It's really hard for me to remove a star from this book.
The author's motivation that fuels the book's overall message is pristine, but Buddhism needs filtering just from being outdated.
The message: take on others' internal suffering as your own, without fear or bias, and that will relieve your own personal suffering which only ever stems from self-importance a la ego.
This Buddhist practice called "tonglen" could be seen as a lifelong personal challenge.
At the end of the day life is full of hurts and these hurts can be looked at as good things.
"Huh? Why?..."
Because suffering gives us a chance to practice tonglen so we can be mentally and emotionally impervious to life's metaphorical punches and cuts whether coming from situations or people.
Here comes my however.
I don't have any desire to accept that a person's life has to end or be short, that death is inevitable.
*knock on wood*
As good as Buddhism is, I still believe hope is relevant to the human experience. I hope that life extension research will pan out for human beings so that physical suffering is diminished or atleast greatly reduced. *knock on wood* I would be happy with that. That is the major reason I removed one star.
Also, the writing is not so elegant which is my default preference, but there aren't any huge errors of any kind.