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Appreciate Your
Life
The Essence of Zen Practice
Edited by Eve Myonen Marko
By Taizan Maezumi
Here is the first major collection of the teachings of Taizan Maezumi Roshi (1931-1995), one of
the first Japanese Zen masters to bring Zen to the West and founding abbot of the Zen Center of Los Angeles and Zen
Mountain Center in Idyllwild, California. These short, inspiring readings illuminate Zen practice in simple,
eloquent language. Topics include zazen and Zen koans, how to appreciate your life as the life of the Buddha, and
the essential matter of life and death.
Appreciate Your Life
The Book of Balance and Harmony
A Taoist Handbook
Translated by Thomas Cleary
The Book of Balance and Harmony is a renowned anthology of writing by a thirteenth-century
master of the Complete Reality School of Taoism, a movement begun around the turn of the first millennium CE whose
aim was a return to the purity of Taoism's original principles and practices. This classic collection, compiled by
one of the master's disciples, is still very much in use by the Taoist adepts of China today. Its serves as a
compendium of the teaching of the Complete Reality School, both in theory and in practice, employing a rich variety
of literary forms, including essays, dialogues, poetry, and song. The writings herein condense the essences of the
Chinese religious traditions of Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism into an alchemical elixir teaching Vitality,
Energy, and Spirit—the "three treasures" of Taoism that promise mental and physical
well-being. 
The Book of Balance and Harmony
The Listening Book
Discovering Your Own Music
The Listening Book is about rediscovering the power of listening as an instrument of
self-discovery and personal transformation. By exploring our capacity for listening to sounds and for making music,
we can awaken and release our full creative powers. Mathieu offers suggestions and encouragement on many aspects of
music-making, and provides playful exercises to help readers appreciate the connection between sound, music, and
everyday life.
The Listening Book
The Art of
Happiness
Teachings of Buddhist Psychology
Here is an extraordinarily lucid and intelligent self-help book, inspired by the Abhidamma, an
ethical-psychological teaching presented in the body of ancient Buddhist scriptures of the same name. Based on
various techniques of Buddhist mind training, the Abhidamma represents the systematic knowledge of the Dharma, or
"good teaching"—that is, the liberating, happiness-promoting way of life. Dr. Frýba has designed a complete
workbook of Dharma strategies for self-transformation, including some thirty detailed exercises that help readers
feel at home in their bodies, protect well-being through mindfulness, and perceive reality with clarity and wisdom.
These exercises show how to deal skillfully with painful events and negative emotions, and also offer direct ways
of promoting positive emotions such as cheerfulness, sympathetic joy, and compassion. By relating these experiences
to specific situations encountered in his work with friends, students, patients, and workshop participants, the
author makes these ancient techniques genuinely applicable to familiar contemporary settings whether in everyday
life, in meditation practice, or in the context of psychotherapy. At the same time, his faithfulness to his
Buddhist sources will be appreciated by traditional-minded spiritual practitioners. 
The Art of Happiness
Become What You Are
"Life exists only at this very moment, and in this moment it is infinite and eternal. For the
present moment is infinitely small; before we can measure it, it has gone, and yet it exists forever. . . . You
may believe yourself out of harmony with life and its eternal Now; but you cannot be, for you are life and exist
Now."—from Become What You Are
In this collection of writings, including nine new chapters never before available in book form,
Watts displays the intelligence, playfulness of thought, and simplicity of language that has made him so
perennially popular as an interpreter of Eastern thought for Westerners. He draws on a variety of religious
traditions, and covers topics such as the challenge of seeing one's life "just as it is," the Taoist approach to
harmonious living, the limits of language in the face of ineffable spiritual truth, and the psychological
symbolism of Christian thought.
Become What You Are 
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