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Home for the Soul: A Guide for Dwelling Wtih Spirit and Imagination
Home for the Soul: A Guide for Dwelling Wtih Spirit and Imagination | Anthony Lawlor
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Anthony Lawlor is known as the architect who brings soul to design. His acclaimed book "The Temple in the House" showed how to and the sacred in architecture. Now, in A Home for the Soul, he reveals how our houses and apartments can become havens of inspiration and renewal."From the moment we're born, we seek to find home." Lawlor says, "Yet, despite this primal longing, our dwelling places often disappoint us." In A Home for the Soul, we discover that the depth and meaning we seek is right in front of us if we but have the eyes to see. Lawlor teaches us how to develop a consciousness about the spiritual possibilities inherent in our interior surroundings; he shows how to recognize the sacred in material form. "Each time we bathe, " says Lawlor, "we not only cleanse the body, we refresh the spirit. Each time we open our front door, we enter a universe of connection and signifcance."Lawlor leads us on a journey through each room of the house, opening our vision to hidden possibilities. We discover, for example, how a stove expresses the transforming power of nature, how clothes closets reveal our inner personalities, and how home offices display our talents. Lawlor shows us the mythological and archetypal meanings within the common objects of daily life--such as a bed, a bathtub, a pair of shoes, or a loaf or bread.The author also offers practical suggestions for arranging or building soulful homes. He explains how to use wood, tile, brick, and stone to express qualities of the spirit and how to use furniture and personal objects as allies in creating meaning.Finally, Lawlor shows us how to construct a Mandala of the Soul--a wood cabinet with compartments for housing thesymbols of home that have particular personal meanings for each reader.;;;;;;;; In these pages, we come to understand how all the rooms we live in can form a sacred place of wholeness, a home that cares for and uplifts the totality of mind, body, and soul.
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review
hissingpotatoes
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Mehso-so

2.5/5⭐ This book is for people who have never thought about a metaphor. I guess there are such people out there, so I can't really fault the book for its scope. But for anyone who's read/watched/encountered any fictional story ever, it's mostly useless to have a book whose goal is to tell the reader “bathing can cleanse not just the body but also THE MIND“ or “knives cut physical things but can also cut through BULLSHIT.“ Oooh, *wavy hands* (cont)

hissingpotatoes The book takes so long to say the simplest thing, or nothing at all. It has little to no practical advice, though if you consider it a collection of archetypes/correspondences, it works better. Points to the author for equally incorporating worldwide mythology/folktales and not just Christian ones like I feared. The mandala exercise at the very end of the book was an interesting way for readers to actually think about their own lives. 4y
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