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Past Book Reviews
The Long Journey Home
Life
Extension Media Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-9658777-2-5, 288 pages, $49.99.
The Long Journey Home
by Dr. George Catlin. DeVorss & Company, 2007, 96 pages, $9.95.
Where are you headed? Is that really where you want to go?
In his second small but potent book, psychologist and educator Dr.
George Catlin gives us this homework assignment: stop! meditate! answer
these two essential questions – if you can!
Catlin’s experience is that most of us don’t know where we’re headed,
nor even where we came from (besides the obvious “New York,” “LA,”
etc.). Yet it is the latter – remembering who we really are and where we
came from – that is the very purpose of life.
“Home” is our Source and “life” is the long journey back to it. How soon
we get there and what we endure along the way is our choice and our
challenge.
Catlin employs a blend of modern psychology and ancient wisdom teachings
to steer us to the path of return. From the mainstream psychological
angle, he explains: “All the pain and all the beliefs we have built up
about ourselves and the world, as a result of the pain, keep us from the
soul. We have to let them all go.” Today, there are a number of
techniques that can help us to eliminate this “backlog of sorrow” and
clear the way for real spiritual progress.
From the ancient wisdom teachings we learn about the ultimate goal of
human experience; the unity of all life and what that means in today’s
global village; the seven energetic streams that qualify all life and
give us different skills and temperaments; the role of meditation and
service in transforming our personal lives; how to use the Law of
Invocation and Evocation to bring positive, uplifting energies into the
world-at-large; teachers, ancient and modern, who offer us tried and
true methods of understanding ourselves and the Path; and the One who
comes now as a World Teacher for all humanity to guide us through the
present chaos into a golden age.
The final chapter might be considered our first-semester exam, as we
answer a series of questions dealing with the central points of each
chapter – designed to convert information into commitment and action.
“The first step is to commit consciously to the journey. Once we have
done that, all that is needed will be provided.”
Reviewed by Lynne Girdlestone
Reviewed by Dale Kiefer
Past phenomeNEWS Book Reviews
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