the chapter titles had no connection to the chapter itself. It felt like someone wrote some words in their diary and bundled it into a book. Maybe it's just me, I don't know. Maybe I would look at it differently when I read it again in the future. But for now, nope.

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Mary
May 29, 2009 rated it it was amazing
This is a little book espousing a life with no suffering. It teaches that we suffer because we attach our identity to things that we cannot control and are only concepts. Buddhist-like teaching mixed with Christianity.
Jilles
Sep 26, 2019 rated it it was amazing
What a beautiful little book full of deep meditations about life, how we have been programmed by society and have lost connection with our deeper selves. A must for every one who is on a spiritual journey (and aren't we all). What a beautiful little book full of deep meditations about life, how we have been programmed by society and have lost connection with our deeper selves. A must for every one who is on a spiritual journey (and aren't we all). ...more
Petar Ivanov
Sep 09, 2021 rated it it was amazing
A truly astonishing book that's full of a lot of insides and wisdom. Really forces you to reflect, think and challenge the status quo and your thinking.
Try to be as a child, free of any brain programming, culture, biases, attachments and etc, and see people and things as they are not as your brain and thinking think they are. Try to be a little freer from attachments!
Recommend it to every human being!
A truly astonishing book that's full of a lot of insides and wisdom. Really forces you to reflect, think and challenge the status quo and your thinking.
Try to be as a child, free of any brain programming, culture, biases, attachments and etc, and see people and things as they are not as your brain and thinking think they are. Try to be a little freer from attachments!
Recommend it to every human being!
...more
Melinda
This is one of those books that just helps you get perspective. It is done in short chapters that reflect on the meaning of a scripture verse, but does not preach a sermon. It's more about how to see everything for what it really is - not what it has become for us through the influences of our culture or other relationships. Anthony De Mello was a thinker who cut through so much of what we assume we understand, but have not critically looked at. This is one of those books that just helps you get perspective. It is done in short chapters that reflect on the meaning of a scripture verse, but does not preach a sermon. It's more about how to see everything for what it really is - not what it has become for us through the influences of our culture or other relationships. Anthony De Mello was a thinker who cut through so much of what we assume we understand, but have not critically looked at. ...more
Paul
May 16, 2010 marked it as to-read
Meditative, contemplative readings that I ponder as I drift off to sleep each night. This book was recently given to be by a wise and gentle soul I know and admire.
Tristan
Sep 09, 2020 rated it really liked it
This felt like Albert Ellis meets Alan Watts—for better (i.e., the unpadded, no nonsense advice about why you're going about happiness in the wrong ways) and worse (i.e., the inconsistent exaggerations, blank slate-ism, and repetitive messaging).

It's a tiny book and I probably wouldn't have liked it so much if I'd blown through it. But I read a chapter or so each morning, and noticed de Mello's words influencing me (for the better) as I went about my days.

This felt like Albert Ellis meets Alan Watts—for better (i.e., the unpadded, no nonsense advice about why you're going about happiness in the wrong ways) and worse (i.e., the inconsistent exaggerations, blank slate-ism, and repetitive messaging).

It's a tiny book and I probably wouldn't have liked it so much if I'd blown through it. But I read a chapter or so each morning, and noticed de Mello's words influencing me (for the better) as I went about my days.

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Maarten Pelle
Mar 08, 2021 rated it it was amazing
Great book with useful insights. Lots of parallels with more universal ideas that stoic writers like Marcus Aurelius, Seneca and Epictetus have written about such as living in the present moment, being indifferent towards pride/social status, external events, desire, happiness, etc. Still a great read overall.
Rajath Moodithaya
An okay read. I came across this as a spiritual read and having read nothing from Jesuit scholars, this piqued my interest. Some good stuff(when talking about trying to describe happiness, "Can you describe reality to someone in a dream?") and some bad stuff(oversimplification of the lived human experience) but it's kept short overall, before it gets way too repetitive. It does have some thoughts that keeps you thinking after you've finished it, so it deserves 3.5 stars! An okay read. I came across this as a spiritual read and having read nothing from Jesuit scholars, this piqued my interest. Some good stuff(when talking about trying to describe happiness, "Can you describe reality to someone in a dream?") and some bad stuff(oversimplification of the lived human experience) but it's kept short overall, before it gets way too repetitive. It does have some thoughts that keeps you thinking after you've finished it, so it deserves 3.5 stars! ...more
Mylan
French is my second language, so I'm not sure if I misunderstood - a lot of this book went in circles and repeated the same messages over and over again. A few key messages were great though! French is my second language, so I'm not sure if I misunderstood - a lot of this book went in circles and repeated the same messages over and over again. A few key messages were great though! ...more
Kennedy C.S.
Jul 04, 2020 rated it it was amazing
Revelatory. Empowering. Perceptive. Potent.
--
De Mello's timeless wisdom and clarity seep through the pages of this little book. Of his books that I have read so far, they almost always revolve around the disproportional influence of attachment and awareness, and this one is no exception to the rule. The Way to Love is filled to the brim with thought-exercises and wake-up calls, which elongate this brief read through copious amounts of thought and meditation, both prescribed and aroused.

-----St

Revelatory. Empowering. Perceptive. Potent.
--
De Mello's timeless wisdom and clarity seep through the pages of this little book. Of his books that I have read so far, they almost always revolve around the disproportional influence of attachment and awareness, and this one is no exception to the rule. The Way to Love is filled to the brim with thought-exercises and wake-up calls, which elongate this brief read through copious amounts of thought and meditation, both prescribed and aroused.

-----Standout Quotes-----
--- "There is not a single moment in your life when you do not have everything that you need to be happy" (7).

--- "If you learn to enjoy the scent of a thousand flowers you will not cling to one or suffer when you cannot get it" (31).

--- "Attachments can only thrive in the darkness of illusion. The rich man cannot enter the kingdom of joy not because he wants to be bad but because he chooses to be blind" (31).

--- "You see persons and things not as they are but as you are" (47).

--- "A good deed is never so good as when you have no consciousness that it is good" (70).

--- "Finally take a look at the society we live in-- rotten to the core, infected as it is with attachments. For if anyone is attached to power, money, property, to fame and success; if anyone seeks these things as if their happiness depended on them, they will be considered productive members of society, dynamic and hardworking. In other words, if they pursue these things with a driving ambition that destroys the symphony of their life and makes them hard and cold and insensitive to others and to themselves, society will look upon them as dependable citizens, and their relatives and friends will be proud of the status that they have achieved" (115-6).

--- "to understand all is to forgive all" (120).

--- "The orchestra is within you and you carry it with you wherever you go. The things and people outside you merely determine the melody the orchestra will play. And when there is no one or nothing that has your attention the orchestra will play a music of its own; it needs no outside stimulation. You now carry in your heart a happiness that nothing outside of you can put there, and nothing can take away" (155).

--- "Has it ever struck you that those who most fear to die are the ones who most fear to live? That in running away from death we are running away from life?" (177).

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Samira
Jan 23, 2018 rated it really liked it
One of the most enlightening books.. it's a bit like his book "awareness" , he's stressed a lot on the attachment and clinging to persons, things.
It's one of those books which breaks your denial state of how much suffering that you have when you cling and attach..
Holiness is not achievement, it is a Grace. A Grace called Awareness, a Grace called Looking, Observing, Understanding.
One of the most enlightening books.. it's a bit like his book "awareness" , he's stressed a lot on the attachment and clinging to persons, things.
It's one of those books which breaks your denial state of how much suffering that you have when you cling and attach..
Holiness is not achievement, it is a Grace. A Grace called Awareness, a Grace called Looking, Observing, Understanding.
...more
Dexter
Sep 12, 2021 rated it it was amazing
I am convinced that this book will help me live a richer, fuller life. Even if it couldn't tell me exactly how to get there.

It instantly became my favorite book of all time.

Darius Murretti
"You live to so that you may learn to love
You love that you may learn to live
no other lesson is required of man"
---the Book of Mirdad

This book is a practical guide on how to love rightly so that you are not drowned in the surging ocean of love but are born by it waves by it to the shore of the bliss of eternal Oneness .

"You live to so that you may learn to love
You love that you may learn to live
no other lesson is required of man"
---the Book of Mirdad

This book is a practical guide on how to love rightly so that you are not drowned in the surging ocean of love but are born by it waves by it to the shore of the bliss of eternal Oneness .

...more
Hannah Petersen
i dedicated each morning to reading one reflection and gained news ways of prayer and perspective
Jana
Oct 14, 2017 rated it it was amazing
Excellent! Much to ponder in this little gem. I will for sure be coming back to this over and over. De Mello makes holiness/spirituality accessible in the here and now...and it's so much more about awareness and grace...so refreshing!!!
Jonathan Martin
Fed up listening to Rhianna finding love in a hopeless place? Bored senseless watching repetitive Hollywood rom-coms? Peeved off with those childhood fairytales about happy-ever-after romances? Then digest a copy of De Mello's The Way To Love and I guarantee your life will never be the same again. Okay, I can't guarantee that but it will certainly provide the opportunity to change your outlook on love, relationships and other trifles. Be warned though, you may not like what he has to say.

I bough

Fed up listening to Rhianna finding love in a hopeless place? Bored senseless watching repetitive Hollywood rom-coms? Peeved off with those childhood fairytales about happy-ever-after romances? Then digest a copy of De Mello's The Way To Love and I guarantee your life will never be the same again. Okay, I can't guarantee that but it will certainly provide the opportunity to change your outlook on love, relationships and other trifles. Be warned though, you may not like what he has to say.

I bought the handy pocket-size version (ideal for public transport, waiting rooms or when you're hanging around for a friend) and like his other tome, Awareness, it is presented in small, titled chapters that you can happily read at once.

Again there is a christian slant to the writings but his tone isn't quite so cutthroat; each section opens with a biblical verse that may instantly evoke memories of tyrannical church sermons for some. However you can simply choose to ignore these or, better still, appreciate his impartial and perhaps originally intended interpretations! I didn't find it bothersome and in fact was able to value the new light he shed on this wisdom, integrating it with my own philosophy and spiritual journey.

In Awareness, the message was basically to bring one's attention to the present so that contentment can be chosen, or realised, in each and every moment. In this book the fundamental message is detachment - release all material and worldly attachments, through awareness, particularly to people and the ideals of romantic unions and saviour relationships. In this way, De Mello believes we can stop giving away our personal power, our basic right to happiness and be truly free to enjoy each moment of life, i.e., not dwelling on the past (attachment), anticipating the future (attachment) or seeking fame, admiration and status that all inflate our ego's. I think this message alone is an ideal cure for the celebrity fever gripping today's society.

I've quickly come to value this little book and have already re-read most of the chapters. The inherent truths are a real wakeup call, clear, frank and succinct, so much so that sometimes you may feel a little embarrassed at having deluded yourself from the obvious! I already feel freer in relation to some of my own attachments – I just need to be careful I don't become attached to this book.

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Jason
Mar 01, 2014 rated it liked it
I previously read the author's book Awareness, which was incredible and I agreed with about 95% of it. This book is largely similar, so if you've read Awareness than you've read 90% of his points in this one. They're still quality perspectives to chew on, but there's little new content here.

Also, when compared to Awareness, I found he was less direct when talking about God in this volume. He does refer to the Kingdom of God and Christ, but he also refers to entities such as "Nature", so it's dif

I previously read the author's book Awareness, which was incredible and I agreed with about 95% of it. This book is largely similar, so if you've read Awareness than you've read 90% of his points in this one. They're still quality perspectives to chew on, but there's little new content here.

Also, when compared to Awareness, I found he was less direct when talking about God in this volume. He does refer to the Kingdom of God and Christ, but he also refers to entities such as "Nature", so it's difficult to tell where he's coming from at certain points.

I also do believe, and this applied to Awareness as well, that he takes detachment a bit too far in some instances. And this could very possibly be from my own misinterpretation of what he's saying. It can sometimes feel like he's advocating a life of such solitude that it comes off as self-protective to make sure you can't be hurt. But, in general, his perspectives would benefit people the world over.

I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys spirituality and philosophy who hasn't read Awareness already.

...more
Stu
May 23, 2021 rated it did not like it

This book reminds me of the Steve Martin joke on how to be a millionaire, "first, get yourself a million dollars". There is no "way to love" described here other than "give up attachments". There are no concrete real world examples to help you. The usual methods used to achieve this, like meditation are dismissed as impractical.

For someone who claims that the path to happiness is to be nonjudgmental, the author uses rather judgmental language like "prison", "disgusting" and "nauseated" to descr


This book reminds me of the Steve Martin joke on how to be a millionaire, "first, get yourself a million dollars". There is no "way to love" described here other than "give up attachments". There are no concrete real world examples to help you. The usual methods used to achieve this, like meditation are dismissed as impractical.

For someone who claims that the path to happiness is to be nonjudgmental, the author uses rather judgmental language like "prison", "disgusting" and "nauseated" to describe those who aren't enlightened. There are some truths here, unfortunately they're lost in abstractions.

It's hard to read how you should "love yourself" without judgment and then DeMello refers negatively to a flabby body or how you should accept everyone and then has a throwaway line that Judaism and Islam lead you astray. I have a strong suspicion, DeMello does not practice what he preaches.

...more
Susan
This book was suggested to me by someone I met a couple months ago. She seems very kind. I was looking forward to reading it. She knew I was Catholic and I believe she said she was Catholic. Overall, it does have some points worthy of pondering, however as I continued reading, some alarm bells were going off. I saw that the author was a Jesuit priest so I thought that might explain it, but as I kept reading, I became more concerned...; it just didn't sound...Catholic..... I looked up the author This book was suggested to me by someone I met a couple months ago. She seems very kind. I was looking forward to reading it. She knew I was Catholic and I believe she said she was Catholic. Overall, it does have some points worthy of pondering, however as I continued reading, some alarm bells were going off. I saw that the author was a Jesuit priest so I thought that might explain it, but as I kept reading, I became more concerned...; it just didn't sound...Catholic..... I looked up the author online and I saw the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith did write a notification about the writings of Father Anthony De Mello and it says that some of the positions he takes are incompatible with the Catholic Faith and can cause grave harm. So I won't be encouraging reading this book. ...more
Anthony de Mello was a Jesuit priest and psychotherapist who became widely known for his books on spirituality. An internationally acclaimed spiritual guide, writer and public speaker, de Mello hosted many spiritual conferences.

The few talks which he allowed to be filmed, such as "A Rediscovery of Life" and "A Way to God for Today," have inspired many viewers and audiences throughout the United St

Anthony de Mello was a Jesuit priest and psychotherapist who became widely known for his books on spirituality. An internationally acclaimed spiritual guide, writer and public speaker, de Mello hosted many spiritual conferences.

The few talks which he allowed to be filmed, such as "A Rediscovery of Life" and "A Way to God for Today," have inspired many viewers and audiences throughout the United States, Canada, and Central America. De Mello established a prayer center in India. He died suddenly in 1987. His works are readily available and additional writings were published after his death.

In 1998, some of his opinions were condemned by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who later became Pope Benedict XVI, wrote for the Congregation:
"But already in certain passages in [his] early works and to a greater degree in his later publications, one notices a progressive distancing from the essential contents of the Christian faith. ... With the present Notification, in order to protect the good of the Christian faithful, this Congregation declares that the above-mentioned positions are incompatible with the Catholic faith and can cause grave harm."

Some editions of his books have since been supplemented with the insertion of a caution:
"The books of Father Anthony de Mello were written in a multi-religious context to help the followers of other religions, agnostics and atheists in their spiritual search, and they were not intended by the author as manuals of instruction of the Catholic faithful in Christian doctrine or dogma."

...more

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"Because left to its own devices life would never produce love, it would only lead you to attraction, from attraction to pleasure, then to attachment, to satisfaction, which finally leads to wearisomeness and boredom. Then comes a plateau. Then once again the weary cycle: attraction, pleasure, attachment, fulfillment, satisfaction, boredom. All of this mixed with the anxieties, the jealousies, the possessiveness, the sorrow, the pain, that make the cycle a roller coaster. When you have gone repeatedly around and around the cycle, a time finally comes when you have had enough and want to call a halt to the whole process. And if you are lucky enough not to run into something or someone else that catches your eye, you will have at least attained a fragile peace. That is the most that life can give you; and you can mistakenly equate this state with freedom and you die without ever having known what it means to be really free and to love." — 25 likes
"Of what use is it to be tolerant of others if you are convinced that you are right and everyone who disagrees with you is wrong? That isn't tolerance but condescension." — 25 likes
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