
- Title : Big Bang, The Buddha, and the Baby Boom: The Spiritual Experiments of My Generation
- Author : Wes Nisker
- Rating : 4.72 (189 Vote)
- Publish : 2014-7-10
- Format : Hardcover
- Pages : 224 Pages
- Asin : 006251766X
- Language : English
Of course, we didn't create the conditions or questions of this new age; we got caught in them. We didn't leave home; home left us. How did a nice Jewish boy from Nebraska become a Buddhist in California? Join Wes "Scoop" Nisker as he takes us on a hilarious, wild ride from West to East and back again in his quest for true self and enlight-en
Of course, we didn't create the conditions or questions of this new age; we got caught in them. We didn't leave home; home left us. How did a nice Jewish boy from Nebraska become a Buddhist in California? Join Wes "Scoop" Nisker as he takes us on a hilarious, wild ride from West to East and back again in his quest for true self and enlight-enment. Combining the best elements of memoir and social commentary, Nisker uses his own story to illuminate the Baby Boomers' roots of spiritual hunger in postwar America. The ground shifted, the old gods departed, the economic and political utopias crumbled, and the traditional answers were washed away. Some deep alternative current has begun flowing out of the spiritual adventures and identity struggles of recent generations. Newman to Allen Ginsberg -- The Big Bang, the Buddha, and the Baby Boom is a guided tour of both the outer and inner move-ments that have culminated in the growing culture of Western Buddhism -- a lasting, vivid picture of how the Baby Boom generation came to be identified with spiritual seeking, how they went about the search, what they have found and created, and what their true legacy is.. His journey begins in middle America (Nebraska to be exact) in the middle of the twentieth century, travels througBush conservative climate.He cover the beatniks, hippies, drugs, the importance of music, the disillusionment with the sixties, the turn towards introspection and fascination with eastern philosophies, the "me" decade of the eighties and the subsequent current apathy.This is a fine documentation of a unique generation that grew up during a time of unprecedented prosperity and had trouble figuring out what to do with it. 101 courses, I wonder if it still is?). Overall, this is quite a enchanting book to read. Wes "Scoop" Nisker, a self-professed Buddhist traces the spiritual history of a generation from the questioning of our parents values to living under the current George W. Despite this apparent simplicity, the practice of Buddhist meditation is far from easy. Wes writes differently from Jack Kornfield (another established author upon spirituality), who happens to be his friend as well. The subtitle of this book could also have been, in the words of rock star-philosopher David Crosby, (It Was) " A Long Time coming, Gonna Be A Long Time Gone".. This book endeavours to discuss about Buddha-nature with humour and using theCopyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. A Nebraska-born Jew, Nisker has practiced Buddhism for decades, but he could be also be a poster child for the multitude of religious and spiritual journeys through the American landscape. This is a good read for anyone interested in pop culture, but for boomers who want to look in the rear view mirror for a clearer glimpse of what's ahead, Nisker's romp is a tender triumph. From moving through the marijuana mist at the Monterey Pop Festival to viewing the neon "Om" sign at sunset at Swami Muktananda's Bombay ashram to conversing one-on-one with the Dalai Lama before he won the Nobel Peace Prize, Nisker seems to have been everywhere when something cool or significant was happening. From Publishers Weekly Who doesn't love a good flashback? Baby boomers in particular will enjoy this wry, hip, fast, breezy account by journalist and alternative radio newsman Nisker (Crazy Wisdom; Buddha's Nature). The sweetness in his journey is in the optimism stamped throughout this passport to times gone by and times to come. Anchored for many


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