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Second Journey, The: The Road Back to Yourself | 
| Author: Joan Anderson Publisher: Voice Category: Book
List Price: $23.95 Buy New: $13.89 You Save: $10.06 (42%)
New (33) Used (9) from $13.75
Avg. Customer Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 14833
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.2 x 5.3 x 0.7
ISBN: 1401303390 Dewey Decimal Number: 155.633 EAN: 9781401303396 ASIN: 1401303390
Publication Date: April 29, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW
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| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description From the bestselling author of A Year by the Sea, a true coming-of-age story for every woman who has asked herself: "Now what?" Nearly a decade after the debut of her bestselling, life-changing classic A Year by the Sea, Joan Anderson is busy. When she's not on the road helping groups of women search for their true selves, she's working on her latest book. And when she's "not working," she's taking care of her husband, her grown children, her grandchildren, and her ninety-one-year-old mother. Joan is stretched so thin from being all things to all people that she doesn't even realize how out of control her life has become. Ironically, she finds she needs to listen to her own advice more than anyone else does. It takes a serious intervention--from her best friends, her doctor, and her husband--before she finally wakes up. The Second Journey chronicles Joan's quest to restore her own equilibrium and find herself again. Suffused with her characteristic humor and warmth, this is a book for any woman who wants to know how to awaken her own independent spirit and set herself on a new path. Joan shares her musings on love, marriage, growing older, family, aging parents, and spirituality as she casts a watchful eye on her own life and helps readers find peace and inspiration within their own lives. She offers reassurance that the best is yet to come, and empowers other women to come of age in the middle of life. The call to a second journey usually commences when unexpected change is thrust upon you, causing a crisis of feelings so great that you are stopped in your tracks. Personal events such as a betrayal, a diagnosis of serious illness, the death of a loved one, loss of self-esteem, a fall from power are only a few of the catalysts. A woman caught thusly has no choice but to pause, isolate, even relocate until she can reevaluate the direction in which she should head. Should she stay the course or choose another path? The goal is to come of age in the middle of life rather than live out our days lacking purpose and energy. It's all about rearranging our lives in our own image.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
Book review July 6, 2008 I enjoyed this book as I have enjoyed all the other books by Joan Anderson. She makes you look inside youself to find out more about youself.
Loved it! June 25, 2008 Another wonderful book by Joan Anderson. For all of us women in search of the next step in our jouney of life, thank you.
Not what I hoped for June 16, 2008 Disappointing, to say the least. It read like a summary of her first books. I only finished it because I was on a 10 hour flight.
Promise Unfulfilled June 11, 2008 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
I came to The Second Journey with hope that I would gain insight into my own life. I was disappointed in the book. Normally I would not write a negative review of a book that is obviously treasured by many readers, but I feel The Second Journey has serious flaws that need to be expressed, considered by others, and perhaps addressed by Joan Anderson in future books.
Here are my concerns:
1.Escape, rather than integration: The book considers the difficulty of sustaining insights gained in tranquility--such as during the author's Year by the Sea--but The Second Journey veers away from confronting that reality. Anderson's weeks on Iona become a new opportunity to escape from life's ordinary demands.
2.Summary, rather than insight: I enjoyed reading about Iona, yet I didn't find sufficient insight into why the experience was so profound for the author. I more or less had to take her word for it. I would have liked more searching, more wrestling with the factors that struck her so deeply. Then I would have liked to understand what from the experience she has been able to take back with her into her daily routine. Again, I had to take her word for it that she has changed; I wasn't given enough information to understand the nature of that change.
3.Circumstances, rather than solutions: Two of the problems that Anderson does confront--reducing the number of speaking engagements and meeting her mother's needs while also meeting her own--more or less solve themselves, albeit with her resolve to accept fewer appearance requests. Many of us are unable to turn down significant parts of our work.
4.Lack of respect for age, rather than appreciation for all stages of life: I reject the idea (suggested in The Second Journey and more directly stated in a Borders Advice for Living video) that her mother has had her chance for life but it's now Anderson's turn. I believe that whatever solutions we find for our own struggles, they can't be based on deciding someone else's life doesn't count as much as ours does.
Clearly Captivating June 6, 2008 Yet another tremendous book ! Tremendous peace, (yes some tears) and working through my own stuff... Look forward to her next sharings.
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