The intro threw me a bit so i stalled thinking it would be quite a tough book - before i'd even gotten to Dabrowski! But i'm now 30 pages in and am enthralled. It is much easier to read than i first thought.
Having listened to the STR a few times as well as the videos - i couldn't find anything else! - as i've been reading, every now and then, Dabrowski's empathic and encouraging voice would echo back. Dabrowski talks like we have all the time in the world and, for sure, we can find a solution, just "keep going", osit.
My initial thought was that the guy was a mystic - and i was surprised he introduces these ideas at the very beginning and how much correlates with the work here; I haven't read many psychological/philosophical books so can't compare.
I highlighted the following:
The uses of certain emotions, and death:
"[...] as it were, the result of two attitudes, one rational, objective, and critical, and the other emotional and dramatic. The first regards death as a universal process, which affects the given individual as "one of many," whereas the second expresses drama, in which the negation of biological life is associated with the need and sometimes even with the necessity of supersensual life. This drama often gives way to a state of peace and internal harmony, which is connected with the supersensual being through meditation.
A correct attitude of humility, arising from the realisation that we are infinitesimal creatures in this endless universe, from the tendency to assume an objective attitude toward reality, and from the survival of our spiritual beings and a sense of union with the Supreme Being, helps us to overcome the fear of our death and to attain peace of mind"
- that's death sorted then! Seriously though, for me, it reads just like that. But i don't disagree and this may be why his tact would be to just leave people with these thoughts and most will come to similar conclusions; "oh yeah, i'm infinite" (I'm not discounting the work involved to 'get there').
Regarding death, it got me thinking about the first time i'd ever considered it - though i can't remember thinking so much about mine, more so about the people i loved and what would happen to them - apparently i could handle my own death at 8 :P
Another i liked, perhaps because i feel i can relate - in a number of positive and negative ways.
"The greater our experience in life, the greater our sensitivity; the more intensive and thorough our elaboration of experiences, the clearer our ideal of personality; and the more we are apt to sacrifice, to subordinate our instinctive needs in favour of personality, the stronger is our disposition to the attitude of courage and heroism."
- I guess this applies solely to conscious experiencing; one thing Dabrowski seems to focus on, is that we aren't all alike in potential which i appeciate because it explains alot. In that there may have been glimpses on our journey that perhaps we process the world in a different way and that may contribute to the feelings of confusion.
One thing that struck me from the outset of hearing the core theories, is how i experienced a feeling of disintegration long before i came to the forum and it's enlightening material, and, instead, was stuck comparing myself with others in my groups of friends. Needless to say it wasn't until i could identify anything 'higher' that i was able to justify and formulate a plan to remove myself from that life, following which the confusion, in that area, dissipated somewhat.
It seems like a highly practical book and for those who have read some of the suggested esoteric reading, it's even more interesting since he seems to skip along certain fundamentals as though they were widely understood, osit. I can see why some thought he had read Gurdjieff.
So nothing ground breaking from me and i may have misinterperated some but, thus far, i think, it is a truly excellent book.
Thank you to all involved in bringing this back to print!
