Whether you are in recovery or simply looking
to improve your life, Edward Bear's latest "Tyler tape"
will show you how to overcome your outwardly centered needs
and concentrate on the inner work of healing and growth.
The Seven Deadly Needs is the sequel to Edward Bear's previous work The Dark Night of Recovery. Set in a conversational format, the book is written as a series of tape-recorded sessions between a mentor, Tyler, and his somewhat resistant pupil, Edward Bear. Each session deals with one of what Tyler calls the Seven Deadly Needs: the Need to Know, to Be Right, to Get Even, to Look Good, to Judge, to Keep Score, and to Control. Because these needs are outwardly focused, they force us to act in ways that are not true to ourselves, and often lead to addiction, isolation and unhappiness. This book will help guide you around some of the larger potholes in life's often-hectic road.
In form not unlike the Platonic Dialogues, the seven chapters deal with many everyday issues that confine rather than expand our experience of reality. These obstacles often keep us from an awareness of how rich our lives can be. Through the course of the book, you will learn how to overcome these deadly needs, how to see the possibilities open to each of us, and how to view each day as a wonderful opportunity for living. Although The Seven Deadly Needs is Twelve-Step oriented, the principles and practices are universal, and the tone is both irreverent and charming.
You will be happy you joined the teacher and his reluctant student as you journey together through the mysterious graveyard of the Seven Deadly Needs. And like Edward Bear, you will learn to just ignore the strange sounds and the shadows that seem to move. There's usually very little danger. Usually.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Edward Bear was born in Brooklyn, NY and grew up in Los Angeles. Early experiences include a brief stint in minor league baseball, too many years in construction work, day labor, bartending, and a variety of dead-end jobs. He attended (sometimes very briefly) six colleges and received no degrees. A correspondence course in engineering landed him a job at Hewlett-Packard, where has been employed for 27 years.
His major influences are Winnie the Pooh, Eugene O'Neill, John Steinbeck, Meister Eckhart, T.S. Eliot, and Jacques Maritain, not necessarily in that order. He has published several fiction pieces in small literary magazines and a novel, Diamonds Are Trump.
As a volunteer at a local hospice, he pushes the cocktail cart on Friday afternoons, delivering drinks to the terminally ill. Given his background and his tenuous relationship with alcohol and drugs, he sometimes thinks he hears a cosmic chuckle as he makes his rounds. He lives in Denver with his second wife. He has six marvelous children from a previous marriage, plays a vintage Martin guitar and writes in whatever time the gods have left for him.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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