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Audiobook

UNPLUGGED
How to Disconnect from the Rat Race, Have an Existential Crisis, and Find Meaning and Fulfillment


by Nancy Whitney-Reiter

Many in our modern society are in the midst of an existential crisis. The ideals of previous generations have gradually eroded, leaving nothing to fill the vacuum. Choices for what to do with one’s life are virtually limitless. So how do you find your life’s direction?

Nancy Whitney-Reiter survived the attacks of 9/11, left her job at a Fortune 500 company, and embarked on a year of international travel and soul searching. By giving herself time and space for self-reflection—unplugging—she was then able to build a new life based on vital interests.

In this lively how-to book, Whitney-Reiter discusses why we feel empty and how we try to fill the void, and then prescribes the unplugged cure...

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Wetware: noun, cyber jargon. The human mind and nervous system.








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New Releases...

Example content imageReminiscences of a Rebel: The True Adventures of a Confederate Soldier


Paperback, E-Book, Kindle Book
(Audiobook coming in Fall 2008)


by Wayland Fuller Dunaway
Introduction by David Little


Why did a Union-loving, secession-opposing young college student volunteer to defend the Confederacy and fight determinedly for her cause?

In April 1861, upon the outbreak of Civil War in the United States, Wayland Fuller Dunaway left his college classroom and entered the ranks of the men who fought the bloodiest war ever waged on the North American continent. A Captain in the Army of Northern Virginia, he marched hundreds of miles in Stonewall Jackson’s command; saw Generals Lee and Longstreet; was among the first soldiers to fight at Gettysburg, where he also participated in Pickett's Charge; and fought against the lines of strangers in blue who, no matter how many times they were defeated...

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Example content imageNot Enlightened Enough: Dialogs in Germany with Steven Harrison


Live Recording

We're not spiritual enough.  We're not enlightened enough.

Has our spirituality left us with an inner voice of constant correction?  Are we striving relentlessly for self-improvement and the freedom we imagine awaits us in that improved state?

Steven Harrison says that our freedom—our complete, total, final and absolute freedom—lies in the vast realm of the unknown. To enter the unknown we must leave everything that we've accumulated, including the wonderful peacefulness of the present moment, which in the end is just one more experience, one more construction of the mind.

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Example content imageThe Risk of Creativity: Dialogs in Amsterdam with Steven Harrison


Live Recording

In The Risk of Creativity, Steven Harrison presents a clear choice:  We can live in our ideas about life, or we can live in the powerful flow of life itself.  

Harrison challenges us to cut through all the ideas and descriptions we have about our lives, including our ideas about spirituality, and to directly experience that which is alive and real.  He encourages us to take the risk of creativity by paying attention to the arising energy of life and boldly giving it full expression.

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Example content imageA Conversation with Steven Harrison: Paradox, Illusion and the Post-Spiritual Inquiry


Live Recording

"Its hard to say what you believe in if your life is a series of questions. You could say you believe in the inquiry."
—Steven Harrison

In 2007, over the course of several days, Steven Harrison and Martin Frischknecht engaged in a lively conversation exploring a wide variety of subjects, including:

• the chaos of the unknown
• the paradox of the actual and conceptual
• the movement of creative energy
• the toxicity of the spiritual marketplace
• the dynamics of dialog groups
.

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