Consciousness

A Man and His Recovery – God’s Puzzle

In her third book „Der Mensch und seine Heilung – Das göttliche Puzzle“ (A Man and His Recovery – God‘s Puzzle) Kristina Hazler – author, corporate coach and  consciousness trainer from Vienna thinks in fancy  thought-pictures and illustrations concerning daily experiences and needs of people in time, in which the health, welfare and harmony became the central subjects of our life and we seemingly have clear ideas how the things must and should  be. “At the same time the qualified specialists, physicians, therapists, consultants and others help us; they take over our life and our body to their experienced hands and we readily “leave us at their mercy“ because we are convinced that our life feels better in other hands – in hands of “experts”. Until we one day come near the point, at which we again feel the need to take our lives to our own hands and know ourselves on new level. At last we get to a point, in which we want to take responsibility for ourselves again and to live according to our own free will. And herewith a moment comes, at which we awake to our own „dirt“ and „mud” we, people produce with our thoughts, ideas and emotions – this sticky mud impeding our lives. The author leads her readers through exciting lines of the book with huge sense and fantasy and asks them to leave routine and predestined ideas, better listen to their heart and be conscious of more things. In a filigree way, in details and almost materially she submits an evidence that the first step to recovery is the self-knowledge – from the outside or from inside. Only a clear self-reflection can help us to recognize the blocks and wounds, remove and transform them. As our „mud“ – our own energy, emotions, ideas, etc. – is all the time connected with us in its own way and one can dispose it only  with his own effort as it is shown by many episodes concerning our own body and energetic system of this extremely poetic and charming workpiece. Kristina Hazler doesn’t fudge the question and problems how it is possible to help a men and rescue him when he himself isn’t sure if he wants us to do that. She emphasizes extremely the fields analyzing exact meaning of illness, healing and health. At the same time she compares our lives with labyrinth, in which some laws and rules seem to be valid. We often think that we don’t have a clear aim and don’t know which way we go. But where our plans and ideals from youth did stay? Did we loose our vigour or our drive? And as our body functions similarly as a car (vehicle), in the best case we hold the wheel in our own hands. Anyway, it seems that also so-called “experts” often sit rather to the passenger seat. If such behaviour formula is transferred to an energetic system, a problem occurs, as we suddenly need somebody who would drive / lead us through our lives.  To move on, countless “components” must cooperate mutually, similarly like in a car. Each part, each little stone has its own specific place, the only one right position in a god‘s puzzle… The author searches the answers to requests what causes the diseases of our bodies, if we are able to reroute or change the natural energy and if are already ill even when we created such detours or are we just detoured, rerouted or blocked? Don’t we just think that we are ill? This book brings very exact and surprise answers. „A Man and His Recovery“ is required reading for all people, who want better know and extend their consciousness. Review of the book: “A Man and His Recovery – God’s Puzzle“ (from the German original „Der Mensch und seine Heilung – das göttliche Puzzle“) Author of Bookreview: Horst Exler here -> The Labyrinth – 3rd chapter of the book

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Awakening in human existence – The Experiment

The book “Das Experiment – Erwachen im MenschSein” (The Experiment – Awakening to Be Human) by Kristina Hazler is a thrilling, intensive and demanding novel about self-cognition and searching for one’s consciousness. The story, composed from a myriad of exciting elements, illustrative descriptions and surprising twists and turns, offers readers an excellent guide and useful tool for exploring one’s nonconscious mind and getting to know one’s Self. The author, a practicing therapist, who conducts consciousness trainings and healing-accompanying therapies, actually did not “write” this book, she only “read” through it. In doing so, she moved on various levels of her own consciousness and sketched an analytically clear, sharp and terrifyingly real picture of life in modern materialistic society. Kristina Hazler deliberately withheld giving detailed descriptions of the setting or look of her characters in order to leave blank as much room as possible for the reader’s own imagination and nonconsciousness. She outlines a magnificent character study into the inner world of two completely different people who had lived in absolute different worlds for many years and started getting closer to each other at ever deeper inner levels. The author, with much love and dedication to detail, describes fascinating experiences bringing together and simultaneously separating the inner lives of Klara and Jan.   The book tells a fictitious yet realistic story which mostly takes place in a sheltered container protected from the outer world. “Real” life is right in its vicinity. The story is a metaphor for isolation, exclusion and confinement, which – in certain form – are present in everyone, and offers ways for various levels of self-examination. Psychotherapist Klara and Jan, who has lived in the container all his life, are in the focus of the profound developing story. The container world opens new and completely different views and opportunities to Klara, who starts perceiving the world in a very different way from what she was used to. One day she has to ask herself who actually lives inside and who lives outside. The experiment is also being watched by researchers outside. What they want to specifically explore is behaviour in a confined space where people can learn about world only by watching it. For some time before her trip into the container, Klara was experiencing tension, uncertainty and expectation of the unknown. Only Jan has lived there, in a world in which he was put by his parents. To him, this setting is a perfect world full of dreams and trust in God. He still takes for granted that he gets his daily ration of food from the outer world through a little window. One day there is a power and water outage in the container and Jan has to cope with these unusual events. He has to ask whether that was a work of God. And when a little later he finds the picture of his late mother and Klara in the food window, he inadvertently starts searching for his self. Who is he in reality? Jan has been expressing his dreams through painting pictures, until one day he meets Klara in the container. It soon turns out that it is not Jan, but educated and real-life experienced Klara, who needs help. Klara, surprised with Jan’s innocent open heart, soon realizes more and more how unfulfilled her life has been and recognizes all problems surfacing from her nonconsciousness with a growing persistence. One day Klara leaves the container with a feeling that the confined room is her own world, the one she had lived in until then. Soon she decides to go back to Jan who has been waiting for her impatiently and full of joy. Instantly clash of two completely different worlds follows: the one of content and happy Jan and the one of unsatisfied Klara – full of doubt about herself and other people. So why are people out there so unsatisfied and unhappy? Having lived together for some time, they decide to jointly explore the outer world. They set out with great expectations and trust. A sudden dramatic event, however, shakes all their dreams and hope. With no advance warning broken dreams, tragedy and pain overwhelm them. They come back to the sheltered world of their container to start something very new for both of them, their joint world. Klara, shaken and feeling guilty, leaves her job with the group of experts and decides to move for good back to Jan in the container. Engaging in conversations, Jan now gradually starts understanding the outer world and experiences a turn in his naivety and dreamy thinking. Also Klara processes her broken first marriage from her early young age which had been based just on reason and cogitates over the loss of her first child. They both start writing diaries. It does not take long for Klara’s life in the container to turn to the better. Her perception of day-to-day things now is much nicer and stronger, and she is expecting a child with Jan. He still has his unshaken trust in the good of his world. Yet, Klara has growing doubt whether her child should be born in the container. From her many trips to the outer world she keeps bringing various things such as books and teaches him to read and understand what money means to people, explains innovations and other concepts to him. She tries to make him ready for his upcoming meeting with the outer world. She sells Jan’s pictures and from the proceeds Jan can order from catalogues various goods, such as plants which he grows with much joy in the garden between the container and a wall, vacuum cleaners or fitness machines. He goes on learning about the outer world in his easy, innocent way, with no bias or prejudice. Klara feels an inner need to more intensively and deeply process her past, especially her relationship to her late mother, her use of alternative therapies and treatments and her choice to abort her first pregnancy. Experiencing great worry and

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Consciousness Training – The Human Paradox

The book Consciousness Training – Human Paradox written by Kristina Hazler describes in vivid and various stories and interviews  big and small daily troubles. These interviews – as a synonym of exchange and communication  – take place on various consciousness levels and accompany the readers on  adventurous and fascinating way of our own awakening and self-knowledge. In her book author describes very personally and illustratively the possibilities of more conscious recognition of ourselves and our own lives. In her stories this successful author and consciousness trainer take us for exciting trip in order to understand and know ourselves. She leads us to discovery of deep and dark parts of human soul. This way is full of stress and the readers  of this book will “feel” and “experience” it, too. Kristina Hazler recorded her own experiences she experienced in altered states of consciousness, in which the daily  consciousness and common human sense, as well as human blocks don’t block a free thought flow. In the form of diary she thinks of various exciting experiences with hunger strike, describes the dreams, wishes, desires and fear and after all she address the question what will happen with a man, when he needn’t do nothing more, when he has no obligations, when one day the mind will „stop“? What to do or how it is when we needn’t do nothing more? Will our existence end or shall we be broken to parts inside? In this book also many other interesting questions of daily life occur and are literally washed to the surface  – for example if disorientated  man  doesn’t follow in his life a course given him by other people,  with which he is not identified and which brings him no real joy. Or why in our society the earning of money and serious life has the highest priority. Is such unsatisfactory life really right and meaningful? What are people driven to by their many negative personal experiences? What are they expressing then – and are they capable, with regard to their needy shape/state, of experiencing and understanding more? With her quite different way of view from totally changed visual angle Kristina Hazler helps us in her „human paradox“ to see and experience the problems in rather different way – mainly the eternal problem “to must” and tries to find answers for other questions: “Don’t the words „to must“ and „to need“  themselves keep this world in motion? Who does assign certain subjects their importance? It seems like just the people are more or less important. We live in a world full of false illusions? And what should we do with all the negative experiences – „mud” of past, which had been stuck on us for long time, how can we get it to the surface and how to handle it? An impression occurs that a man moves all his life on a stage full of illusions – everything in his life is getting faster and rotates faster and faster. The hopeless and busy people are trying to survive this tempo. Anyway, beyond this role played by people in their lives everything moves in its own time, with its own velocity as if vitality, joy and harmony rule in life. Because the right and true principle we find in quite different perspective and frequency.  Sooner or later each of us will experience the “time of awakening“. The author says that each man meets also the situations not corresponding with his current state of consciousness and development – first of all with his personal experiences, in which even the little things can be important. Nothing in our lives is accidental – all the life consists of experiences and knowledge. Each event needs its own tempo, way and time being characteristic for specific man. At the same time our bodies and souls undergo continuous transformation. The author says:„We should experience and learn consciously we are still ourselves. This fact forms a man, his individuality and his diversity“. „Paradox in life is that no paradox exists.“ Review of the book: “Consciousness Training – Human Paradox” ( from the german Original „Bewusstseins Coaching – Das menschliche Paradoxon“ ) Autor of review – Horst Exler

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