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Janice Dean Willis

Auteur de Dreaming Me

6 oeuvres 269 utilisateurs 4 critiques

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Crédit image: Jan Willis. Photo copied from a Profile at Cornell.

Œuvres de Janice Dean Willis

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Depth, substance and heart.

I like Jan Willis' spiritual autobiography for the way it combines dreams, a chronological account of a life, and an account of spiritual growth and focus as a source of strength. I call it spiritual because Willis' focus on the issues that drive her - her intelligence that separates her from her community, her anger at the way blacks are treated by whites, and her love for and by her family & community permeate the book, call her to keep seeking and lead her to teach.

I love the way she uses her repeating dreams of lions to introduce sections of the book, thus giving story and mystery importance.

Chronologically, Willis grew up in Alabama (her father worked in a steel mill), graduating from high school in the mid 1960s. She attends college at Cornell University in new York, where she participates in a study abroad program in India and meets Tibetans there. She's also involved in campus politics, and upon graduation in 1969 is faced with a difficult choice: whether to join the Black Panther party or return go abroad to study in Nepal at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery.

The results of this choice, her study, and her return to the US to teach form the remainder of the book. I find Jan Willis a courageous and inspiring woman because she faces external and internal obstacles and continues to grow and learn.
… (plus d'informations)
½
1 voter
Signalé
markon | 1 autre critique | Jan 22, 2015 |
A manual containing several practice texts for a range of Tibetan Buddhist meditational deities, mainly at Kriya Tantra level. The author is an Afro-American woman, one of the first students of Lama Yeshe and a well respected Buddhist scholar. Her other works include Enlightened Beings: Life Stories from the Ganden Oral Tradition and Dreaming Me: From Baptist to Buddhist, One Woman's Spiritual Journey.
½
1 voter
Signalé
chamekke | Nov 18, 2005 |
One of the first books on "women and Tibetan Buddhism," this has some absolutely terrific essays.
 
Signalé
chamekke | Sep 15, 2005 |
From LibraryThing:

Depth, substance and heart.

I like Jan Willis' spiritual autobiography for the way it combines dreams, a chronological account of a life, and an account of spiritual growth and focus as a source of strength. I call it spiritual because Willis' focus on the issues that drive her - her intelligence that separates her from her community, her anger at the way blacks are treated by whites, and her love for and by her family & community permeate the book, call her to keep seeking and lead her to teach.

I love the way she uses her repeating dreams of lions to introduce sections of the book, thus giving story and mystery importance.

Chronologically, Willis grew up in Alabama (her father worked in a steel mill), graduating from high school in the mid 1960s. She attends college at Cornell University in new York, where she participates in a study abroad program in India and meets Tibetans there. She's also involved in campus politics, and upon graduation in 1969 is faced with a difficult choice: whether to join the Black Panther party or return go abroad to study in Nepal at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery.

The results of this choice, her study, and her return to the US to teach form the remainder of the book. I find Jan Willis a courageous and inspiring woman because she faces external and internal obstacles and continues to grow and learn
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
TallyChan5 | 1 autre critique | Sep 14, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
269
Popularité
#85,899
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
4
ISBN
12

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