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A Spiritual Renegade's Guide to the Good Life [Paperback]

Lama Marut
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Book Description

Jun 5 2012
Start a Revolution, Incite Happiness!

Delivered with fearless candor and disarming humor, Lama Marut introduces a simple set of exercises that offers a revolutionary yet wholly practical approach to creating and sustaining happiness in a complex modern age.

Integrating the ancient teachings of Tibetan Buddhism into the everyday grind, A Spiritual Renegade’s Guide to the Good Life presents a fresh take on our quest for a joyful existence. Each chapter includes an action plan designed to elicit true happiness and forge a clear path toward fulfillment. You’ll learn how to:

• transform problems into opportunities;

• set yourself free from fear and anxiety;

• unburden yourself of past resentment;

• create an action plan for true happiness.

Further explore the concepts of a spiritual renegade lifestyle through Microsoft Tags within this book, which link to online videos of Lama Marut discussing each of his concepts firsthand. This book is bound to disrupt your suffering, disturb your dissatisfaction, and elicit a deep-seated contentment. Happiness is in your hands.


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Review

"A Spiritual Renegade's Guide to the Good Life is so good I wish I had written it myself! Seriously, you really should try to overcome your fear of bliss and start living the way Lama Marut suggests. I recommend this delightful book that should accompany your day to day from now on."

—Robert A. F. "Tenzin" Thurman, Jey Tsong Khapa professor of Buddhist Studies, Columbia University, cofounder of Tibet House US, and author of Why The Dalai Lama Matters

"A Spiritual Renegade's Guide is light and lively, also deeply wise and worth delving into. This practice manual will help us all bring Buddhist principles into daily life, here and now, including forgiveness, gratitude, ethical living, and experiencing for yourself the buoyant joy and happiness of spiritual living. I read and savored it." (Lama Surya Das author of Awakening the Buddha Within)

"Lama Marut skillfully and eloquently describes how happiness naturally emerges as a reward of authentic spiritual practice. A marvelous guide for those choosing to walk on joy’s path."

—Michael Bernard Beckwith, author of Spiritual Liberation

"While reading this book, thinking about this book, and trying his suggestions I have begun to experience what life is like when one puts 'the horse before the cart.' I am experiencing a lot more time and a lot more love, and I am extremely grateful. It's brilliant."

Mary McDonnell, Academy Award nominated actress, Dances With Wolves

"If you want advice on how to dig yourself out of a black hole, you need a man with a spade on the inside. Lama Marut, formerly Brian K. Smith, is just the bloke. He’s the favorite sports coach you had when you were five: big like a bear (in a reassuring way), direct, fun and with an American accent that curls around his forthright southern charm."

—Lisa Mitchell, "The Buddhist and the Black Hole," THE WEEKLY REVIEW (Melbourne)

“I can think of few teachers of spirituality more capable of offering the profound and rich traditions of Buddhism and the visionary voices of yoga. When you meet Lama Marut you encounter greatness, a place where the heart and mind are one, and the company you keep presents a rare presence that can change your life.”

—Douglas R. Brooks, author and professor of Religion, University of Rochester and Spiritual Voice of Anusara Yoga and Rajanaka Yoga

"Lama Marut’s book is an intelligent, readable primer on how to live a good life. He begins with an exploration of happiness, and then moves into areas that influence happiness, such as forgiveness, not living in the past or dwelling on the future, gratitude, work, materialism. His book is a challenge to 'swim upstream' and be the renegade that does not, for instance, buy into the dominant culture of consumerism, which is designed, he says, to keep you wanting more."

—Rae Padilla Fancoeur, The Herald News

"In down-to-earth, no-nonsense language, Lama Marut, Buddhist monk, university professor, surfer and motorcyclist, tells readers how to incite happiness in life....If you’re ready to roll up your sleeves and do the work required to achieve genuine contentment and help others achieve it too, let Marut be your guide."

—Diane Holcomb, New Consciousness Review

Publisher's Weekly Review:

By no means the first to frame spiritual practice as a form of rebellion, Lama Marut (aka Brian K. Smith) manages a fresh approach based on Asian philosophy, particularly Buddhist principles. An ordained monk trained in the Tibetan tradition and former professor of religious studies, the author argues that happiness is the most important goal in life, but it comes from within, not by depending on external, ephemeral factors such as money and relationships. An important key to happiness is giving to others. Focusing on karma as opposed to the usual Four Noble Truths, Lama Marut applies unusually cogent arguments that individuals can indeed change their relationship to the past and have control over their futures, yet be unable to change the present except for their responses to it. He draws on sources from ancient to modern to illustrate his ideas; he avoids sectarian spirituality as well as New Age clichés. Lama Marut knows how to describe concepts clearly and to make a persuasive case while entertaining his readers. His chapter on forgiveness is a particularly compelling gem of brevity. This provocative, “hip” guide (there’s a motorcycle on the cover) doesn’t weasel out on the importance of living a “morally pure life” to achieve happiness. Agent: Molly Lyons. (June)

About the Author

Born Brian K. Smith to a second-generation Baptist minister, Lama Marut had a strong interest in spirituality from a very young age, along with a passion for motorcycles, surfing, and yoga. He earned a Ph.D. in comparative religion before becoming an ordained Buddhist monk. He has worked as a professor at Columbia University and the University of California Riverside. Marut is founder and spiritual director of three spiritual centers and serves as a founding board member and staff teacher at the Yoga Studies Institute.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Rule 62 Ken TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
In a well-written and light-hearted work, author Lama Marut identifies and addresses the impediments to happiness that every human faces: resentment and regret of the past, inability to appreciate and be grateful for all that we have, and fear of the future. Encouraging the reader to become a "spiritual renegade", he serves as a spiritual Sherpa in helping the reader learn to address our past, our future and our present, with some surprising revelations. It turns out that we can change our past as well as our future, but it's the present we must accept as is. A highlight of the book for me was an especially helpful tutorial on forgiveness: what it is, what it isn't and why it's important to forgive those we feel have harmed us before getting on with the business of being happy. He also gives the reader a better understanding of the concept of Karma and its importance in building a happy future. Each chapter concludes with something for the "couch potato" to meditate on and a simple action plan. If the concepts in each chapter are still unclear, Lama Marut provides the reader with internet links to videos in which the author provides further summary and explanation.

The undertone of the book is that, while "the unexamined life may not be worth living" (to quote Socrates), the process of examination should be relaxed and fun. For me the first part of this book was especially wonderful, while some of the concepts in the latter parts were not as easy to grasp. For anyone wishing to understand the meaning or purpose of life (which Lama Marut says is simply to be happy), or wondering how to become happy or happier, I strongly recommend this book, especially for those open to introspection and those looking for more than the "same old same old" that seems to appear in the usual self-help books. The concepts and discussion in this book are indeed tailored for "spiritual renegades."
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Amazon.com: 4.9 out of 5 stars  18 reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Must Read. A Practical Approach to Spiritualism in Modern Society Jun 9 2012
By David W. Lowell - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I am currently reading this book and am finding Lama Marut's world view to be truly inspiring. I was so inspired that I wanted to share my thoughts in the form of a preliminary review--as I feel it is critical to capture emotions contemporaneously.

The author states that we live in a time of tremendous opportunity, a period that is not guaranteed to last long. For quite some time I have had the feeling that we are in a time of great opportunity, perhaps even approaching a Golden Age, and the author points to ancient teachings that confirm this. We have miraculous tools, like the internet, telephones, airplanes, etc., at our disposal all the time and we tend to take them for granted. We should recognize our great fortune and use these tools to grow spiritually and not be distracted by the typical drama of daily American life. We look beyond the traffic each morning, the bad tasting coffee and the pesky person at work and find a world rich in daily miracles and ready for our loving contribution.

I look forward to continue reading this book and more from this author. Hopefully I will have finished reading it by the time I update my review (unless I must give in to inspiration to update it before I finish the book).

UPDATE:
So I finished reading Lama Marut's book today, and I actually was able to meet the Lama in person between my last writing and this one. Being that he was doing a book signing north of Boston and I live in central Rhode Island, just getting up there on a weekday afternoon posed a bit of a challenge. Once I arrived at Cape Ann, though, I felt like I was in paradise. Even the parking meter welcomed me with about 55 free minutes.

What I like about this book is its conversational style...you feel like you are sitting with the Lama, face to face. It took a little bit of getting used to, at first, but I found it to be more engaging than other styles.

As far as context, he introduces an interesting notion of the past and future being subject to change, but the present as being fixed. This contradicts many philosophical sayings, such as "que sera sera" (whatever will be will be) and "what's done is done." The Lama substantiates his theory by stating that in the face of a difficult situation, namely dealing with an annoying person, no single tactic works every time. Some annoying people stop being annoying when you are kind to them, some stop being annoying when you are mean to them, and others continue to be annoying no matter what you do to them. Therefore he states that the present is the result of past karma and therefore is unchangeable. Only our reaction to the present can be changed. How we view the past and how we react to the present both drastically affect the future.

Toward the end of his book he tackles the paradox of feeling content in the present moment while maintaining motivation to seek spiritual development. Western culture has sold us on continually pursuing happiness in the present moment with stuff you can buy...as if you could buy happiness. We remain unhappy because we fail to forgive ourselves for past failures, try endlessly to change our present condition of suffering (to no avail), and forget to express gratitude for all of our blessings and treat others as we would want to be treated in the present in order to ensure a happy future.

If I was to say something critical about the book, which every good review should since no work is perfect, it would be that the author presupposes the reader either believes in karma or is ready to believe in karma when presented with some convincing arguments. I think the author has studied Buddhism for so long that a worldview inclusive of karma is the only thing that seems to make sense to him, and the book reflects that. Therefore his suggestions for living the good life all depend on one's conviction regarding karma. In his version of karma, which probably matches traditional Buddhist views, karma is a cycle of a person acting kindly toward others and being subjected to pleasant circumstances in the future and similarly acting negatively toward others in the present and being subjected to unpleasant circumstances in the future, and it works 100% of the time. I think that the Christian view also makes sense of a God running the show and rewarding you when you are good and punishing you when you are bad, but both the reward and punishment are designed to guide a person toward spiritual growth. It does make sense that it is working 100% of the time, whatever the system is, otherwise there would be a great temptation to try to "get away with something", which would completely undermine the spiritual growth process. Of course there are many other views out there including ones where your good and evil acts count for nothing. I would venture to say people following the latter logic would probably gain little from this book, but those following the Christian view and others like it may find the book to be helpful even if they are not completely sold on karma.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading the Lama's book and look forward to reading more from this author.

Thank you for sharing this with us Lama Marut,
Dave Lowell of PracticalManifestations.com
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Be a rebel -- love, forgive, and be mindful Jun 7 2012
By Steve Proctor - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I'm a big fan of "unusual" spiritual autobiographies. But usually these books just focus on the author's own spiritual path. Spiritual Renegade is a different type of book, not the type I read as much of. This is more of a spiritual guide, and less of a memoir. So its focus is not so much "here's what I did," but more, "here's how it can help you." Still, while this kind of book isn't usually my style, I found it really powerful.

Marut is an ordained monk in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition. He frames spiritual growth as a form of rebellion. Instead of our society's outward focus on material wealth and well-being as the source of happiness, he promotes beginning with the self. This is the only thing we have control over, so it makes sense.

Thankfully, he avoids New Age cliches in his writing. And instead of a "my religion is better than yours" approach, he draws on many spiritual traditions. His chapter on forgiveness is especially powerful.

So for an excellent guide to living our lives spiritually in the modern world -- traditional Tibetan Buddhism for the modern mind -- I highly recommend this book.

Other books you might also like include Cave in the Snow : Tenzin Palmo's Quest for Enlightenment and I Walked to the Moon and Almost Everybody Waved: The Curiously Inspiring Adventures of a Free Spirit Who Changed Lives
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Are You Ready Yet to Give Up Being Unhappy? Jun 10 2012
By Fiercemama - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is no namby pamby approach to spiritual life. If you are fed up with the sweet and sugary philosophies that have never really helped you to end your unhappiness once and for all, this is the book for you.

The book begins with an investigation of why real lasting happiness itself is the goal of every true spiritual path. And that happiness isn't for wimps or the naive. From there it offers hands on, practical approaches for how to implement happiness in your own life.

Lama Marut knows of what he speaks, both through his experience as an ordained Buddhist monk and a scholar of comparative religion and Sanskrit. But his presentation is fresh, modern, relevant and salt-of-the-earth, with a good dose of his signature wry humour.

The book also contains QR codes throughout that you can scan with your smartphone, which will take you directly to inspiring 3 minute videos from Lama Marut's teachings, that bring the content of any given section to life, with his signature humourous, down to earth sensibility. The book's endnotes also give lots of helpful and fun online resources.

Highly recommended.
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