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Where to go in a world full of adversity and lies?This is the question the little ugly man asks himself. We are no strangers to this question either. »Tread new paths and let go of what you cling to« resounds in his heart. Which paths can we take out of the limited spaces of unwholesome thinking? Of course, we can and should change and shape ourselves and the world around us. But, the deepest change we can ultimately give to the world is most likely that of coming into our own, at the center of our being - that is, where our true home is.The parable The Bhikku addresses the path that leads to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Where to go in a world full of adversity and lies?This is the question the little ugly man asks himself. We are no strangers to this question either. »Tread new paths and let go of what you cling to« resounds in his heart. Which paths can we take out of the limited spaces of unwholesome thinking? Of course, we can and should change and shape ourselves and the world around us. But, the deepest change we can ultimately give to the world is most likely that of coming into our own, at the center of our being - that is, where our true home is.The parable The Bhikku addresses the path that leads to present awareness through conscious inhalation and exhalation, and which is described by many Eastern and Western teachings. The little ugly man's stops on his journey to the holy Bhikku (which means "monk" in Pali) are described in an archetypal way, rendering the monk as an independent authority on the inner cosmos of man. The fairytale-like narrative is the fruit of the author's own journey as well as a tribute to the holy women and men he met on his numerous travels in Southeast Asia.
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Autorenporträt
The author was born in 1965 in the Allgäu region. He spent his early childhood in several children¿s homes there. Starting at age 12, he lived in the Pestalozzi Village for Children and Adolescents in Wahlwies where he completed an apprenticeship as a cabinet maker at the age of 19. He later obtained his high school diploma and his entrance qualification for higher education. After training as an insurance salesman, he completed a degree in legal studies at the University of Applied Sciences in Ludwigsburg and graduated in 1997 with a major in tax and business law as a Diplom Finanzwirt (FH). In 2015, his first autobiographical work Verloren im Niemandsland (Rombach Verlag, Freiburg) was published, followed by his second autobiographical work Schattenkind, vergiss mein nicht (Verlag Urachhaus, Stuttgart) in 2018. Today he works as a successful freelancer in tax consulting in Southern Germany. Clemens Maria Heymkind is married and the father of four children.