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HOW DOES A SOUL FIND ITS PURPOSE IN THE WORLD? Here's how a working soul coach does it. Breaking with Belief clearly describes how you become the soul, get focused, transcend your fate, partner with your beautiful body, and find a destiny of purpose that unveils itself daily. On the way, spiritual author John Davidson offers a new answer to the question how "spiritual" can actually mean something significantly different than "religious." Continuing his soul perspective series, Davidson's new book describes in detail his hands-on teaching process and how it helps people learn to recover the…mehr

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HOW DOES A SOUL FIND ITS PURPOSE IN THE WORLD? Here's how a working soul coach does it. Breaking with Belief clearly describes how you become the soul, get focused, transcend your fate, partner with your beautiful body, and find a destiny of purpose that unveils itself daily. On the way, spiritual author John Davidson offers a new answer to the question how "spiritual" can actually mean something significantly different than "religious." Continuing his soul perspective series, Davidson's new book describes in detail his hands-on teaching process and how it helps people learn to recover the body from its trauma. Soul and body are inherently connected, Davidson writes, but their soulmated relationship must be cultivated skillfully in order to heal the wild body and coax it into service of the soul's planetary agenda. All souls come to the planet encoded with a gift that can only be unpacked with the discovery of purpose, says Davidson. While gifts are inherent, purpose arises from a daily process by which a soul seated in the coherent heart uses the sensuality of the body to seek out opportunities in a rapidly changing world. Belief has no place in that process. Breaking with Belief steps outside the box within which the current debate regarding religious belief rages. In one way or another, the religious, atheists, agnostics, scientists, academics, and meditators all believe in belief. Their debate centers almost entirely upon the content of belief while treating the process of belief as a necessary given. For a progressive believer, the ultimate trap is not the content of belief-many people now feel free to pick and choose-but the process of belief itself, which they have been conditioned to assume as necessary. Instead, Davidson argues, the direct experience of the soul seated in a coherent heart, in combination with the rational and visionary capacities of the brain, provide what we need to navigate the planet with purpose and connect directly with the mystery we call by the proverbial 10,000 names.