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What Is Meditation?: Buddhism for Everyone | 
enlarge | Author: Rob Nairn Publisher: Shambhala Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $11.21 You Save: $3.74 (25%)
New (24) Used (17) from $2.88
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 773736
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 112 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.5 x 0.4
ISBN: 1570627150 Dewey Decimal Number: 181 EAN: 9781570627156 ASIN: 1570627150
Publication Date: October 31, 2000 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Amazon.com Review If you are looking for a book about the fundamentals of Buddhism, without complicated theories or explanations of involved techniques, you have found it in Rob Nairn's What is Meditation?. In the sparest terms, Nairn outlines the major divisions of Buddhism, the Buddha's core teaching, and what it means to be a Buddhist at the most basic level. He goes on to provide three simple exercises in meditation that will suffice for anyone who wants to get his or her feet wet without being sucked into whirlpools of terminology. Like swimming, meditation requires just a brief amount of instruction in technique, and the rest is up to the practitioner. If you find the water welcoming, from Nairn's springboard you can jump off to slightly more involved books by Thich Nhat Hanh, Sharon Salzberg, Jack Kornfield, or Surya Das. Wherever you end up going, if you know nothing about Buddhism now, What is Meditation? is a good place to start. --Brian Bruya
Product Description What Is Meditation? explains the Buddhist worldview and the age-old practice it perfected to unfold our innate qualities of compassion, self-acceptance, and inner peace. Rob Nairn gives step-by-step instructions for beginning your own meditation practice, including three simple exercises?"Bare Attention," "Remaining in the Present," and "Meditation Using Sound"?to help get you started.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
GREAT BASIC BOOK ON MEDITATION AND BUDDHISM December 31, 2008 Easily understood, yet in depth, book on meditation and buddhism. Good size to carry along and read when have spare time while waiting at drs. office or on vacation. Definitely worth the money and time if you've ever had an interest in meditation or buddhism.
Simple and to the point how to on meditation April 18, 2007 Most books on meditation I've read find it necessary to include lengthy descriptions of Buddhism in all its varieties, as well as detailed and sometimes obstruse explanatinos of the Buddhist way. This short work is an exception. Nairn sticks to the bare bone basics of how to, with only the least necessary smattering of history and philosophy. The accompanying photographs - one simple one per chapter - are an appropriate and effective extra that helps set the tone for the text.
Not a bad introduction March 6, 2002 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This was the first book I read on Buddhism, and while it covered the basics adequately, overall, I found it very lacking.Nairn gives an overview of the essentials and differing schools of Buddhism, but I found little which I could bring into everyday life. Personally, I found that "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Understanding Buddhism" was a much, much better book. Don't let the "Idiot's Guide" title throw you off, as I almost did; it's a really comprehensive, well-flowing book. Nairn's book feels more academic and a bit colder to me - if I wanted to write a term paper about Buddhism, I would get Nairn; however, if I wanted to begin living Buddhism, I would still get the "Idiot's Guide," by Gary Gach. The Nairn is a quick read (I read it in one bathtub sitting,) so if you're looking for something short to give you the basics, this may work for you - but, if you want to go on to better understand and practice Buddhism, you'll surely want to pick up a more involved and detailed book.
Clear, concise introduction to Buddhism July 12, 2001 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
As its subtitle suggests, this handsome little book is really an introduction to Buddhism for the general reader, and is not a discourse on the nature of meditation. Part One is "An Introduction to Buddhism" and Part Two, "An Introduction to Meditation." The question "What is Meditation?" is addressed on page 56, and the following answer given: "Meditation is the process of learning to work skillfully with the mind in a way that will lead by successive stages to tranquillity, insight, spontaneous purification and the total liberation from all negative states." As such, this very general definition will do just fine, although an understanding of what "total liberation from all negative states" might mean is something that comes only after a long practice. Additionally, as revealed in the next paragraph and on the following pages, there are "many different systems and methods of meditation," and the one "dealt with here" is called "Insight meditation." Incidentally, the last two words are the title of a book by Joseph Goldstein, who was one of author Rob Nairn's teachers.Buddhist generally insist on adding "insight" to meditation because the process of Buddhism itself is predicated on insight into the human predicament leading to action toward liberation. What Buddhism says in a nutshell is that there is suffering, that there is a way out of the suffering, and this is what it is. So taught the Buddha nearly twenty-six hundred years ago. This book emphasizes the compassionate nature of Buddhism while giving a quick outline of the general principles of the religion, followed by an outline of the Buddha's teaching. In the section on meditation there are twenty or so pages to guide the reader into how it is done. As someone who has practiced meditation for many years, I can tell you that this method will work, but the important thing to understand about meditation is that it is a practice, an acquired skill that takes a while to learn. Once learned it can be let go of easily in the hustle and bustle of daily living, but once mastered and completely entered into, it becomes an essential part of our lives and transforms us. While this book does not completely fulfill the promise of the title (meditation varies for every individual and indeed over time varies for each of us), nonetheless it is valuable as a clear, concise introduction to one of the great world religions.
Hello November 28, 2000 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This was my first book on meditation and Buddhism. "What is Meditation?" is geared toward a reader like my self. It is a great book to introduce ones self to Buddhism. If you like this book, go on to bigger books which are more in depth on the subject. The book seems to touch all the bases with the tip of its toes on the Buddha's teaching and the practice of meditation. The book will teach you to accept your self and your world to make the best use of it. It offers an ideal perspective one should try to see the world through. I haven't tried any of the three meditation exercises that the book teaches, but they are all very simply instructed and easy to follow. If you want to learn about Buddhism, but don't want to commit to a very long book, this is for you.
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