EBOOK

Ελληνικά
Όταν Ο Παπαγάλος Σωπάσει αληθεια • αφημα • αγαπη
Eνας πρακτικός οδηγός εσωτερικής αφύπνισης
George J. Georgiou(0)
About
In When the Parrot Goes Quiet, Dr George J. Georgiou invites readers into a deeper, quieter, and more honest walk with God - one that begins not with outward performance, spiritual language, or religious appearance, but with the inner transformation of the heart.
The "parrot" in this book represents the noisy, repetitive voice of the ego: the part of us that reacts, defends, complains, controls, judges, compares, and repeats the same old fears and opinions as though they were true. It is the inner voice that wants to be right, wants to be seen, wants to be admired, and often wants to manage life without fully trusting God. For many sincere seekers, this voice can hide behind spiritual words, good intentions, religious activity, or even the desire to help others. Yet beneath the surface, it may still be driven by pride, fear, resentment, guilt, self-importance, or the need for control.
This book is about what happens when that voice begins to quiet down.
Drawing inspiration from the Map of Consciousness developed by Dr David R. Hawkins, Dr Georgiou explores the spiritual journey as a gradual movement from lower states of consciousness - such as shame, guilt, fear, anger, pride, and desire - toward higher states of courage, willingness, acceptance, reason, love, joy, peace, and surrender. Yet this is not presented as an abstract theory or intellectual system. Instead, it becomes a practical guide for daily life: how we think, how we speak, how we respond to conflict, how we make decisions, how we forgive, how we pray, and how we learn to recognise the difference between the ego's noise and God's quiet guidance.
At its heart, When the Parrot Goes Quiet is a book about spiritual discernment. Many people desire to follow God, but struggle to know whether they are being led by faith or by fear, by love or by pride, by wisdom or by emotional reaction. Dr Georgiou gently shows that the ego often speaks loudly, urgently, and defensively, while the voice of Truth is usually quieter, steadier, and more peaceful. God does not need to shout over the ego. Rather, we are invited to become still enough to hear Him.
Throughout the book, Dr Georgiou makes clear that spiritual maturity is not measured by how religious a person appears, how much they know, how well they speak, or how much they do in public. It is measured by the condition of the heart. Are we becoming more loving? More truthful? More forgiving? More patient? More humble? More obedient to God? Are we able to admit when we are wrong? Can we set boundaries without hatred? Can we disagree without contempt? Can we serve without needing applause? Can we trust God when life does not follow our preferred plan?
These are the deeper questions that shape the journey of this book.
When the Parrot Goes Quiet helps readers recognise the many ways ego disguises itself in everyday spiritual life. Sometimes ego appears as pride: "I know better." Sometimes, as victimhood: "No one understands me." Sometimes, as control: "Everything must happen my way." Sometimes, as false humility: "I am nothing," while secretly wanting others to notice our sacrifice. Sometimes it hides inside spiritual superiority, where a person believes they are more awake, more faithful, or more righteous than others. Dr Georgiou brings these patterns into the light, not with condemnation, but with compassion and honesty.
The purpose of seeing the ego is not to hate ourselves. It is to become free.
When the parrot goes quiet, the soul begins to listen.
And in that sacred quiet, we may finally hear the voice of God more clearly.
The "parrot" in this book represents the noisy, repetitive voice of the ego: the part of us that reacts, defends, complains, controls, judges, compares, and repeats the same old fears and opinions as though they were true. It is the inner voice that wants to be right, wants to be seen, wants to be admired, and often wants to manage life without fully trusting God. For many sincere seekers, this voice can hide behind spiritual words, good intentions, religious activity, or even the desire to help others. Yet beneath the surface, it may still be driven by pride, fear, resentment, guilt, self-importance, or the need for control.
This book is about what happens when that voice begins to quiet down.
Drawing inspiration from the Map of Consciousness developed by Dr David R. Hawkins, Dr Georgiou explores the spiritual journey as a gradual movement from lower states of consciousness - such as shame, guilt, fear, anger, pride, and desire - toward higher states of courage, willingness, acceptance, reason, love, joy, peace, and surrender. Yet this is not presented as an abstract theory or intellectual system. Instead, it becomes a practical guide for daily life: how we think, how we speak, how we respond to conflict, how we make decisions, how we forgive, how we pray, and how we learn to recognise the difference between the ego's noise and God's quiet guidance.
At its heart, When the Parrot Goes Quiet is a book about spiritual discernment. Many people desire to follow God, but struggle to know whether they are being led by faith or by fear, by love or by pride, by wisdom or by emotional reaction. Dr Georgiou gently shows that the ego often speaks loudly, urgently, and defensively, while the voice of Truth is usually quieter, steadier, and more peaceful. God does not need to shout over the ego. Rather, we are invited to become still enough to hear Him.
Throughout the book, Dr Georgiou makes clear that spiritual maturity is not measured by how religious a person appears, how much they know, how well they speak, or how much they do in public. It is measured by the condition of the heart. Are we becoming more loving? More truthful? More forgiving? More patient? More humble? More obedient to God? Are we able to admit when we are wrong? Can we set boundaries without hatred? Can we disagree without contempt? Can we serve without needing applause? Can we trust God when life does not follow our preferred plan?
These are the deeper questions that shape the journey of this book.
When the Parrot Goes Quiet helps readers recognise the many ways ego disguises itself in everyday spiritual life. Sometimes ego appears as pride: "I know better." Sometimes, as victimhood: "No one understands me." Sometimes, as control: "Everything must happen my way." Sometimes, as false humility: "I am nothing," while secretly wanting others to notice our sacrifice. Sometimes it hides inside spiritual superiority, where a person believes they are more awake, more faithful, or more righteous than others. Dr Georgiou brings these patterns into the light, not with condemnation, but with compassion and honesty.
The purpose of seeing the ego is not to hate ourselves. It is to become free.
When the parrot goes quiet, the soul begins to listen.
And in that sacred quiet, we may finally hear the voice of God more clearly.