I'm tired and resentful of another book about spirituality that interjects a selfish and mercenary mindset. In one chapter, Kyle Gray states that the soul is not attached to money. Yet in the preceding chapter, he tells readers that anyone can make a living by doing something they enjoy. This myopic view ("I can do this, so anyone can.") dismisses the struggles of those who aren't, for example, articulate, young, educated, and attractive white men (i.e., priveleged).
What about parents? They have to work to put food on the table. Yet this isn't enough. To raise a child in today's world means daily, burdensome sacrifice. It means giving more than you feel you have in you, time and again.
But everyone's goal, according to Gray, is happiness. Everyone. Well, a selfish world in which everyone is invested in their own happiness, has gotten us to war after war, more ugliness and destruction. Repeat.
That's not my goal or life purpose. Judaism teaches tikkun olam. It's everyone's duty to heal the world. Buddhism, Christianity and many other religious groups teach the same. That's what I live by.
Generosity goes hand in hand with gratitude, love, and peace. These elements are both achieved at the highest vibration and take us to it. This average book does neither.