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36 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE BOOK has been written!
Finally! The book has been written. During my 15 years as a hospice nurse, countless caregivers, students and volunteers have asked me "Which book should I read?" This is The Book, both succinctly written and easy to read. With great compassion, Dr. Coberly covers nearly all our secret fears and inadequacies by talking about her own beginnings using wonderful heart...
Published on March 12, 2002 by Barbara K. Shirland

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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Buddhist Spiritual-Principals Advisory
This is a very useful book and a quick read for those inclined to the buddhist approach to dying. However, if the dying person is of another faith or faithless..it has limited applications for the dying person and will be mostly useful to the care-giver. Also, application in the dying person's life of these ideas is not a "quick fix", so if you are not the full-time...
Published on June 30, 2003


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36 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE BOOK has been written!, March 12, 2002
By 
This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
Finally! The book has been written. During my 15 years as a hospice nurse, countless caregivers, students and volunteers have asked me "Which book should I read?" This is The Book, both succinctly written and easy to read. With great compassion, Dr. Coberly covers nearly all our secret fears and inadequacies by talking about her own beginnings using wonderful heart warming stories. Many of us have tried and failed to understand the Tibetan Books of the Dead. She makes the Tibetan Buddhist view on death and dying understandable to a Westerner. And she finishes this brilliant piece by giving us the tools we need to face death with great love. The annotated list of recommended readings alone is worth the price of the book. Nurses can log onto a website listed on the inside back cover and take a test for CEU's.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is helping us very much., June 3, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
My six brothers and sisters and I are sharing the care for our parents who are both in their early 90s. We know they do not have a whole lot longer to live and we have been discussing our feelings and lack of experience about death and dying. My brother brought home Sacred Passage and read it and then we took turns reading it. The author explains in such a simple way that it is natural to be afraid of death because we never talk about it with each other. But then she also offers so many suggestions about how to get stronger about facing death and about seeing that during dying there is a pattern that we might be able to observe. The Tibetan Buddhist part of the book really makes sense even though we are Christians. I like the way the author uses that Buddhist psychology to give us ways to be more help to our parents. All of us liked this book, and I think it would be good for anyone in a similar situation. The book makes a person feel that they will be able to face death after all.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Treasure is Always There, April 6, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
Sacred Passage is a remarkable and timely book - a consummate marriage of the art of living and the art of dying. It elevates care of the dying from a fearful, sometimes paralyzing, undertaking to a compassionate, fulfilling, engagement with living. Time and again the book illustrates how in learning to fully be there for a dying person we come to know and understand ourselves more deeply as well. The author is adept at illustrating how much we can learn from the process of dying when we are unafraid of seeing clearly what is there - a sacred passage. As the author says: "... the treasure is always there, its discovery imminent. It is not dying that reveals it, but awakening."

The inspired revelations of this engaging volume did not come easily. The author - a longtime nurse, educator, and hospice administrator - skillfully weaves together poignant and emotionally gripping stories about her own beginning professional doubts and about the transformation she underwent to a broader view of life and death informed by the wisdom of the Tibetan Buddhist perspective. The outcome is an invaluable, practical guide for anyone responsible for taking care of a loved one or a patient who is dying.

All of us face the mystery of life's coming to an end - most of us with fear and denial. This book demonstrates convincingly how facing up to the mystery can not only promote a more caring, compassionate, and insightful end to life, but illuminate and enrich the art of living. As a psychologist and university professor teaching courses on death and dying, I look forward to using this book in my classes. And I recommend it to anyone seeking an inspiring, practical guidebook for the one trip we are all destined to make.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read, March 12, 2002
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This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
Sacred Passage takes a disarmingly honest look at the subject of death. It is filled with real life stories that demonstrate new and innovative ways to interact with a person who is dying.

The author, a former emergency room and hospice nurse, gives sage advice and practical suggestions on how to deal with many of the troubling situations that come up when a friend or loved one is given a terminal diagnosis. The book offers the Buddhist perspective on death and dying in terms that are clear and easy to relate to.

I rate this book 5+ and recommend it as both a provocative narrative as well as an extremely helpful little manual on how to be an empathetic presence during the death of a loved one.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Philosophy for the dying and their caretakers, June 5, 2002
This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
This survey of providing fearless, compassionate care for the dying reflects the author's work as an emergency room RN and her own brother's diagnosis of terminal cancer, which led to her search through Eastern teachings for spiritual wisdom and insights. The Western fear of death generates denial and isolation; Tibetan Buddhism focuses on the nature of death, and Sacred Passage illustrates two practical applications of the philosophy for the dying and their caretakers.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Extremely helpful and easy to read too, July 28, 2003
By A Customer
I have a friend who is dying and I am afraid to visit him because I don't know how to act or what I am not supposed to say. I bought some other books about death and dying and Sacred Passage was also suggested. I didn't think I would like it because it has some Tibetan Buddhist stuff in it and I am a Catholic. But, anyway, I got it and liked it better than the other ones because it gave me some actual ways to act and also told me that if I don't know what to say I am not obligated to say anything, really. That was such an eye opener for me. I definitely recommend this book to anyone who is forced to be around a dying person and feals afraid, like I am. This book gave me hope that I would be able to do it. I even bought two more copies to give to people for presents.
Thank you to the author for helping me so much.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Every nurse needs to read this book, November 12, 2003
By A Customer
This book was such a surprise to me. I didn't realize how much I needed to hear what was in it. I think all nurses, everywhere,
would get something out of what this book talks about. By the title it seems like it's a book for people who are dying, but it seems just as useful for anyone who cares about people whether they are dying or not. I am so glad that another nurse friend of mine gave me this book to read.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspirational, February 12, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
This book really inspired me. And, it wasn't because
I even know anyone who is dying but it made me see
how important being alive is and how much I
take it all for granted. This is a good book for younger
people to read, because it reminded me of
something I don't usually think about, every day is an important
day.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent book, June 15, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying (Hardcover)
Helpful, authentic expression and excellent writing. A very
worthwhile book.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book will change your approach to death and helping others cope with death, September 4, 2008
In 2002, I walked into our local library to return my daughter's library books while my father was in the hospital and had been told he had a week to live. I found this book in the new book section and my entire family took turns reading it. This book allowed us to focus on what was truly imporant, supporting my father at the end of his life here on earth. I had never spent time with someone dying before. Because of his condition, he could not leave the hospital. I stayed with him close to 18 hours a day and experienced as he passed from one stage of dying into the next. This book explained the stages of dying and helped me understand what he was going through. In fact, I would have been freaked out if I had not read the book when my father started seeing water and experiencing other phenomenon which are explained in the book as commonly experienced. The central point of the book is that your role is to help the person dying by supporting them and putting aside your grief until after their passing. After his death, the nurses told us they had never seen a family so focused on the patient and so supportive. Even though my father's death was painful and hard on him, we gave him all our love, prayers and support and the tension and anguish in his face disappeared and his face literally glowed after death. I highly recommend this book. I am buying my own copy now that we have other family members facing this death in the next few years.
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Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying
Sacred Passage: How to Provide Fearless, Compassionate Care for the Dying by Margaret Coberly (Hardcover - March 12, 2002)
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