Host: Michael Toms & Justine Willis Toms Interview Date: 6/2/1997 Program Length: 1 Hour
Media:
MP3 Download
Price: $1.99
Program Description: It’s no secret that a rich and happy life has little to do with material wealth. So how can we make the best of what we do have? Alice Walker offers a fresh look at how to live well in a complex culture. Her unique depth of perception is a gift that shows us new angles on everything from cocaine to Aunt Jemima to painting murals on the White House. We can escape the bleakness of our white-dominated cultural landscape, she insists, in a way that could make life better for everyone. She notes, for example, that “It’s impossible not to be made happier if you alleviate suffering for anyone, or anything.” This dialogue is brimming with inspiration for celebrating human life in all its colors and moments. (Hosted by Michael Toms and Justine Willis Toms.) Now available as Hay House Tape 1 hour
Alice Walker won the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for her novel The Color Purple, which was made in a movie by Steven Spielberg. She is the eighth child of Georgia sharecroppers. After a childhood accident blinded her in one eye, she went on to become valedictorian of her local school, and attend Spelman College and Sarah Lawrence College on scholarships, graduating in 1965. Her other novels include The Temple of My Familiar, By the Light of My Father's Smile, Possessing the Secret of Joy, and Now Is the Time To Open Your Heart. She is also the author of three collections of short stories, three collections of essays, five volumes of poetry, and several children's books. Her works are heartful reminders of the strengths of family, community, self-worth, nature, and spirituality.
Topics explored in this dialogue:
The main ingredients of happiness
How to "turn off the noise" in a noisy world
The Million Man March and Louis Farrakhan
The real meaning of Aunt Jemima
Why we should paint the White House
A synchronistic trip to Carl Jung’s house
Why "There is more happiness in being harmless than in being harmful."