The Great Work of Your Life: A Guide for the Journey to Your True Calling

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars | 1,263 ratings

Price: 14.68

Last update: 01-29-2025


About this item

Discover the deep purpose hidden at the very core of your being

To know your true calling - your dharma, as the yogis say - is perhaps the greatest desire within each of us. And yet, few can say we know our purpose with absolute certainty. Fortunately, there is a time-tested guide - an ancient map - for discovering and fulfilling your unique calling. In The Great Work of Your Life, Stephen Cope walks you through each step of the journey.

Cope teaches that the secrets to unlocking the mystery of your dharma can be found in the spiritual classic the Bhagavad Gita - a timeless tale about the path to dharma, told through an instructive dialogue between the fabled archer Arjuna and his divine mentor, Krishna. In The Great Work of Your Life, Cope uses Arjuna's journey as a framework for each of us to discover our own dharma, masterfully weaving together stories of both well-known and ordinary Western lives. Throughout the book, Cope explores the "Four Pillars of Dharma", or the stages we move through as we fulfill our own true callings. Each pillar is illustrated with riveting true stories, including:

  • Jane Goodall's ability to follow her heart without question
  • The little-known tale of Walt Whitman's dharma discovery in the second half of life
  • How living your purpose can be like training for the Olympics in the story of Susan B. Anthony
  • Ludwig van Beethoven's triumphs over childhood abuse, depression, and going deaf
  • Gandhi's transformation from tongue-tied youth to leader of the Indian independence movement
  • Understanding how divine guidance works with the life of Harriet Tubman
  • Additional insights and tales from the lives of both famous luminaries and everyday people

"We feel the happiest and most fulfilled when we bring highly concentrated effort to our true calling", teaches Cope. Moving and inspiring, The Great Work of Your Life is a call to action and step-by-step guide for each of us to discover and embrace our dharma.


Top reviews from the United States

  • Henry
    5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Great Books of Our Time
    Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2013
    Sometimes a book just finds you. In my case I just turned 50 and feel as if my calling has escaped me despite having been successful in business. With a somewhat heavy heart that dharma has escaped my every effort to catch it (there lies the paradox) I downloaded Cope's book on my new Kindle and read it straight through. And how could I not read this book? My father did his dissertation on Walden's Pond and Thoreau and HDT and I share the same first and middle name, "Henry David," as I was named after the great writer. Thoreau is a central figure in Cope's book.

    I love spiritual non-fiction and have read well over 100 books on the soul, love, the shadow, spirit, and how to live an abundant and happy life. And while many are dog eared, underlined and highlighted, never before have I ever read a book that was just perfect. I dont purport to be qualified to edit such a great book but had I been put to the task, I wouldn't have changed, added or subtracted one word. This is a brilliant work of art and although Cope is modest and even comically self-disparaging at times, I believe this book has no peers in uncovering one's soul purpose in this incarnation--if that is of interest to you. And if you are quite pleased (and fortunate) to have found a meaningful calling, then still read about how some of the world's most respected and gifted artists, abolitionists, mediators and statesman (Gandhi) and others lived their lives, sometimes crazed and painful, with purpose and with a gift so special that all of them knew that their work flowed through them with divine grace. In short, ego was pushed aside to make room for greatness to blossom.

    As you go through this book and witness how those graced with a karmic, dharmic bedazzling gift (Thoreau, Whitman, Beethoven, Tubman, Gandhi, et al.,) either read and lived the wisdom from the Bhagavad Vita or if uneducated, like Harriet Tubman, still had the precious gift bestowed upon them, you may get the sense, as I did, that if you seek fame, fortune and ego gratification, dharma will look elsewhere. Yes, you may build skyscrapers and golf courses like Donald Trump, but if you are drawn to this book you will be far more interested by the personal journey of an enlightened monk in his little 10 x 10 room than by someone chasing and succeeding in finding a buck on Wall Street.

    Maybe I was put on this earth to be good salesman and caring father. There is no crime in or to my life. Yet, I still believe that something has evaded me. Tonight in my meditation practice I asked for guidance from the divine, as Cope suggests in the book. I'll be watching for the signs.

    Please read this book and please share it with your friends. It's a game changer. I once read a quote from the Dalai Lama that said "teach all eight years olds to meditate and war will be eliminated in one generation." I wholeheartedly agree and will add that if you read this book and live it, you will be more fulfilled, and for the lucky few whose dharmas are finally jarred loose from reading "The Great Work of Your Life," I imagine that it will be better than finding a gold ticket to Willy Wanka's Chocolate Factory!

    I am so happy that this book found me, even if that means that reading about the fulfilled dharma of others is as close as I will ever get to catching that elusive tiger by the tail. Perhaps when I give up the search, my dharma will find me. Perhaps I've had it all along.
  • Elizabeth R. Marston
    5.0 out of 5 stars I’ve purchased so many
    Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2024
    I continue to gift this book to friends. It’s one I, myself, go back to over and over again when I need a boost. It’s transformational.
  • Kathmandu
    5.0 out of 5 stars The Path of Karma Yoga
    Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2013
    A recurring theme of the book is based on a quote from the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas:

    "If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you; if you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you."

    Now that I've completed it, I can wholeheartedly recommend this book. While I had a hard time identifying with some of the people that Cope uses as examples of those that lived out their dharma, I was still able to get something out of almost every story. There were others, on the other hand, with which I really connected, especially the stories of Thoreau, Robert Frost, and Gandhi.

    While I did enjoy the first half of the book, I feel like it really comes together in the latter sections where Cope gets into the essence of karma yoga, letting go of attachment to outcome and dedicating your actions to God. Somewhere amongst these pages, I began to really understand the concept of not being the "doer" which is something I've struggled to wrap my head around for some time. Now, I'm finally able to relate this concept to my own experiences and see how it's possible for it to play out in all aspects of life.

    The idea of service as a means to liberation is something frequently talked about by Ram Dass and also something that has been on my mind quite a bit as of late. So, it's not surprise that this passage really hit home:

    "If you don't find your work in the world and throw yourself wholeheartedly into it, you inevitably make your self your work. There's no way around it; You will take your self as your primary project. You will, in the very best case, dedicate your life to the perfection of your self. To the perfection of your health, intelligence, beauty, home, or even spiritual prowess. And the problem is simply this: This self-dedication is too small a work. It inevitably becomes a prison."

    The chapters on the life of Gandhi are very inspiring. I honestly didn't know much about Gandhi aside from the stories that I've heard Ram Dass and others tell. While I knew that the Bhagavad Gita was very central to Gandhi's life, what I didn't know, and it was very interesting to learn, is that he actually didn't read the Gita until he was in his mid-twenties. While I've read the Gita, as well as several commentaries on the Gita, I can't say that I've ever really studied it. After discovering how much of an impact it had on Gandhi, how it literally changed the direction of his life, I think this is something that needs to change.

  • Best Sellers in

     
     

    The Way of the Shepherd: Seven Secrets to Managing Productive People

    4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,791
    15.29
     
     

    The Familiar Stranger: (Re)Introducing the Holy Spirit to Those in Search of an Experiential Spirituality

    4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars 59
    19.68
     
     

    Your Story Has a Villain: Identify Spiritual Warfare and Learn How to Defeat the Enemy

    4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars 279
    17.32
     
     

    You're Not Dying You're Just Waking Up

    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,838
    19.95
     
     

    The Genesis 6 Conspiracy: How Secret Societies and the Descendants of Giants Plan to Enslave Humankind: Gary Wayne’s Genesis

    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,885
    7.99
     
     

    Peak Mind: Find Your Focus, Own Your Attention, Invest 12 Minutes a Day

    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 985
    24.29
     
     

    Raising Grateful Kids in an Entitled World: How One Family Learned That Saying No Can Lead to Life's Biggest Yes

    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,106
    14.61
     
     

    The Exorcist Files: True Stories About the Reality of Evil and How to Defeat It

    4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 302
    19.49