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The Adventure of Living

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$15.39
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Book Overview

Paul Tournier, who now lives actively in retirement, was a general practitioner in Geneva for nearly fifty years. Although he never had a specialist training in psychiatry and disclaims the title of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

this book is great

Tournier explains beautifully why every person has an instinctual desire for adventure. The book may have been written a while ago, but it has universal truth. In the last 15 years, something called eustress theory has popped up---which means that people have a desire to challenge themselves. This is a modern rendition of everything Tournier said in his book 50 years ago. Please read it. You'll be happy you did.

The Adventure of Living

For those dissatisfied, for those who become increasingly aware through the years of something missing in their lives, this book will open wide the gates of self-discovery. "Woe betide those," says Paul Tournier, "who no longer feel thrilled at anything, who have stopped looking for adventure." The excitement of his own enthusiasm for living permeates every page of his book. With strong, bold strokes the eminent Swiss physician and psychiatrist outlines exactly what is at the heart of humanity's sickness. It is, he says, man's failure to fufill himself. And he believes that where so many people fail miserably in expressing their true selves is in seeking substitutes for real adventure. He cites many examples. For instance: * The clock-watcher working day after day at a job which holds no interest for him, because he lacks the adventurous drive to find and develop the special talent given to every human being. * Those who lose themselves in popular films, novels, TV, sooner than investigate their own abilities. * Parents who identify themselves with their children in the pathetic hope of realizing the dream they themselves missed. * The man who maintains a mistress for excitement because he finds his marriage deadly dull - not troubling to make the marriage itself exciting. * The hypochondriac to whom illness becomes a desparate search for adventure. Stage by stage through each of the three parts of the book - The Adventure, The Risk, The Choice - Paul Tournier shows that in each human being there are two selves - the one presentes to the world, and the hidden, true self. In the struggle to integrate these two selves man finds the real adventure of living, and no bogus substitute can ever replace it. He also believes that until people admit this and face up to the face that only through holiness and a deeper knowledge of God can they fufill themselves, true happiness will elude them. --- from book's dustjacket
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