Other Works
Licking Honey from the Razor’s Edge
Licking Honey from the Razor’s Edge means that to taste the sweetness of life we must take the risk of going to our own edge, at critical turning points throughout life, but especially midlife. A lifelong process of getting ready and asking critical questions, letting go and becoming, or not.
Unless you actively seek personal change, listen to your heart, you will, to some degree, have lived a non-authentic life and missed the treasure inside yourself. This would be your greatest personal tragedy.
Actually the labyrinth is thoroughly known. Many blokes before you have found the treasure within and tasted the sweetness of life. Which is to say that a field guide such as this, drawing on realisations, old and up to the minute, classical and personal, is handy for navigation.
Here’s an overview of the territory, in the 3 Stages of the book.
Stage I: First, the outward journey that shaped you. There is much to explore, realise and understand about yourself here that is critical for the success of life’s next stage.
Stage 2: Second, the tricky razor’s edge stage of waking up to the need for the great turning of insight, growth and progress. Everyone likes progress, few like change. However your fate depends on committing to it. And knowing how to do it. There are tricks to learn.
Stage 3: And thirdly, turning insight into healing, progress and growth, the inner adventure. To come home to yourself, figure out your crowded bed, love and let yourself be loved. This guide explains what you may do and learn, how to do it, and how to avoid the pitfalls along the way. You’ll find what I have concluded are the most important questions in life. It’s the questions you ask yourself, or don’t, that determine your destiny.
Licking Honey from the Razor’s Edge
Licking Honey from the Razor’s Edge means that to taste the sweetness of life we must take the risk of going to our own edge, at critical turning points throughout life, but especially midlife. A lifelong process of getting ready and asking critical questions, letting go and becoming, or not.
Unless you actively seek personal change, listen to your heart, you will, to some degree, have lived a non-authentic life and missed the treasure inside yourself. This would be your greatest personal tragedy.
Actually the labyrinth is thoroughly known. Many blokes before you have found the treasure within and tasted the sweetness of life. Which is to say that a field guide such as this, drawing on realisations, old and up to the minute, classical and personal, is handy for navigation.
Here’s an overview of the territory, in the 3 Stages of the book.
Stage I: First, the outward journey that shaped you. There is much to explore, realise and understand about yourself here that is critical for the success of life’s next stage.
Stage 2: Second, the tricky razor’s edge stage of waking up to the need for the great turning of insight, growth and progress. Everyone likes progress, few like change. However your fate depends on committing to it. And knowing how to do it. There are tricks to learn.
Stage 3: And thirdly, turning insight into healing, progress and growth, the inner adventure. To come home to yourself, figure out your crowded bed, love and let yourself be loved. This guide explains what you may do and learn, how to do it, and how to avoid the pitfalls along the way. You’ll find what I have concluded are the most important questions in life. It’s the questions you ask yourself, or don’t, that determine your destiny.
Puberty Boy
Have you ever noticed, now that you’re growing up, that your parents want to sit you down and have these embarrassing kinds of conversations with you about sex? Or they leave those ‘educational’ books about growing up lying around the house? Or you’ve got some questions about what’s happening to your body but you just can’t hack the thought of talking about it with your mum?
Well, Puberty Boy sidesteps embarrassing conversations and gives the full low down on what it means to be growing up. And it’s written just for you.
In this book, real men and boys share their stories about puberty. This lighthearted, plain speaking and honest book tells you what puberty is, when it happens and how your bodies will change. It explores the thinking and emotional changes that are happening alongside the physical and even tackles how to talk to girls! There’s a brain shift happening inside you at puberty and Geoff Price makes sure that you know about it and are equipped to handle it.
Puberty Boy explains the transitions that boys need to go through to become healthy young men in a unique, colourful and commonsense way. It is an essential guide for boys – and your parents, carers and teachers might even find it useful as well! (Hey, leave it lying around for them to find.)
Booktopia (Australia)
Amazon (International)
Booktopia (Australia)
Amazon (International)
Puberty Boy
Have you ever noticed, now that you’re growing up, that your parents want to sit you down and have these embarrassing kinds of conversations with you about sex? Or they leave those ‘educational’ books about growing up lying around the house? Or you’ve got some questions about what’s happening to your body but you just can’t hack the thought of talking about it with your mum?
Well, Puberty Boy sidesteps embarrassing conversations and gives the full low down on what it means to be growing up. And it’s written just for you.
In this book, real men and boys share their stories about puberty. This lighthearted, plain speaking and honest book tells you what puberty is, when it happens and how your bodies will change. It explores the thinking and emotional changes that are happening alongside the physical and even tackles how to talk to girls! There’s a brain shift happening inside you at puberty and Geoff Price makes sure that you know about it and are equipped to handle it.
Puberty Boy explains the transitions that boys need to go through to become healthy young men in a unique, colourful and commonsense way. It is an essential guide for boys – and your parents, carers and teachers might even find it useful as well! (Hey, leave it lying around for them to find.)
