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"A profound and moving listening experience, Ground Zero And The Human Soul is narrated with confidence, reflecting a primary concern with sharing a positive vision for tomorrow."
Midwest Book Review June 2003

" 9/11 Still Strains New York Psyche...Poll Finds Widespread Unease and Lingering Fear of Terror."
N.Y. Times headline, September 8,2003.

Seven years later, the lasting impact was to our world optimism and our individual inner harmony.

You, your neighbor, your friends, every citizen and world leader in every region of the world ... have an inner life ... where truth, harmony and goodness struggle with fear, doubt and hatred. Because of Ground Zero, our global future, both immediate and long-term, requires a new understanding of our individual inner life. Your internal reality is your soul life. Your soul responds with thoughts, feelings and the will to take action in a changed real world. It is the place where the future begins.

Rebuild your soul ... and the world ... starting from Ground Zero.

Introducing:

"Ground Zero and The Human Soul"
"The Search for the New Ordinary Life."

In six inspiring audio conversations,Lynn Jericho and Bethene LeMahieu Ed.D. present a clear picture of the human soul and its role in knowing and shaping the self ... and knowing and shaping the world. With the historic experience of 9/11 as a backdrop, they paint a picture of "9/12" - a New Ordinary Life - one that embraces both the intimacy of your individual life and the vastness of the world ... for generations to come.
These conversations address:
  • How loneliness leads to greed and aggression.
  • How personal harmony is a precursor for global harmony.
  • The four ways we experience evil.
  • The struggle in every soul between fundamentalism and freedom.

  • ... and much more.

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"Ground Zero and The Human Soul ... provides a much-needed foundation for building a realistic post-September 11 world. Emphasizing psychology over history, this provocative and challenging work belongs in every public library."

Review by Joseph L. Carlson,
Library Journal,
April 1, 2003