Will I ever be happy in love?
In Sex, Love, and Dharma, Arthur Jeon answers these and other common questions like “Why do I always fall for the wrong person?” “How can I stop sabotaging my relationships?” and “What’s the secret to a passionate sex life?” with compassion, humor, and honesty. Drawing on the teachings of the dharma, Jeon provides a fresh way of looking at relationships that doesn’t rely on someday finding “the one.” Instead, we learn to embrace the opportunities to love in the here and now, no matter what the circumstances.
Applying the timeless wisdom of the dharma to the joy, challenges, and heartache of contemporary romance, Sex, Love, and Dharma offers a better way to be in love and will help you achieve the true love you always imagined was possible.
Arthur Jeon leads Dharma Conversations and teaches yoga at Yoga Works in Santa Monica, California. He is the author of City Dharma: Keeping Your Cool in the Chaos.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
August 29, 2005: because Arthur Jeon writes of LIVING. Teaching that it is best to live - and, more importantly, love - in the present applies to every aspect of life. Though there is much wisdom in these pages on how to deal with love relationships at every stage, the most important is how one lives as an individual. Acknowledging that everyone stumbles and runs into walls (not always of one's own making), the important thing is to learn one's lessons, bless it and proceed on the journey.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 01, 2005: Arthur Jeon should become a national treasure. As I read his works, first City Dharma, and now, Sex, Love and Dharma, I can't decide whether I am more amazed by the beauty and heart within the writing, or the wealth of wisdom contained in the text. In Sex, Love and Dharma, you will see yourself in a number of the entertaining anecdotes that cover all facets of love and relationships. You will laugh when he tells you that 'Sexual relationships are like Roach Motels, easy to enter and very difficult to exit...' and you will be deeply moved when he tells the story of a young woman selflessly stopping to help an older woman in a wheelchair. Reading this work, I found myself learning new 'loving skills' and being reminded of ones that I had forgotten. I found myself inspired to approach the world with new eyes and a more open heart. I also found myself wanting to be more awake to the beauty I am surrounded by daily, and to the opportunities to create beauty that are available to me right now. After all, as Arthur suggests, love is at its best when it's a verb, not a noun. In Sex, Love, and Dharma, Arthur takes on the role of a patient teacher of practical, common-sense wisdom. Yet he never bludgeons us by telling us what to believe or what to go do. He simply suggests that we can find our way out of suffering and into happiness. By seeing clearly, remaining awake, and paying attention to the unfolding of the present moment in all its fullness, everything becomes available to us, especially love.