Outside Reading- Hesse

For my leadership class I had to read the book Journey to the East by Hermann Hesse. It is about a man, Hesse, who took a pilgrimage with a secret society, called The League. The goal of the pilgrimage was to make it to the East. The description of the East was “the home and youth of the soul, it was everywhere and nowhere” (27). The League’s destination reminded me of one of the axioms of a sacred place:  the impulse of sacred place is both centripetal and centrifugal, local and universal. The East could be described as a sacred place, because it wasn’t a specific place and it was more of a spiritual goal. While Hesse was walking he experienced vivid flashbacks to his childhood, almost as if he was reliving it. In a way he was decentering himself and reaching a point of flow, but instead of being in a state of nothingness, he was in his adolescent state of mind. Due to leader conflicts, Hesse never made it to the east, but years after he left the journey he continuously is reminded of the impact the journey had on him.

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