9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Clear, Simple, Helpful, 20 April 2010
By Thomas Küng - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Look at Yourself (Paperback)
This book by John Sherman is very clear, simple and helpful. His words are very much "to the point". His constantly reminding us to "Look At Yourself" in this book and on the web ([...] and [...]) brought a fundamental shift in my life. As he says: "To look at yourself whenever it occurs to you is to move from the endless work of self-definition to the endless adventure of self-discovery". I recommend this book very highly to everybody.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"This is where the water is..."!, 20 April 2010
By Joshua J. Berkowitz "Joshua Jay Berkowitz" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Look at Yourself (Paperback)
I've been slowly absorbing John's message for over two years and this book has been the tipping point! It's all in the cover, I love the blankness around "Look at Yourself." I was fortunate enough to meet John a month and a half ago and all he really had to say to me when it came down to it is "stick to the point-you". Absolutely, I am down with that, I may go on a few side trips here and there but the end is certain because the intent is there! His story is wonderful but what came out of it can only be found right here in the certainty of your existence. John is a down to earth bad ass who has truly done it totally wrong and I love him even more for it because when it comes down to it, he's got the goods and this book proves it! I also love that he dedicated it to Gangaji. This core message, look at yourself, is the most exciting, accessible message I've ever come across. It just goes and goes and goes and stops and stops and stops, the discovery of what it is to look at yourself!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is as clear as it gets, 19 April 2010
By C. Myers III "corebe" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Look at Yourself (Paperback)
There must be hundreds of books on this subject and I have read many of them. This is as clear as it gets. If your mind wants more explanation before getting on with it, well, then just admit that you may be as nearly hopelessly addicted to thinking as the rest of us and get on with it anyway.
As the author, John Sherman says, "we are actually trying to solve the symptoms instead of the problem." and "The only thing that will rid you of that idea is the truth." and about the difficulty of even trying to describe this ephemeral practice, he suggests most encouragingly from his own experience, the ultimate value of just getting on with it, "Once you start trying, it teaches itself."