One thing that bothers me about this book is it seems very binary to me. If you are spiritual, that’s a one. Ego centered, well, that’s a zero. You could almost do a search and replace and substitute Godly for spiritual and worldly for ego and sell the book to a whole different market, based on what I have read.
What I have seen so far in life rejects binaries in terms of relationships and people. None of my marriages and relationships in my long life have been the same. What one relationship needs to survive often is poison to another. Over time marriages and relationships change! That's wonderful in my own life book. My own marriages and relationships have been wonderful because of their differences.
Life styles, relationship and gender orientation possibilities are richly varied. Many styles of relationships and religions make up the world. Not even a scale from black to white is enough. Life is Technicolor rich to me. I like Technicolor. To me binary is white or black and that to me is narrow minded and limiting in perspective.
I do agree with the book that most of the world around us is a reflection of the world we create in our minds. That fits with what the author writes. We have more free will than we often grasp. We can change our world by changing our minds. But, to quote Agent Cooper in Twin Peaks, “coincidence and fate figure largely in our lives.”
My first wife fell asleep at the wheel and hit a power pole. I don’t think she willed that power pole to be right where it is as she slid sideways into it.
And, what about evil? There are evil people who do evil things. I don’t think the folks in the World Trade Center willed airliners to hit their buildings by having the wrong attitude. You can just be at the wrong place when evil happens. Evil does not happen to people because of their wrong attitude.
You can’t just blame the victims for having the wrong attitude. But, that’s what I think the book often does. It posits that a person can be abusing you and the target of the abuse should change their attitude and that will stop the abuse.
That does not sit well with me. The author wraps up with a chapter on mindful divorce. That's not enough for me. I am a spiritual guy who meditates and tries to live mindfully.
To me this book falls short. I agree with it 90 percent. My concern is that folks who read this book, and embrace it 100%, may end up taking on shame and blame for things that would be better off being let go.