We Think We Are In Control Of Our Lives, But Who’s Really Pulling Our Strings?
'Being and Life: On Becoming One’s Being,' a new book by Scott K. Smith, describes the tremendous impact our being has on almost all areas of our lives, even though most of us are unconscious of its existence. Being and Life also explains the wide range of emotions that men and women experience as they become more their being.
(PRWEB) August 22, 2005 -- What do the following have in common: a man
becomes tongue-tied when he asks a woman he secretly loves for a date; a
country's ethnic and religious violence escalates into a war of genocide; and a
popular teenaged girl experiences overwhelming guilt and depression and then
thinks about committing suicide because of them?
In all these cases and
others like them, the being within each of us—who we are before everything
else—can be mostly if not entirely responsible for these emotions and
actions.
The being in us truly is the engine of human existence because
nothing has a greater influence on our own lives and on human life as a whole.
But astonishingly, almost all of us are unconscious of our own being's existence
and of the being in anyone else.
"Being and Life: On Becoming One's
Being" (Ontology Press), a new book by Scott K. Smith, describes in detail the
impact our being has on many aspects of our lives: on our emotions, thoughts,
beliefs, and values.
“Many people believe our deepest nature is the
cause of our problems, but in fact it is our alienation from our being that is
ultimately to blame. The more we understand the being that is in us,” Smith
says, “the more we see that most of the problems of most of us come solely from
our alienation from who we truly are. Whether we are conscious of it or not, our
alienation diminishes our lives profoundly.”
Being and Life also explains
what men and women think and feel as they become more their being, which is very
difficult. The pain that comes with trying to develop a being-to-being
relationship, the feeling that one is “not living fully in life,” the root
emotional cause of the Cultural War: all of these emotions and understandings,
along with countless others, spring directly from the sensing and then the
misunderstanding of the being within us. Our being is responsible for the very
best and the very worst in us, and the only way we can become it at its best is
to understand it fully. For all of us as individuals, couples, and citizens,
nothing is more important than ending our alienation from ourselves and from
each other.
To schedule an interview or to request a review copy, e-mail
us or call 530-389-2451 or fax 530-389-8458. For more media information visit
our web site at www.OntologyPress.com.
# # #
Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/8/prweb274574.htm