1st Edition

Zen and the Heart of Psychotherapy

By Robert Rosenbaum Copyright 1999
    334 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    In the midst of our busy activity, people often feel fragmented. We experience conflicting demands from our work, our personal relationships, our families, and our spiritual practice. In this book, the author, a practicing psychotherapist, explores the challenges and joys of making our life into a coherent whole. Psychotherapy addresses a sense of fragmentation in an effort to help us be uniquely ourselves. Zen Buddhist practice insists we find ourselves on every moment of our lives; it speaks to the basic connectedness of all things. This book attempts to integrate the two. Each chapter examines some aspect of sewing together the practice of Zen with the realization of psychotherapy, and its implications for daily life. Though there is a logical progression to the chapters, each chapter can be read on its own if the reader is interested in how a particular text might inform their psychotherapy or life circumstances. Through the stories of his clients' and his own difficulties and discoveries, the author invites each reader to actualize the fundamental point: to realize the joy and compassion that comes when we touch the basic ground of life, and put it into play in our everyday activity.

    Preface and Meal Chant. Credo. Full Engagement. Awaking the Thought of Enlightenment. Building the Sanctuary. Evolution. Happiness, Suffering and Psychotherapy. Tides. Intimate Relationship. Dust. Empty Self, Connected Self. Freedom. Host and Guest. For Fran Tribe. Actualizing the Fundamental Point.

    Biography

    Robert Rosenbaum