Jonathan Livingston Seagull: The Complete Edition
W**I
Are we free or doomed from birth?
This is my all-time favorite book. It contains the most important truths I have ever learned.This book certainly could be viewed as Eastern Religion / New Age, and considering Bach's other books perhaps that is his main meaning.However, JLS also contains important non-religious truths which apply to everyday life. For example, based on one of the most quoted parts of the book, "Jonathan" might answer everyday questions like this:Are you saying I can lose weight and be thin, even though I've been fat my whole life?I say you are free.Are you saying that even though I finished near the bottom this year, with hard work I could finish near the top 3 or 4 years from now?I say you are free.Are you saying that even though the aptitude test showed I'm bad in math, that I could be successful in my dream job, engineering, if I try hard enough?I say you are free.Those answers are very, very different from the prevailing paradigm / meme within our society, which says that nearly everything is determined at birth, so that we are born either "fat" or "thin" people, born "smart" or "bad at math", born as "great athletes" or "losers". Society then tells us that we shouldn't try to change anything about ourselves (since it supposedly won't work), but should spend our lives happy or bitter because of the gifts that were handed out at the birth lottery. A key turning point is when Jonathan rejects the "strange hollow voice" in his mind which tells him:"There's no way around it. I am a seagull. I am limited by nature. If I were meant to learn so much about flying, I'd have charts for brains. If I were meant to fly at speed, I'd have a falcon's short wings... I must... be content as I am, as a poor limited seagull."Jonathan rejects this when he realizes that by tucking his wings close to his body he can simulate the falcon's short wings and fly fast even though he wasn't born with short wings. After he tries this and is able to fly faster than any gull could with extended wings, Jonathan realizes: "We can be free! We can learn to fly!"JLS says that mental restrictions are the biggest factor keeping us from reaching our potential. Some of those restrictions come from society, and some are self-created mental straitjackets. All of those mental limits are false and unnecessary. The truth according to Jonathan is:"Your whole body... is nothing more than your thought itself, in a form you can see. Break the chains of your mind, and you break the chains of your body, too..."(That can be seen as a totally non-religious statement. Our bodies today are the result of how hard we worked in the past and the mental limitations we didn't shed, and "our thought" = our mind is what determined that.)This leads Jonathan to answer these questions very differently from society: Who am I? What is my purpose in life? Should I be egotistical?Society tells us that we should conform, and we specifically are what the birth lottery gave us, like someone might be "heavy set, average intelligence but good in math". Society says that we should be immensely proud of everything we (supposedly) were born with, and of every victory, and should be intensely ashamed of anything we were born without, and of every defeat.Jonathan however, believing we are not limited by birth, sees each of us as being unique and of unlimited potential. Our goal and purpose in life is simply to be ourselves. This is not the limited self we are at the start of adult life, but everything which hard work could make us:"you have the freedom to be yourself, your true self, here and now, and nothing can stand in your way.Are you saying I can fly?I say you are free.""Each of us in truth is an idea... , an unlimited idea of freedom, and precision flying is a step towards expressing our real nature. Everything that limits us we have to put aside."This means that ego is meaningless, because what we are today is simply the result of yesterday's hard work, and whatever races we lose today could be won in the future if we work hard enough. Today's ranking and abilities are just the starting point for the rest of our lives, not something to get egotistical about. As one of Jonathan's students thought with a smile once he began teaching his own students, "No limits, Jonathan? Well, then, the time's not too distant when I'm going to appear out of thin air on YOUR beach, and show you a thing or two about flying!..."The reason why I discussed this in length is to disagree with reviews which say that JLS must be seen as a religious book, and that it teaches only "common sense" truths. It is rare, not common, to meet anyone who believes what JLS teaches.
M**M
Fantastic story!
The very first book I read. Filled with morals for people. I re-read the book in a day and still LOVE ❤️ IT!
J**N
Reliving the Past
I read this awesome highly metaphorical book years ago and just revisited it before passing along to a friend..
M**L
Profound and Relevant Story
After reading Illusions and Running From Safety, I was a big fan of Richard Bach and his easy-to-read fables that bring some pretty powerful, thought-provoking ideas to life. This book was great and I read it from cover to cover the moment I finally opened it over two cups of coffee. I will say, like some of the other reviewers, that the last part is a departure from the overall positivity of the first three parts of the book. As someone who spent his youth in church before walking away as an adult, I can understand the driving force behind it and it really does connect some interesting dots. However, I don't know that I'll leave the book on a table for my kiddos to peruse because they wouldn't understand that piece of the story and think it will detract from the otherwise overarching message of the original text. Regardless, it is a great read and I recommend it to those on both sides of the church doors.
T**.
Book
Good book
A**T
Great experience.
Great condition. Fast shipping. Excellent experience.
D**Y
Life Changing
I first read this book 45 years ago. It planted in me a seed of freedom and growth that I did not fully recognize until now. Thirty years and a hundred books later, ideas and even nuances showed up in my own writings. Re- reading this has closed a circle. Now I too, must seek out the Fletchers of the world.
J**I
My favorite book on resilience when following your passion
I read this book about 20+ years ago. It's still one of my favorites. If you're someone who feels like the odd man out or always going against the grain, this book is for you! Keep following your dreams even if your family doesn't agree, it's your life!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 week ago