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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Power of Empathic Understanding, August 31, 2000
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 109,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
As Ms. Davis says in the introduction, the sense of the book is to "see deeply the beauty and connectedness of all life; then think, speak and act from what you see." The book is a series of essays that build nicely on that theme. What makes the book outstanding is that Ms. Davis is a genius at emphathic understanding. For example, in one sequence she reads a story about a nursing home where the television sets are kept on for a minimum number of hours a day to mentally stimulate the patients. She wonders if this is a good idea. Some of the patients who cannot speak were perhaps accomplished professional musicians who abhor harsh sounds, and the staff may find their nerves jangled by the constant background bruit and bray of television.

I think I learned more about good ways to find out how people would like to be helped from this book than from almost all the others I have read combined. I hope Ms. Davis goes on to write a book just about how to handle the types of difficult situations that one runs into in life.

I am reminded of walking in front of the Plaza Hotel in New York one night in a light drizzle around 10:30 p.m. On top of a bench is a young woman sitting alone wearing a white wedding dress and veil and sobbing uncontrollably. I wanted to comfort her somehow, but didn't have a clue as to what to do. Her grief was so overwhelming that she didn't notice me as I stood quietly nearby. I didn't know how to get her attention or to find out how to help. After ten minutes of this, I quietly walked on. Ms. Davis would have known just what to do. I'm sorry that I didn't.

Some of the essays relate to helping ill people and the dying. Ms. Davis recounts being with her parents near the end of their lives. There are many valuable messages there for all of us who will be the ones who are sick and dying, or the caregivers.

This book will make you feel more deeply alive and in love with life than ever before. It will also make you more human, in the good sense of that concept.

After reading this book, consider how you can better convey your needs to those around you in a way that will encourage them to do the same with you. That will be the beginning of many beautiful moments.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Celebration of Kinship, September 3, 2000
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
Maggie has written a beautiful book about taking care of our fellow man. Her words flow like a calming river, bathing our souls in caring consciousness. This book will teach you deeply and remind you we are all human. Maggie helps us hear the thoughts of the ill and dying. She takes us by the hand and leads us into their world. How do you handle a parents death, a friends illness, the loss of a pet? What do you say to a friend experiencing a loss? How do you feel about your own aging? These are issues we will all have to face in our life.

Her words inspire us to move beyond courtesy and kindness and realize empathy. She evokes this feeling through a montage of anecdotes, meditations, stories from her own life, collected quotes, eternal wisdom and rivers of thoughts which run deeply over the rocky river beds of life.

The philosophy is to see the beauty and interconnectedness of all life. The goal is to strive to think, speak and act from what we see. Maggie has been listening to her own heart and the concerns of others for years. She has absorbed this knowledge and wants to pass it on to us in a way that affirms the best a human can be. She reminds us: "...any life we care for well can remind us of all we are capable of giving."

I highly recommend this "drink for the soul" to nurses, doctors, hospice volunteers, families caring for their loved ones, and everyone who feels disconnected and wants to start learning how to care for others. How beautiful the world would be if we could all know what Maggie knows in her heart. How caring of her to share her knowledge with us.

By reading this book you will realize how the smallest deed can have a positive effect in your own neighborhood. If you nourish yourself with the attitude of compassion, at the same time you will leave attitudes of worry, self-doubt, blame, fear, resentment and pettiness to die without your care. Maggie started Neighborcare to provide hands-on-care, plant care, pet care, help with errands, meal preparation, housekeeping, help with outside chores and help with transportation to medical appointments.

Her vision for the future is to encourage others to serve the ill, dying, injured and heartsick. She applauds volunteer efforts and I believe she is going to succeed in bringing awareness to caring with this thoughtful book from her heart.

The lessons presented in "Caring in Remembered Ways" are your guides to compassion. Along the journey of collected thoughts you may not see the words through you own tears. This is when you will most clearly see the needs of your own soul and the needs of fellow souls traveling with you in life. If you plant the thoughts from this inspiring book in your soul, caring will grow.

~The Rebecca Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Needed Reminders, August 31, 2000
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
"Caring In Remembered Ways" is subtitled "The Fruit of Seeing Deeply" and oh what a blossoming orchard of wisdom Maggie Davis passes on to us throughout her charming book. This is what we refer to as a night stand staple. A book to pick up at any moment, slowly page through, and derive comfort from re-learning how to give comfort.

There is poetry, glimpses of heart rendering stories of the dying, of family, and fresh, ripe *bites* of fruit to pick , especially regarding enriching childrens lives. One of our favorite lessons of nature was quoting George Washington Carver--"the man best known for discovering the many uses of peanuts [he] was described as a saintly man who believed that a flower will give up it's secrets to you if you love it enough--that anyone will do that."

A beautiful inspirational book in content and appearance.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wise Words of Loving Kindness, January 30, 2002
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
CARING IN REMEMBERED WAYS is the kind of book I reach for when I crave nourishing insights during trying times in my life. Maggie Steincrohn Davis' book about loving and caring for ourselves and others is true food for the soul, written like poetry. Thirty-one graceful entries gently serve up tasty morsels of ancient wisdom (such as how to see from the heart, or face times when loved ones are dying) alongside a garnish of amusing and heart-warming personal anecdotes.

I love the way Maggie understands all the subtle nuances of care-giving, and the ways love can reach through any situation, when we imagine it can. She writes, "Only by reaching 'beyond-the-beyond' of people -- behind their eyes, back of their pain, beneath their blaming and irritation and fussing -- do we make a path to the best in them. Treating someone with compassion who does not treat us well in return might be our fullest offering of love, as well as our own greatest relief during the daily rounds of vigilance and giving."

In this book, every sentence feels like a prayer and a meditation on love and compassion. As I read each comforting entry, I find myself feeling like I'm back in the warm, sunny days of my childhood -- snugly wrapped by my mother in a fluffy towel after a warm bath. CARING IN REMEMBERED WAYS can help brighten and warm even the darkest, coldest days in one's life. It's the ideal pick-me-up for anyone who grows weary of caring for and nurturing others, and even oneself.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Book That Will Change Your Life, March 1, 2000
By 
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
Caring in Remembered Ways is one of those rare, remarkable books that inspires without preaching and shows how powerful and healing simple acts of listening, touching, and caring can be. Maggie Davis' writing is eloquent and has the ability to speak to the heart in a way that awakens the desire to reach out to people. On every page are anecdotes, observations, insightful passages from philosphers, poets, caregivers and ordinary people doing extraordinary acts of compassion. This is a lovely book to hold and keep nearby. It is the kind of book you can open to any page and find a little gem that can move and remind you how precious life is. There are passages in this book that brought tears to my eyes and others that brought a smile to my lips. I highly recommend this book to people in the caring professions, or to anyone who wants to make a difference in the lives of people they know or have met for the first time. I can't imagine how anyone's life would ever be the same after reading this very special book.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars a lilting mediation, August 21, 2001
By 
Rebecca Brown "rebeccasreads" (Clallam Bay, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
A personal, practical & tender book about honoring the heart - a deep-seeing that goes beyond courtesy, kindness & empathy to the living compassion. Especially fitting for health practitioners, teachers, parents & volunteers.

Maggie's philosophy is to see the beauty & interconnectedness of all life. Her goal is to strive, to think, to speak & to act from what we see. She has been listening to her own heart & the concerns of others for years.

There are books that you read & there are books you live by. Caring in Remembered Ways is just such a book, the kind you can read from cover to cover or leave on your nightstand for those final, meditative thoughts before sleep. The throne room is also a good place for such pondering in a moment of privacy & relaxation.

A simply beautiful inspirational book of verses, thoughts, stories & philosophies.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars '...any life we care for well can remind us of all we are capable of giving.', October 19, 2010
By 
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
Maggie Steincrohn Davis is a gift to the world. How she has come to tread through life so supportingly and so gently amazes us all - especially those who have had the experience of sharing her thoughts is this caressing book CARING IN REMEMBERED WAYS: THE FRUIT OF SEEING DEEPLY. Attempting to 'review' this book seems in many ways absurd, for how can anyone write these thoughts she shares so abundantly and quietly any better than she? But often the hope of a review is to encourage others who may not know about a book to notice, take the time to place it in the personal library, and read if very often.

It would be a pleasure to quote passages from every section of this book to truly share the magic Davis weaves. But she says so much in her introduction - words that are repeatedly bourne out on every page of the book - that it seems a sensible place to start. 'Caring in remembered ways is a caring in ways the heart knows and the world longs for. It is being all we are for the sake of all of us, moving beyond courtesy and kindness and empathy to the living compassion - the fruit of seeing deeply - that enlivens all the rest.'

Part of the important message of these pages is to care for ourselves, nurturing our own souls so that we are available to our fellowmen. She offers conversations and situations in which in a matter of a few words she explains how listening with our whole being, free of judgment, free of body language while the one beside us is sharing, free of offering solutions - how simply listening with compassion can alter the needy person's life and in turn provide a sense of rightness that permeates our own minds and hearts. Her examples will find memory ties in all of us - situations that mimic periods of experience we have encountered and sometimes, even, we have truly been there for someone who needed caring - and she suggests how we can enter a person's sphere of need and provide the caring ear and support that seems to have vanished from this chaotic world we now inhabit.

In a time when the quality of the word 'heart' has been so vulgarized Davis reminds us of what HEART really is. It is the font from which we can be still, be thoughtful, and be wholly present, the place where these means of truly caring originate and grow. The heart is compassion. This reader has found so much solace in these pages, but more important, Davis has the kind gift to awaken forgotten moments of what it means to be a caring being. Read this from the earth book and you will be looking for Davis' wings....Grady Harp, October 10
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful tribute to the power of spiritual caregiving, January 27, 2009
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
I can't say enough about this book. I keep at my bedside, and often carry it back to my office to pick up and read when I feel a need to reconnect with the caring power I know runs in my blood. If you are a caregiver in anyway- to a parent, a child, a spouse, an animal, a farm, an idea, a school, yourself - this book will be an inspiration. And aren't we all caregivers in one way or another? It will remind you of the simple ways we can all connect and care in our daily lives, and how far the simplest gesture of caring can go for the receiver. And of course, through the many stories of real people in the book, it demonstrates that goodness bounces back, like a wave. I also found Maggie's writing lyrical, and smooth, calming but not sappy and full of Dr. Phil like preaching. Rather, it is an authetic glimpse into compassion. I started reaing it when my father was in hospice, and a year later, I still find re-reading it helps me in many ways.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tender mercies, April 19, 2000
By 
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
At times when my heart felt as if it would surely break I'd open to a paragraph and instantly be lifted into a sense of comforting peace. I feel no "text", no separation between author and reader. We are "right there" together, as Maggie Davis' self-honesty and compassion create a safe space to share the heart-deep experiences, her own and others, as we care for family and friends who are ill and dying. I and my family are grateful for the blessing of this book in our lives.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rewarding, comforting, inspiring reading., April 6, 2000
This review is from: Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply (Paperback)
Maggie Davis' Caring In Remembered Ways is a practical, tender, heartwarming, poignant, powerful little book honoring those deep-seeing ways known to the human heart. Here is a reminder that true caring neither begins or ends at the beside of someone charged to our care, but extends to all life. Caring In Remembered Ways is highly recommended, rewarding, comforting and inspiring reading for anyone charged with a professional or voluntary relationship to someone in need, no matter the circumstances of their lives or ours.
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Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply
Caring in remembered ways: The fruit of seeing deeply by maggie steincrohn davis (Paperback - July 2, 1999)
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