Highgrove Books
In the Light: Putting an order to the chicken and the egg and other great mysteries of life
In the Light: Putting an order to the chicken and the egg and other great mysteries of life
Couldn't load pickup availability
A surprising collection of sometimes irreverent anecdotes and stories intertwined with a few insights and some timely questions.
"The more we learn the more ignorant we become"
An easy read that might just get you thinking.
Do you wish you could change from the busyness of consistent doing to just being, from endless achieving to just appreciating?
There is an answer but you may not like it.
The challenge is to read and think with an open mind.
www.inthelightbook.info
Author: Michael Pietsch
Publisher: Highgrove Books
Published: 03/01/2024
Pages: 184
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.33lbs
Size: 7.00h x 5.00w x 0.46d
ISBN: 9780975652909
About the Author
Pietsch, Michael: - Michael Pietsch spent his childhood years in the open spaces of farm life. Today some would say it was an idyllic way to grow up. Most likely it was. Indeed it must have been because, to this day, he's still not sure whether his family was poor or well off.In the numerous decades since, life has taken him in many different directions providing a wide diversity of experiences. Recently, now free of the encumbrances attached to the earlier stages of life, he has been able to grasp a little of life's bigger picture, and experience some of the associated delights and pleasures of just being.Once Michael would have said that he has a wife, he has three children and he has six grandchildren. He now prefers to define himself as Michelle's husband, as the father of three adult children, and as the grandad of six beautiful grandchildren. There may also be an imaginary legal document out there in the cloud somewhere stating that he is part owner of the bit of land on which he lives. In reality he knows that he is the groundsperson. The real owner is the beautiful majestic old stringybark gum tree that has been residing there for around 250 years.
Share
