Audiobook7 hours
Healing the Heart of Democracy: The Courage to Create a Politics Worthy of the Human Spirit
Written by Parker J. Palmer
Narrated by Stefan Rudnicki
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
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About this audiobook
In his newest book, Parker J. Palmer builds on his own extensive experience as a an inner life explorer and social change activist to examine the personal and social infrastructure of American politics. What he did for educators in The Courage to Teach he does here for citizens by looking at the dynamics of our inner lives for clues to reclaiming our civic well-being. In Healing the Heart of Democracy, he points the way to a politics rooted in the commonwealth of compassion and creativity still found among We the People. Democracy, writes Palmer, is a non-stop experiment in the strengths and weaknesses of our political institutions, local communities, and the human heartand its outcome can never be taken for granted. The experiment is endless, unless we blow up the lab, and the explosives to do the job are found within us. But so also is the hearts alchemy that can turn suffering into compassion, conflict into community, and tension into energy for creativity amid democracys demands. Healing the Heart of Democracy names the habits of the heart we need to revitalize our politics and shows how they can be formed in the everyday venues of our lives. Palmer proposes practical and hopeful methods to hold the tensions of our differences in a manner that can help us restore a government of the people, by the people, for the people.
Author
Parker J. Palmer
Parker J. Palmer, a popular speaker and educator, is also the author of The Active Life. He received the 1993 award for "Outstanding Service to Higher Education" from the Council of Independent Colleges.
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Reviews for Healing the Heart of Democracy
Rating: 4.157894736842105 out of 5 stars
4/5
19 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I was disappointed. Parker doesn't truly seem to want to heal anything as much as he wants everyone to buy into a liberal point of view. I was hoping to find a way to talk to "those others" on the right. A way to understand the fundamentalists who think differently than I do. How to have a true conversation with those who are on a different wave length from mine. Instead of any of this, I read regurgitated Palmer. I read about "circles of trust." I read about clearness committees. I read (this is new, true) about John Woolman (wait: wasn't this story in [A Hidden Wholeness]? I did read about citizenship and about our founding "fathers" and this was good. But the book was much to long, and it didn't need to be. What had been written about before could have been trimmed to simple reminders. I think it might then have kept my interest. But it also needs a new name. He doesn't come even close to giving us a recipe for healing our democracy. Not until and unless he can find some good in the "other."
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I love Parker Palmer. I love everything I've read by him (and, as many folks know, I especially love his Let Your Life Speak). This book is different. And yet it's also part of a deeper theme...what happens when we live a heart-centered life...this time in the more public arenas of our society. I love that it's not a polemical screed. It steers clear of "you suck no you suck" thinking. Indeed, quite the opposite (this despite Palmer's evident pain at the level of discourse in the country). While nominally focused as a treatise on possible ways to heal the discords, it is--like so much of his work--a beautiful meditation on healing ourselves. Essentially the way to heal the heart of democracy is to allow our own hearts to be broken open so that they may be truly healed.Some gems:"Partisanship is not a problem. Demonizing the other side is.""Everyday life is a school of the spirit that offers us chance after chance to practice dealing with heartbreak."
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5American democracy is under severe threat according to Parker Palmer. The threat does not come from outer forces or big business or incompetent government. The danger to America’s democracy comes from its own citizens. Our fear of each other, our differences, and our future is unraveling the civic community upon which democracy depends. Parker has not written a how-to manual for saving democracy. His book provides insights into our own misinterpretations and misunderstandings that are tearing at the fabric of our democracy. He then points to ways we can reclaim the promise of American democracy.Parker outlines five habits of the heart that are critical to sustaining democracy. He defines “heart” as a way of knowing that integrates intellect, emotion, imagination, and intuition. Heart gives us the courage to reach out to others. It sustains us while we enter into and hold the tensions created by our differences long enough to allow our compassion and creativity to discover new solutions to the imposing problems we face as a nation. What we can do to develop heart is the subject of Parker’s book.This is an important text for every citizen to read. Parker provides us with direction for moving beyond diatribe and entering into dialogue. Rather than attacking our differences, Parker advocates that we embrace them. Parker offers us a hopeful vision of who we can be and illuminates what we need to do to attain that vision.