Steven Weiner, Computer Specialist and Aesthetic Realism associate, writes: Do all of us have an attitude to the world itself? And will this attitude affect how we see everything in our lives, including love? Read “Always—Yourself & the World,” the much needed current issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known. The commentary… Read more
Nancy Huntting, Aesthetic Realism consultant, writes: Are other people and things in our way, or a means to our freedom? The happiness of our lives depends on our feeling the second—and art shows we can! That is the subject of “Poetry, Impediment, & the Big Mistake,” the new issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism… Read more
Leila Rosen, Aesthetic Realism associate, writes about this upcoming Public Seminar: At this important seminar, the Aesthetic Realism consultation trio There Are Wives—Barbara Allen, Anne Fielding, and Pauline Meglino—will speak about one of the biggest causes of pain in marriage. Why do husbands and wives who once felt they were so warm to each other,… Read more
Louis Dienes, poet and photographer, began to study Aesthetic Realism in 1943. He recommends Eli Siegel’s poem “Somewhere This” and says: In this magnificent free verse poem of 1925, through snatches of conversations to be heard any day—on sidewalks, in apartments, and accompanied by the ever-present elevated train, high above city streets—we feel the mystery… Read more
Jeffrey Carduner, Aesthetic Realism consultant, writes: The large fight in the self of everyone and in world economics—and what that battle has to do with unions—is explained in “The Sheer Fight,” the new, great issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known. The commentary by editor Ellen Reiss begins: Dear Unknown Friends: We are… Read more
Steven Weiner, Computer Specialist and Aesthetic Realism associate, writes: Why don’t people like the way they feel? And what causes the insomnia that millions experience night after night? The ever so needed answers to these questions are in “There Are the Self & Sleeplessness,” the current issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be… Read more
Leila Rosen, Aesthetic Realism associate, writes about this upcoming Public Seminar: In asking this question, Aesthetic Realism, for the first time, articulates the reason people are often tormented about love and sex: our purpose. Is the pleasure we have for the purpose of respecting the world more—which includes, and is represented by, the person we… Read more
Nancy Huntting, Aesthetic Realism consultant, writes: The difference between these two is crucial to everyone’s life, yet not understood: “Individualism—True & False.” You’ll be surprised, relieved, thrilled by this great issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known. The commentary by Ellen Reiss begins: Dear Unknown Friends: The great essay by Eli Siegel… Read more
Jeffrey Carduner, Aesthetic Realism consultant, writes: “We have two opposed hopes about people, two opposed hopes about the world. What do these hopes have to do with whether or not we can like ourselves? The answers are in “Our Two Desires,” the magnificent current issue of The Right of Aesthetic Realism to Be Known. The commentary… Read more
Leila Rosen, Aesthetic Realism associate, writes about this upcoming Public Seminar: Women (and men too!): Come and have a wonderful time learning about yourself! “Can There Be Real Love without Criticism?” The Three Persons—Aesthetic Realism consultants Margot Carpenter, Carol Driscoll, and Devorah Tarrow—will answer this surprising, urgent, and, really, beautiful question. They’ll show what Aesthetic Realism makes… Read more