A Passion For the Possible: A Guide to Realizing Your True Potential

A Passion For the Possible: A Guide to Realizing Your True Potential

by Jean Houston
A Passion For the Possible: A Guide to Realizing Your True Potential

A Passion For the Possible: A Guide to Realizing Your True Potential

by Jean Houston

eBook

$13.49  $17.99 Save 25% Current price is $13.49, Original price is $17.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

“With elegant simplicity, Jean Houston shows you how to unleash the genius that lies in the depths of your being” (Deepak Chopra).

Discover your own extraordinary gifts and live every day with passion.

Now you can explore and expand your own unique possibilities on all four levels of your being—the physical, psychological, symbolic, and spiritual—using the practical and creative tools in this remarkable guide. In her most deeply transforming book to date, Houston leads you on a profound journey of self-discovery and shows how you can courageously commit to experiencing your real potential.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780061749148
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 01/17/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 174
Sales rank: 946,983
File size: 705 KB

About the Author

Jean Houston,Ph.D., is the bestselling author of fifteen books, including The Possible Human and The Search for the Beloved, and an internationally renowned psychologist, scholar, philosopher, and teacher. She is the co-director of the Foundation for Mind Research in Pomona, New York, and founder of the Mystery School -- an institution dedicated to teaching history, philosophy, the new physics, psychology, anthropology, myth and the many dimensions of our human potential. A consultants to the United Nations, UNICEF, and other international agencies, Houston presents transformational workshops to people and organizations all over the world.

Read an Excerpt


An Invitation to Discover More of What You Are

You! I know you.
You may not think I know you, but I do.
You are a seeker. You are a fledgling ready to take flight. You sense intuitively that you have potential that you've barely begun to tap. You are a bud ready to blossom.
A chrysalis waiting to become a butterfly.
I've met you in the supermarket when you were corralling two energetic kids and pushing a cart full of groceries. I saw you glance longingly at the book rack. Your face had the determined look of someone who knows there's more to life than frozen food and runny noses.
Thirty-five thousand feet up in the air, I've been your seatmate. You told me that your twelve-year-old son pitched a two-hitter last night while you were in a hotel room a thousand miles away. You said that your dream was to quit your sales job and open a woodworking shop in the town where you live.
I've listened as you've told me about discovering that you're a writer. Though all you've got to show for your efforts is a notebook full of unpublished stories and a shoe box full of rejection letters, you're hard at work on the outline of a novel.
I've encountered you as a young college graduate with the world open before you. You are filled with ideals, skills, and dreams but have not yet figured out how to harness that energy—not to mention pay for that student loan.
You came to tell me how it is to be a cancer survivor. You are alive and glad to be so. Your longtime partner couldn't stand hospitals and left you in the middle of chemotherapy, but you have joined a survivors' group and are in training to counsel other cancer patients.
You were the fifty-somethingwoman at my seminar whose youngest daughter had just gone off to college. Though your husband says that "personal fulfillment" is a bunch of baloney, you've signed up for an evening course in world religions and several seminars in addition to mine. "It's my turn now," you told me. "I've come here to find out what's next."
Whoever you are, whatever your life may be, I know you as I know myself. We both face the same challenges. We are living in a time of the most far-reaching and rapid change in human history.
Most of us will log five to fifty times the experience of our ancestors of two hundred years ago. Many of them received at birth the pattern for their lives, growing up to be farmer, weaver, soldier, priest, or mother bearing and burying one baby after another. Rich or poor, peasant or aristocrat, their lives followed the same formulas as had their parents' for ages past. There were advantages, of course. They knew who they were, what to tell their children, the comfort of sameness, and a lack of options.
And then it all changed. It has been said that as many events have happened from 1945 to today as have happened in the two thousand years before 1945. The ancient curse "may you live in interesting times" has come true for us. This is it—the most interesting time in human history. Nothing comparable has happened to humankind since the industrial revolution or, further back, since we gave up the wanderings of the hunt and settled down to agriculture and civilization.
Our everyday lives reflect this quantum leap in the complexity and pace of contemporary experience. We are caught uncertain, unprepared, and unprotected in the face of too much happening too often. We are the people of the parenthesis, at the end of one era and not quite at the beginning of the new one. Some of us withdraw from the onslaught. We become workaholics. Or we find numbing solace in addictions or in hours spent staring at the television. Too many of us agree to lives of serial monotony and the progressive dimming of our passion for life.
But many, a significant number, are trying to understand the momentous opportunity that is ours. The future is seeded in the time of parenthesis. We are among the most important people who have ever lived. We will determine whether humankind will grow or die, evolve or perish.
How do we prepare ourselves for such times? How do we prepare ourselves to take responsibility for the personal as well as the planetary process? We have not been trained for this task, and the usual formulas and stopgap solutions will not help us. The density and intimacy of the global village, the staggering consequences of our new knowledge and technologies make us directors of a world that, up to now, has mostly directed us.
Today our extremely limited human consciousness has powers over life and death that once mythically were accorded to the "gods." Extremely limited consciousness with the press of a button can launch a nuclear holocaust. Extremely limited consciousness intervenes in the genetic code, interferes with the complex patterns in the sea and on the land, and pours wastes into the Earth's protective ozone layers, wiping out countless plant and animal species. Extremely limited consciousness has killed 100 million humans in the last sixty years.
Extremely limited consciousness gives us governments that are too large for the small problems of life and too small in spirit for the large problems. Extremely limited consciousness cannot deal with ethnic and tribal violence and the rage of the dispossessed, the addiction to consumption and soul-killing substances, the very survival of life on this planet. Instead, extremely limited consciousness offers us a patchwork quilt of solutions that create ten new problems for each quick fix.
What qualities of mind, body, and spirit can overcome these limitations? How do we go about preparing ourselves to become stewards of the planet, filled with enough passion for the possible to partner one another through the greatest social transformation ever known?

What People are Saying About This

Joan Borysenko

"A Passion for the Possible is a guide to expressing our fullest potential as human beings by one of the greatest teachers of this time, or indeed, of any time. Jean Houston's work is a blessing in the true sense of the word; it encourages hidden potential to germinate and come to fullest flower."

Caroline Myss

"This is one of the finest books I have ever read, authored by one of the finest individuals I have ever met."

James Redfield

"Jean Houston eloquently reveals the Essential Self--the guide within us all, which can lead us to our higher destiny, expose our purpose for being, and manifest all that we can be...if we have the courage to listen."

Dr. Wayne W. Dryer

"Jean Houston is a national treasure. She writes from her heart directly to mine--very simply. I love this book."

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews