Foreword
David R. Loy
Preface: Deep Calls to Deep: Hallowing Our Relationship with Nature
Introduction: Transpersonal Ecopsychology by Way of Phenomenology and Contemplative Spirituality
1. Seeing Those Peach Blossoms Changed My Life: Keeping Joy, Wonder, and Gratitude Alive in Our Heart
2. The Ghost Bird's Haunting Cry: Letting Our Heart Break . . . Open
3. All Real Living Is Meeting: Losing Nature, Losing Our Humanity
4. The Dissociative Madness of Modernity's Shadow: Constructing, Deconstructing, and Reconstructing Culture
5. The Supposedly Separate Ego: Delusion, Paranoia, and Greed in Conventional (Co)Existence
6. No Longer I: Christian Mysticism, Self-Surrender, and Transpersonal Realization
7. Nature's Conversational Consciousness: Awareness as an Ecological Field of Relations
8. Basho's Contemplative Therapy for Narcissus: From Ego-Centered Alienation to Eco-Centered Intimacy
9. Nature-Healing-Body-Healing-Nature-Healing-Body: From Desensitization to Embodied Attunement
10. Living Means Being Addressed: Embracing Earth's Wild, Sacred, Ethical Call
11. Love Is Our Nature, Our Calling, Our Path, Our Fruition: It All Comes Down to This
Coda: Deep Calls to Deep-Deep Listens from Its Depths-Deep Serves Deep
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
About the Author
Will W. Adams serves as a psychology professor at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and as an ecopsychologist, psychotherapist, and meditation teacher.