Visit the Becoming
Me website here.
To purchase Becoming Me click here.
What
is Becoming Me?
Becoming
Me is not exactly a parable and not exactly a creation story.
It's not exactly a children's book and it's not exactly an adult
book. Said Buddhist teacher Jack Kornfield, "It's the
simplest, sweetest way to remind us that the Divine is shining
in us all the time, and that 'we' are ultimately 'me'."
Becoming
Me combines the deepest mystical ideas of many different
faiths about 'who we are' and 'why we're here' ... yet it
also is consistent with science. So it's not exactly fiction,
and it's not exactly non-fiction. It's not the literal story
of any religion, yet it has been embraced by people of many religions.
Where
did it come from?
The
first line of Becoming Me, "Once upon a time, I
was," just popped into my mind, late one night, after a deep
breathing meditation. I realized that it might just be possible
to express the mystical understanding of creation in the form
of a children's book -- and to tell this story from God's point-of-view.
But the voice telling this story would not be booming or angry
-- it would be curious, loving and playful--a infinite God who,
more than anything, wants to be little.
For
several years, I didn't take this idea seriously. But then
one day, while I was struggling to write a big philosophical book,
this little book just insisted on being written. It was
written in a couple of weeks and found a publisher a few weeks
later.
What's
the point?
Becoming Me is now being used to promote interfaith understanding,
environmental awareness, and philosophy-for children. It's also
being used in religious education classes, as well as a meditation
for people in times of stress or crisis. Each simple line
of Becoming Me represents some major spiritual concepts,
and the dazzling paintings by Chris Gilvan-Cartwright tell a big
part of the story (read more).
Here
is one of my favorite reviews, which explains it better than I
can:
From
rich endpapers that suggest the golden oozing goo of creation
to the gloriously hued chaotic mass at its end, we sense the
relationship of color, light and sound in the cosmic creation--and
at the heart of it iall is the voice of God. Daring?
Yes. Presumptuous? No. There is a humlity
and simplicity--and just enough mischief--in the writing that
makes it somehow plausible that the person of God has written
this book, describing the enormous complexity of creation in
terms of self-discovery. It resolves beautifully in the
way that God becomes human, and how in human form we still forget
that we are God. Profound fun for all ages, a delight
for anyone who enjoys pondering imponderables. (Antoinette
Botsford, Review Editor, Napra Review, September/October 2000)
To
see the new animated version of Becoming
Me, read reviews, background essays, reading group guide,
and parent/teacher guide, visit the Becoming Me website:
click here.