Thich Nhat Hanh's writing is deceptive in its subtlety. He'll go
on and on with stories about tree-hugging or metaphors involving raw potatoes;
he'll tell you how to eat mindfully, even how to breathe and walk; he'll suggest
looking closely at a flower and to see the sun as your heart. As the Zen teacher
Richard Baker commented, however, Nhat Hanh is "a cross between a cloud, a
snail, and piece of heavy machinery." Sooner or later, it begins to sink in that
Nhat Hanh is conveying a depth of psychology and a world outlook that require
nothing less than a complete paradigm shift. Through his cute stories and
compassionate admonitions, he gradually builds up to his philosophy of
interbeing, the notion that none of us is separately, but rather that we
inter-are. The ramifications are explosive. How can we mindlessly and
selfishly pursue our individual ends, when we are inextricably bound up with
everyone and everything else? We see an enemy not as focus of anger but as a
human with a complex history, who could be us if we had the same history.
Suffice it to say, that after reading Peace Is Every Step, you'll never
look at a plastic bag the same way again, and you may even develop a penchant
for hugging trees. --Brian Bruya
From Publishers Weekly
"Next time you are caught in a traffic jam . . . sit back and smile . . . a
smile of compassion and loving kindness." While such sappy Zen advice from a
Buddhist monk, a Vietnamese resident in France following his exile in 1966,
could send Western seekers of enlightenment into overdrive, fortunately most of
the suggestions offered in this slim guidebook are of more substance. In a
series of vignettes and short passages, e.g., "Cooking Our Potatoes," Nhat Hanh
outlines techniques for living mindfullly, that is, in the present. Emphasizing
that all things are interconnected on personal and political levels, he notes,
for example, that the wealth of one society is based on the poverty of others.
This book of illuminating reminders bids us to reorient the way we look at the
world, turning away from a goal-driven, me-first modality toward a humanitarian
perspective.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This
text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.