Most of us feel it: a quiet ache that life has been pulled apart into pieces. Work over here, faith over there, the living world somewhere in the background. Yet our bodies, relationships, and the changing climate keep insisting that everything is connected. This book names the story behind that tension and offers another way to see. It shows how the myth of separation became so persuasive and why it now leaves us anxious, exhausted, and unsure where we belong. Drawing on science and spirituality without forcing either into the other, it invites the reader into holistic thinking that honours data, experience, and meaning together. Through vivid examples, gentle practices, and grounded reflection, you will learn to recognise unity consciousness not as an escape from reality but as a clearer reading of it. The chapters explore ecological spirituality, spiritual ecology, and the deep interconnection of life, bringing ideas like sacred science and nondual awareness down to the scale of daily choices. Along the way, you will meet strands of modern mysticism that do not ask you to abandon reason, and forms of mind body spirit practice that do not drift into vagueness. For readers who sense that the old splits no longer make sense, this book offers a steady, intelligent companion on the way back to wholeness.
The Myth of Separation
SKU: 9789375365495
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- Claudine Al-Nasir is a writer and facilitator whose work sits at the meeting point of ecology, spirituality, and culture. Raised between city streets and wide open landscapes, she learned early that maps rarely capture what places actually mean to people. Over years of teaching, community work, and quiet study, she has become interested in how stories of separation shape bodies, institutions, and the land itself. Drawing on contemplative practice, systems thinking, and everyday conversations with people far outside formal debates, she writes in a voice that is both steady and searching. A subtle thread in her work is the memory of older Mediterranean and desert traditions in which sea, sky, and soil are held as parts of one living story. Rather than offering quick fixes, she invites readers into patient ways of seeing that reconnect inner life, shared life, and the more-than-human world.


















