![]() Presence: Human Purpose and the Field of the Future $16.95 This work is a continuation of Senge and others who have taken a much deeper look at human thought, interaction and desire to create what matters most. Not only do they continue to point us in the right direction regarding recreating organizational thinking, they actually practice the "presencing" concept and vividly describe the process. The book is better appreciated if the reader has some familiarity with Senge's past work and writings. A great book if you are interested in exploring a more grounded, deeper appreciation of your own talents, thinking and the power of dialogue. ![]() The Presence Process: A Healing Journey into Present Moment Awareness (v. 1) $19.95 This is perhaps the best book I have ever read for serious students who want to make 'mindset' changes, including overcoming those subconcious, limiting beliefs about yourself. This is not just a 'feel good book' as the excercises required to reach your goals must be performed for the number of days listed for each exercise. Though they are not hard to perform they are somewhat mind-blowing when considering the astounding results. This book is a God send for those of us who have painful, and conflicting messages from our subconcious minds, put there at a very young age... these messages prevent us from having a happy, productive, and positive outlook on life. For me personally, it is an absolutely fantastic book! ![]() Rise $11.98 What sets these guys apart is their ability to rock out like i thought only Hotwire could and then bust out with a RATM-ish song but much better cause as we all know RATM was annoying as hell. Also, songs like Lose Yourself (WITH NO RAPPING AT ALL) prove these guys really have talent but that they also know how to throw down and blow 500 watts of blaring electric guitar and angst-driven lyrics through your ears. Never heard of curb records before but the production value is great so it's not a garage-made thing. GO get it. ![]() Presence $11.98 From a band that has, arguably, never produced a bad album, Presence was the one that I had the hardest time appreciating for years. Now that I've listened to it probably between 200 and 300 times, it is undoubtedly my favorite in the LZ canon. Perhaps this is due to the fact that over the decades it has received the least airplay, but I think it goes deeper. Don't miss this one, it's a gem. |
|