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34 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Warm and unpretentious account of a life lived well, August 26, 2004
By 
Robert Anderson (Pacific Northwest) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
Beginning at the age of 11 and occuring several times more throughout his life, the author found himself in an altered state where he was able to view Heaven, or "The Golden World" as he called it. The title of this book then, "Balancing Heaven and Earth", chronicles his spiritual journey which was characterized by the need to balance or integrate the nearly undescribable bliss of heaven with the author's ordinary existence.

Looking back on his life while near the end of it Johnson examines and chronicles his life and spiritual journey for us, including his experiences growing up as a poor kid without a leg, his meeting with Carl Jung and subsequent career as a Jungian analyst, writer and speaker, and his adventures traveling around the world. Especially interesting are his tales of India.

Johnson's "voice" comes across as grandfatherly and warm. He doesn't claim to have achieved enlightenment, doesn't claim to know all of the answers, and he clearly isn't attempting to recruit followers, or build up his ego, resume or bank account. He writes simply and elequently, and avoids the complex, philosophical jargon that render many writers (such as Ken Wilber) somewhat inaccessible to simple lunkheads like me. (Note however, that a basic understanding of Jungian psychology will add to one's understanding).

Here is a sample passage that I particularly liked, which is the author's take on sainthood, coming after a small town in India had asked him to live there as their local "saint":

"I have meditated on the subject of sainthood many times since this experience, and I find a bit of wisdom in understanding that saints are people who suffer the projection of unlived holiness from a group of people and are made to serve in this strange role whether they like it or not. It is only the other side of the coin of scapegoating, in which a group chooses an individual to carry the dark side of their own personalities, which they are unwilling to own for themselves...God help the poor person who is landed with either of the excesses that humankind finds equally difficult to bear."

(The theme of people unwilling to "own" their own best qualities, and therefore projecting them onto a religious guru, is touched upon several times throughout the book).

Overall, this is a wonderful story of someone following God's leading throughout life and finally coming to a place where they are comfortable in their own skin, both physically and spiritually - having learned to lay down the ego's agenda and follow the subtle leading of the Spirit of God.

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37 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A transformative experience, June 2, 1999
By 
R. Needham (Friday Harbor, WA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
This is less a review than a hymn of gratitude. For me, this book is one of the "slender threads" Johnson talks about, a serendipitous opportunity that, grasped, changes your life. If you, like he, have experienced "the Golden World," you are likely to sob as I did at his description of it and his yearning to return to it. Johnson is an old soul, an introvert, a solitary by nature, who wrestled with his destiny for decades.

His memoir gives me hope for my own struggles, and I believe this will hold true for many, many readers. I have rarely been so moved by a book; perhaps the only other I have found so affecting was Matthew Fox's collection of Meister Eckhard's thought.

If you are seeking the light in any way or form, don't miss it.

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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Possibly the best work in Johnson's compendium., May 17, 1999
By 
RMBACON@FEA.NET (Orange County, California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
As a student of depth psychology, particularly Jungian, I have read all of Johnson's work and this most personal work is the one that has affected me the most deeply. By revealing the details of his life's journey, Johnson gives the reader insight into how it looks to "follow your bliss." Sometimes the call we receive is not an easy one and Johnson poignantly shares his struggles with this as well. But remaning true to the "still small voice" and allowing his ego to be used in service to the Self (God) has resulted in a life that is both rich in texture and joyful in experience. This book is a treasure and one to be savored at that!
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars His best book yet!, April 28, 2006
By 
Kara (Upland, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
I truly wish I had read this book before I read Johnson's other works, as I think this very personal account of the author's spiritual and intellectual journey have shed a lot of light on how he came to believe the things he wrote in his more academic writings. This man's connection to the unseen world, his openness, his ability to see truths about himself, about humankind and about the nature of the Divine are a wonderful foundation for reading and understanding books like He, She and We. This is his latest book, but I recommend to anyone interested to read this one first. It will leave you hungry for more.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exquisite humility and engaging stories, December 8, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
What a treasure this book is! Robert Johnson shares his understanding and experience of the "slender threads" that have guided him through the events of his life, from one synchronistic moment to the next...and such a thread seemed to lead me to this book. It is a rare gift, written by a man who openly shares both his struggles and his joys, someone who reveals his true soul without any of the blustery ego-dross that so many modern "masters" pontificate with. "The highest form of worship," Johnson writes, quoting a Hindu saint, "is simply to be happy." Johnson's own hard-won happiness shines tenderly from his stories, and he invites us to share in his journey of homecoming and self-liberation. Jerry Ruhl, in his introduction to the book, describes Johnson as someone who "maintains an ethical obligation to...powerful and myserious forces" (dreams, visions, and synchronistic events). Johnson's life choices show the ultimate sanity of dedicating oneself to the realities of soul, love, and service. His ethics are honed, exquisitely, by experience and relationship; his humility is sincere. This is the first book of his that I've read; it definitely won't be the last!
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A View Through Young Eyes, April 25, 2000
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
My soul (as my mind percieves it) has not yet found the thread of enlightenment. I accept the path to stumble, fall, rise up and down and to reach into the oblivion of understanding. I have seventeen short years behind my eyes, and strive to become an old woman. I thank Robert Johnson and his writings in "Balancing Heaven and Earth", as it is of great comfort to known although I am alone in my personal journey, I am not alone in my attempt to find a middle path between the extremes of human despair and joy, and the truths behind it. I have often gazed upon the world in realization that I do not, in fact, understand it in the least! I cannot comprehend the forces behind the companies which constructed the buildings and the societies that mesh and become urban life (although the boundaries between urban and sub-urban, country, city, town and household have been blurred beyond recognition). Yet it is of comfort to me to have the opportunity to read Robert Johnson's biographical writings...as I have great respect for him. I shall further indulge in his other works!
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deep Yet Accessible, February 28, 2006
By 
Just Another Reader (Terre Haute, Indiana United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
This author reveals a very productive and interesting life. He has definitely paid attention to his inner and outer worlds all his life. All of his books that I have read are of high quality, and my favorite one besides this one is "Inner Work", which I found to be very helpful.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Enlightening Memoir, January 27, 2008
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
I learned a great deal from this book. It gave me a basic understanding of Jungian analysis, in particular how dreams are used to tap into the sub-conscious mind and help identify one's personal "destiny" or "thread" as Johnson describes it. I appreciated his several visions of the "Golden World" and how he sought, throughout his life, to re-experience this heightened state of awareness. He also describes how we project our desires onto others in order to experience this sense of connection. I loved Mr. Johnson's experiences in India, and the way he immersed himself in the culture and learned so much about their distinct way of viewing the world. I hope to read another of his books.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Indispensable Guide, November 7, 2007
This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
When I'm asked for the most influential books in my life, this is the one that tops my list. As someone who reads 50-200 books a year, that's a big list. I've given it as gifts, quoted it in sermons, referred to it as a spiritual counselor, used it for my own growth and have come back to it over and over since it was first published. I happened upon these reviews while ordering Johnson's latest CD, Golden World, which I'm thrilled to know has been produced. I've read all his books and agree with other reviewers that this is the best, or at any rate, the one that has provided a helpful road map for my life and experiences, and hence, for the many whom I also touch. For those of us, and there are numerous souls, who have had extraordinary tastes of the Golden World (and its inhabitants), "balancing heaven and earth" for the rest of one's life is a daily task; sometimes grace, often a struggle. His words in this memoir (my paraphrase): "there have always been those whose job it is to tend the borders between the worlds" gave me context when I first needed it. His book "We," while it didn't save me from romantic errors (and he writes: "the genie"--e.g. romantic love--"can't be put back in the bottle,") did, again, provide a context for healing and future lessons ("the depression is always in direct proportion to the inflation that preceded it.)His experiences with Krishnamurthi, recounted in this book, gave me important lessons as a teacher, e.g."don't try to give an old man's wisdom to a young person," and his lessons on sainthood have been extremely important as well. If you are living the inner journey, have any sort of spiritual life, and especially, if like Parsifal, Johnson's oft-referred to mythic model, have suffered the agony and the ecstasy of a visit to the Grail Castle and then "lost" it, this book is for you.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Connecting to the divine, August 14, 2006
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This review is from: Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations (Hardcover)
The most readable book written by Johnson, perhaps because it is the story of his life written with a friend. It has a lot of his dreams and real life experiences that he encountered and used to walk the path of his connection to the sacred. It is not a book of masculine spirituality rather the of the deeper connections available to all mankind. I throughly enjoyed it but it is not a light read.
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Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations
Balancing Heaven and Earth: A Memoir of Visions, Dreams, and Realizations by Robert A. Johnson (Hardcover - January 20, 1998)
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