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Tamed by a Bear

Coming Home to Nature-Spirit-Self

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Priscilla Stuckey shines a brilliant light on the relationship we long to cultivate with the deepest wellsprings of our wisdom and love . . . This is a groundbreaking book, written with extraordinary clarity, beauty, and radical honesty." —Gail D. Storey, author of I Promise Not to Suffer: A Fool for Love Hikes the Pacific Crest Trail, winner of the National Outdoor Book Award
In an age of materialism, language of spirit or spirits seems at best suspect and at worst alien or naïve. When Priscilla Stuckey begins hearing Bear’s voice, she is a writer and religious studies professor in her fifties. Though she enjoys communing with trees and birds and the land, she intellectually knows better than to try talking directly with spirit. Yet searching for the truth of her own identity leads her directly toward what she is most skeptical of. As Stuckey opens to her spirit animal helper and his affectionate, jovial wisdom, she begins to realize the slow dawning of faith. Tamed by a Bear shows one person responding to the call of her heart, which is also the call of Earth to all human beings today: to listen to a more–than–human wisdom so people can address the social and environmental crises facing the world.
At this moment, when the future of life on Earth as we know it hangs in the balance—threatened by climate change, species extinctions, and extreme economic inequality—the key to survival is found in answering one question: How can humans live more peaceably and sustainably with the rest of nature? The heart–opening conversations between Bear and Stuckey suggest a reinvigorating of nature–spirituality in everyday life. Their dialogues show an educated, thoughtful person grappling with her skepticism about Earth spirits and gradually saying yes to a call from beyond her intellectual understanding.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 17, 2017
      When the publicity tour for her previous book leaves religion professor and advocate of nature awareness Stuckey (Kissed by a Fox) feeling unmoored personally and professionally, she embarks on a shamanic guided journey. In these meditations, she encounters a “helper” in the form of a jovial, pleasure-loving bear. She records her disjointed, impressionistic conversations with Bear, structuring them for her reader around small personal crises in her life over the course of a year. Bear advises patience on her housing search and an encouragement to return to cheese after years of lactose intolerance, as part of a general encouragement to pay attention to our bodies, make time for pleasure, and not waste so much time worrying. Stuckey expresses frustration with people who assume Bear is just a projection of her subconscious, arguing instead that he is a force outside of her she has tapped into. While the details of her life will not apply to most, Stuckey’s book is a fine model of the type of knowledge one can gain through a similar process.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2017
      Albuquerque-based spiritual counselor Stuckey (Kissed by a Fox: And Other Stories of Friendship in Nature, 2012) delivers a tale of the bear as yogi.What's a person to do when, having written a "memoir showing my deepening connection with nature," the drudgery of book tours and talks and appearances sets in? Naturally, summon forth an ennui-busting bear, introduced courtesy of the neighborhood shaman for hire, a "Spirit Helper" who "loves and supports a person throughout their life and who provides a face--a point of contact, a relationship--for connecting with spirit." Bear, the spirit helper that materialized, weighed his helpee and found her wanting in the listening-to-the-spirits department. Then, as if having read a little Carlos Castaneda by way of brushing up, Bear instructed Stuckey in what passes for bruinic/druidic philosophy: "Compassion for the body and for the material world is a sure foundation," he says. When she realized she "simply couldn't afford living in this town" (Boulder, Colorado, her home at the time), Bear told her, "Come to the neutral mind! Come to joy!" For Bear, it seems, joy involves appearing in dreams wearing "a frilly maid's costume" or a golfer's hat. ("I mean, really, Bear--golfing?") But if that's your bliss, well....Bear sends mixed messages, too, telling Stuckey to sit in peacefulness on one page while inviting her, paw extended, to "lead me on yet another marvelous if puzzling adventure." Puzzling indeed, though David Carradine might feel proud to utter Bear's concluding thought: "When a person realizes that the path is just one of daily communion with what-is, that is the point." The book may find a few appreciative readers in Santa Fe and Sedona, but fans of actual ursines will want to look elsewhere, while those seeking wisdom from a bear ought to look no farther than A.A. Milne.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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