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I
The more clearly you understand yourself and your emotions,
the more you become a lover of what is.
Baruch Spinoza
The first time I watched The Work, I realized that I was witnessing
something truly remarkable. What I saw was a succession of
people, young and old, educated and uneducated, who were learning
to question their own thoughts, the thoughts that were most
painful to them. With the lovingly incisive help of Byron
Katie (everyone calls her Katie), these people were finding
their way not only toward the resolution of their immediate
problems, but also toward a state of mind in which the deepest
questions are resolved. I have spent a good part of my life
studying and translating the classic texts of the great spiritual
traditions, and I recognized something very similar in process
here. At the core of these traditions in works such as the
Book of Job, the Tao Te Ching, and the Bhagavad Gita there
is an intense questioning about life and death, and a profound,
joyful wisdom that emerges as an answer. That wisdom, it seemed
to me, was the place Katie was standing in, and the direction
where these people were headed.
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