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B**B
A reminder of the silent companion
John O’Donohue was an Irish poet, priest and philosopher, a proponent of a specific kind of Celtic spirituality which formed the lens through which his philosophy could be seen. His first and best known work is ‘Anam Cara’, published in 1997. ‘Anam cara’ is the Celtic phrase for ‘soul friend’.In a sense, this book is review proof. To anyone who has read my other reviews on fiction and non-fiction this may be seen as a departure. Personal philosophical contemplation of the big issues—life, death, eternity, etc.—are so subjective that to apply the same kind of critical analysis to them that I would apply to a novel misses the meat of the matter and becomes a stab in the air of Intellect. Just as all books are not created alike, so all reviews of those various books should also not be alike.The anam cara can be found in another person although, whether one finds THE anam cara or AN anam cara in another person or not, there is the presence that travels with the individual from birth to death. An individual’s life span, like the seasons, is a cycle. O’Donohue traces the phases of the cycle throughout the book in explorations of solitude, friendship, love and death. These are all big abstract concepts but O’Donohue brings them inside our eyelids with his intimate, poetic language.Donohue’s contemplation of the large themes is as intimate as poetry and as spiritual as any church service and yet this former priest never preaches. His pleasure in the novelties of creation and his meditations on the threshold of conscious and unconscious existence are contagious. He brought to my awareness a few insights that seem obvious except that I never thought to articulate them but here he has presented them to me.Consider what he says about the human face:“The human face carries mystery and is the exposure of the mystery of the individual life. It is where the private, inner world of a person protrudes into the anonymous world. While the rest of the body is covered, the face is naked. The vulnerability of this nakedness issues a profound invitation for understanding and compassion. The human face is a meeting place of two unknowns: the infinity of the outer world and the unchartered, inner world to which each individual alone has access…Your feet bring your private clay in touch with the ancient, mother clay from which you first emerged. Consequently, your face being at the top of your body signifies the ascent of your clay-life into intimacy and selfhood.”He invokes the cyclical view of life repeatedly. It is inherent in the fact that he was born and died a Celt:“The Celtic mind was never drawn to the single line; it avoided ways of seeing and being that seek satisfaction in certainty. The Celtic mind has a wonderful respect for the mystery of the circle and the spiral. The circle is one of the oldest and most powerful symbols. The world is a circle; the sun and moon are too. Even time itself has a circular nature; the day and the year build to a circle. At its most intimate level so is the life of the individual. The circle never gives itself completely to the eye or to the mind but offers a trusting hospitality to that which is complex and mysterious; it embraces depth and height together. The circle never reduces the mystery to a single direction or preference.”Generally, O’Donohue’s imagery and metaphor is fresh and vibrant although he does use a phrase such as ‘neon consciousness’ or ‘neon awareness’ a bit too frequently for my taste. Once was fresh; more than that the impact is diluted. He also quotes people without citation. He will write, “Dostoevsky said…” or “Goethe said” without providing the specific source of the quote. I don’t doubt O’Donohue; I believe in his integrity. I would just like to read the original for myself to see the context in which the quote appeared.Those are relatively minor quibbles. One of O’Donohue’s great achievements is to shed a fresh light on things we either take for granted or have never articulated. He presents them to us in a novel context, which is really what the best writers do for us.The chapter on death is worth the price of the book for me. It provides the wisest, most consoling, most clear-eyed outlook toward death that I have encountered. He describes the Irish mourning tradition in which women keen and provide a sad liturgy, a ritual for externalizing the loss of the departed. This is followed by the wake:“Its ritual affords the soul plenty of time to take its leave. The soul does not leave the body abruptly; this is a slow leave-taking.”He provides a calm reassurance that assuages any fear of dying that touches me more than most anything else I’ve read about death. He died unexpectedly in his sleep in 2008. The cause of death was not disclosed outside the family. Reading his calming words, I could imagine them echoing through his consciousness in his last moments. His cycle was complete.
А**
Inspirational Celtic wisdom.
A well used soft cover. Will enjoy it and then pass it along.
D**K
Fabulous & enlightening!
Fabulous, easy read for anybody interested in Celtic history. Very enlightening. Great for anybody interested in self-discovery or meditation. Purchased a 2nd as a gift for my best friend. This well written book is difficult to put down.
T**G
A MUST for Christians who are looking for answers that are right in front of us, in nature.
The late John O'Donahue, sheds his identity as a former Catholic priest in search of more answers by going to the source of his Celtic roots, and he delivers. This man is not only a poet, but a philosopher, to be highly esteemed, who obtained his degree in Germany, in German! Not only does he demonstrate his extraordinary enlightenment and give some of this gift to us, that we may recognize and correct behavioral habits from recycling pain addictions, but he also opens up a whole new world to the reader, to recognize that the environments that we live in, are alive--living and breathing like us--such that when we visit them, we become a part of them. For this reason, those living in environments of desolation, pick up the vibration of that environment, losing hope, and those visiting jolly streams, where nature is singing, also morph and materialize into a piece of that joy as part of the living environment in which you visit or abide. I cannot thank this author enough for opening my heart to the joys of blessing and appreciating things like water, which has the humility to take up the form of whatever contains it. John O'Donahue is such a very meticulously sensitive writer, that his words will send new ripples of excitement up and down your body when you recognize that everyone, including and especially yourself has a very huge role in this overwhelming world...That we are indeed made of God's dreams that have been in the making of the 4.5 billion years the Earth has been existing. As a biologist of the Christian faith who was seeking "more", I am so glad I was directed to this author. Upon reading this book, I naturally grabbed his book of Celtic blessings, and started applying them to my daily life as well. If you are stuck in a rut, and you have reverence for God, and would like a more intricate view of appreciating God in the nature around us that is often and wrongly shunned for pagan worship (when we are actually glorifying God for these things), this is the book for you. I personally think religions who admonish inquiry into God's beauty in nature or those who cast the fear of sin of investigating and appreciating how nature was revered by the ancients does nothing but pull you away from God. Fear-based religion is nothing but dictating what or what you can't do, based on fear of sin...All that is garbage here, where it belongs, and God is celebrated as a source of only Love, Light, and accessible Beauty all around us.
G**N
Another good Celtic Spirituality book
Again an author brings a personal and approachable touch to a complex and ofttimes very convoluted subject. I have not finished my first read of the book but so far am favorably impressed. It is gentle, flowing and easy to read although there are many layers of meaning to be found. I suspect this is one that a reader will profit from frequent revisiting in the future..
L**L
Loving this book!
What an amazing book. Such beautiful depth of wisdom and understanding! I believe this is right thinking on our body- being temple of Spirit and our connection to earth and as souls living in a body--as our clay home. He redeems the wrong thinking in Christendom on this subject, imo.
J**S
Great read
Very deep subject, well worth the read. Highly recommend.
H**R
great book - John O'Donohue - what more to say?
Great book and worth the read
U**K
Gut
Gut
L**A
Sabedoria celta
É um livro com uma linguagem simples, porém profunda. Fala bastante sobre os sentimentos, principalmente, aqueles que os antigos celtas cultivavam.
C**E
Nice read.
Very good book. Wish I could know more and more on Celtic cultures. Makes me want to go back to celtic times.
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