Books%2FThe King, Warrior and Magician

Error converting content: marked is not a function

icon:: đź“–

purchased:: 
start:: 
end:: 
published::
length:: 
author:: 
cover::
reading-time::
score::
- Genius
  collapsed:: true
- The ancient Romans believed that every human baby is born with what they called his or her “genius,” a guardian spirit assigned at birth. Roman birthday parties were held not so much to honor an individual as to honor that person’s genius, the divine being that came into the world with him or her. The Romans knew that it was not the man’s Ego that was the source of his music, his art, his statecraft, or his courageous deeds. It was the Divine Child, an aspect of the Self within him.
- Highlights
- A boy for whom the Precocious Child is a powerful influence wants to know what makes other people tick as well as what makes himself tick. He wants to know why people act the way they do, why he has the feelings he has. He tends to be introverted and reflective, and he is able to see the hidden connections in things.
	  id:: 636a6565-918f-4d06-a475-b80122f1c64d