I cry all during, every time I listen. It is a spiritual experience
@joshw.2739Ай бұрын
I discovered this from a Versus battles forum arguing what the fastest being in fiction is. It’s now my go-to media when I’m struggling to fall asleep.
@dontask8639Ай бұрын
Jonathan the GOAT
@tinksbell3997Ай бұрын
I was at the beach and I was surrounded by seagulls just sitting watching me as I was grounding and spoke Light Language to the sea It was a magical experience I shared this with a friend who then commented and said You had High Council watching then sent me this video What a beautiful story to listen to and such truth Know thyself through transcendence, all things are possible only believe❤
@drcubix2 ай бұрын
Are there any other audiobooks as good as this? Extremely well written, profound with perfect narration as this? If yes, please comment below. I'm looking for more such experiences. Thank you! Much love.
@ziggersz4899Ай бұрын
Hi. Richard Harris and his three sons recorded his book of poetry, I, In The Membership of My Days. It's beautifully done and I think you'll really enjoy it. Also Richard Harris recorded The Prophet. Both these masterpieces are available on KZread. Richard's poetry is particularly deep, emotional and extraordinary. Hope you will love it. ❤
@williamcordoba46042 ай бұрын
It is a wonderful story that awakens the soul and takes you in a journey of self-realization
@jodydeats11952 ай бұрын
Fantastic
@pullmyfinger64382 ай бұрын
❤
@NinaLlamera-ue2vj2 ай бұрын
Guys pls listen to this. I got a copy of the book when I was in high school. A friend and classmate lent me a copy that was owned by her late father. Somehow that where I started breaking boundaries of myself in a good way. It's not easy. Know that it's not easy but worth it guys over here. Peace and love®️🙏💥💥💥💖💖💖❤️❤️❤️💝💝💝💝💝💝😘
@jamesmiddlebrook1143 ай бұрын
My grandfather who I didn’t know well died and left this book in his bedside table, apparently he read this book often. I think I know my grandfather more the more I read this book. Truly a treasure.
@Noah2010aUgust3 ай бұрын
That’s awesome right
@Noah2010aUgust3 ай бұрын
Normal american day
@gsabra23 ай бұрын
My first time hearing this superior reading. I am awed.
@martinmcchesney3153 ай бұрын
Someone told me a seagull is the only bird that can shit while flying, all the rest have to land first, that's insane
@lienplayz81853 ай бұрын
I am the exact 8000 the person to like, it may not be an achievement to others, but it's an achievement to me. also, this video teaches you to not become suppressed by the words of others and prove you can do better than they think you can (that's what I learned from this)
@user-mv2rp2xg5c4 ай бұрын
Outlast as a Outcast
@user-mv2rp2xg5c4 ай бұрын
I was the nerdy bookworm, reading this in grade school, ignored by my teacher. Bullied by the other 5th grade kids. Thank you seagull. Taught me to live and love myself in my minds eye. Where it did me the most good.
@Zerosho4 ай бұрын
I found this album in mother's stuff after she died in 1981. She was my only parent growing up. After she died, I was living in her house alone. I was only 18. I played this album over and over on an old console record player my mom had also left behind. It was one of the most beautiful stories I'd every heard (before I read The Dhammapada). It gave me hope because I was already beginning to think differently than the "flock". My family deserted me soon after my mom died. Joined the military, found success blah blah blah. I haven't heard the album in years and thanks to this post, I can hear it again. Thank you.
@AJerkfaceSurgeonRuinedMyLife3 ай бұрын
And how are you today? Just a stranger here, was touched by what you shared.
@davejenkins1460Ай бұрын
it was her gift to you always remember it
@ZeroshoАй бұрын
@@davejenkins1460 I will, always, my friend. My mom has made her presence known throughout my life. Thank you.
@NormanNC4 ай бұрын
first book I ever read cover to cover without putting it down. on a flight from Tennessee to ny
@jenniferallen52054 ай бұрын
🥹
@toyatsymonds93245 ай бұрын
Cahows dominated the islands of the Atlantic before heathenistic vultures took the hook and arrived by desperate means feeding off swine grease .
@jesse79125 ай бұрын
Brilliant
@fluiditynz5 ай бұрын
I think this book formed a subtle inspiration for my life when I read it as a child some 42 years ago. My father learned that I could dispute many accepted popular beliefs and be right. Some of it was the arrogance of a teenager but I was bright, inventive and I researched hard. Follow the theme of this book and you can go a long long way.
@judithroers96555 ай бұрын
Whatever you were created to do and love to do...do it well.
@faridsdailyactivity39825 ай бұрын
Part 36:48
@spoudaois45356 ай бұрын
I remember this book was very popular. I was a young child and only thought it was very strange for a bird to have a middle name.
@edajungck6 ай бұрын
😅
@th3codexx4496 ай бұрын
If Sampha brought you here you a real one
@vinfrost55887 ай бұрын
I'm really disappointed in *this* version. I found the link and sent it to a friend to listen to...but when I listened myself, I found out it SKIPPED the whole.last 5 or 6 minutes, which is the best part, where it talks about separating loving someone from their actions. I had to send him another link that had the whole thing.
@DukeFan19717 ай бұрын
Even though the narration cuts out parts of the book, it maintains the essence of the story that inspired millions. It was written in 1970, a year before I was born. My grandmother loved the story, and bought the original hardback book for my 6th birthday as a present, and then my parents bought me the LP record of this exact narration. I didn't know who Richard Harris was at the time--it would be many years before I would see him in movies like Gladiator, Camelot, Smilla's Sense Of Snow, Unforgiven and his last great role as Dumbledore in the first 2 Harry Potter movies. To me, he embodied every role he played as if born to it, and his performances defined the roles he played. Jonathan Livingston Seagull was no different. His voice is unmistakable, full of passion and verve, and for me as a child, it brought that story to life, where I preferred to play the LP, sit back and close my eyes...and for me, he WAS Jonathan Seagull. My grandmother and I were always more offbeat, which was why we shared so many things for decades. I would be reading a book...call her up to tell her about it...only to find she had been reading the same book. My life has always been different than most. I had two Near-Death Experiences, 7 years apart, at 7 and 14. What I saw, heard, felt and experienced during them completely changed my life...and the only person in my life who believed me, accepted what I told her completely, and helped me to share my stories with others like me...was my grandmother. There were several people who influenced my young life, and shaped who I would become. Richard Bach/Jonathan Livingston Seagull/Richard Harris was the first. Carl Sagan/Cosmos was the 2nd (and meeting him during a 7th grade science class field trip to Cornell University was like other people meeting their favorite celebrity actor or singer). But the one who influenced me every single day, from my birth in 1971 til her death in 2015...was my grandmother. And Jonathan Livingston Seagull was the very first story/experience we ever shared together. So for me, this will ALWAYS be in the core of my being, and to this day...only 3 things ever inspired me to want to fly. The last was my cousin, who was a Naval aviator, and retired not long after the first Top Gun movie, so I was hooked on fighter jets. In the middle was Superman, which was the very first movie I ever saw, in 1978 at age 7 with my dad. But the first...a year prior to that...was my grandmother, Richard Bach, Richard Harris...and Jonathan Livingston Seagull. ❤❤❤❤❤
@DukeFan19717 ай бұрын
And by the way...to this day, 46 years later...I STILL have the original book!
@valentinius627 ай бұрын
This was a very well-known book back in the 1970s. Hardly hear about it anymore.
@user-ox8em2ff2t7 ай бұрын
BIBLE FOR JESUS. MOON, SUN, HEAVEN, STARS FOR JESUS. OCEAN FOR JESUS AND FISHES. OCEAN SEAGULL FOR JESUS. WAS DIED, HIM. ALWAYS HIGH. FATHER!
@Telephonebill516 ай бұрын
CONTENT-FREE TROLL BOT
@radkhan52337 ай бұрын
gold gold gold
@jimih85398 ай бұрын
One if not the only childhood book that still stays with me to this day is “ Johnathon Livingston seagull” . I recall my grandmother reading it to me at bedtime, all snug & safe. I bought a couple of copies from Amazon a couple of years ago and wrote a message on the blank first page . This book contains the wisdom of your grandparents, it has all the moral codes a young person needs & gives strength and understanding when facing a choice of going with the crowd or being brave enough to follow your own path. If your a grandparent that has found this book , please read it first and you will understand that it should only be read by you to your grandchildren . After you have finished using this book, please set it free for the next grandparent to find . I set both books free into the world, I left one on a bench in Manchester railway station and the other on a table in Costa Coffee on Chester railway station. I sincerely hope both books are now being passed from one set of grandparents to another’s 🙏
@andreaurelius458 ай бұрын
....yeah....we got some of those sea gulls that learned to fly inland....most of them die in the winter.
@Cindilc8 ай бұрын
I could listen to Richard Harris read the phone book!
@Telephonebill516 ай бұрын
You should see "Camelot". Great dialog, great singing, yeah, a musical.
@Cindilc6 ай бұрын
@@Telephonebill51 I’ve seen it, a lot! I even got to see him in the live performance
@caturocaturo9 ай бұрын
Anyone here for How Did This Get Made?
@moemouse98669 ай бұрын
My choir teacher read this to our class in 2008 towards the end of the school year, the class didn't wanna finish the book so I'm glad I remembered it and got to hear the end.
@user-dr5yv8jv9f9 ай бұрын
like all gteat mam he knows evrything is meaningless his bore work so become fame
@user-dr5yv8jv9f9 ай бұрын
A NEW BRANCH OF LITERATURE BUT ANOTHR NO ONE DOES THIS TYPE.. COMPLETLY EMOTIONLESS HUMOURLESS WORK. ITS TRAIT OFGREAT MENS WORKS ANDY WILIAM ONCE LOST IN TIME DUST. BUT NEIL DIAMONDS BORE QUALITY WILL ALIVE TILL DISASYER OF EARTH. UNIVERSAL LAW
@brettnivinski84219 ай бұрын
😮😅
@donaldduring84199 ай бұрын
Yes how absolutely true infact Mary Baker Eddy wrote this line in her book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures "We are all capable of more than we can do"
@donaldduring84199 ай бұрын
Same here.
@H.C.Q.10 ай бұрын
I’m a bird enthusiast- both wild and exotic, and I have an old copy of this story, but the words are too small and my eyes are too blurry to read it. And now they are even more blurry. What a beautiful story!
@oligahindmarch465310 ай бұрын
I just listened this and again and will listen again. Wonderful. 😢
@thingsthatmakemego-ooh10 ай бұрын
Unable to listen because the music is too much.
@raewalton163710 ай бұрын
Such a classic on spiritual growth
@dichev11 ай бұрын
The background music is annoyingly loud and for me it is difficult to focus on the narrative.
@martamccool274011 ай бұрын
TrTa sobre cómo el ignorante confunde espiritualidad con fanatismo religioso, dos cosas muy diferentes. Confundir la convicción de una experiencia vivida , un conocimiento adquirido, con una tradición basada en creencia y torcer el objetivo de la misión inicial con una práctica ciega sin base, sin sabiduría ni consciencia
@martamccool274011 ай бұрын
Creo que es Juan Salvador gaviota en espanol
@SWeatherford6611 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this on KZread. My bootleg CD copy that I bought online from Germany is now scratched and skips...
@jellyselector Жыл бұрын
First, maybe 2nd book I read (8-9 age?) No wonder, life defined itself around adrenaline rushes the moment I finished the last chapter 🙏🏼 Worth a bedtime listen :) Hanina ⚜️ 15:09
Пікірлер
I cry all during, every time I listen. It is a spiritual experience
I discovered this from a Versus battles forum arguing what the fastest being in fiction is. It’s now my go-to media when I’m struggling to fall asleep.
Jonathan the GOAT
I was at the beach and I was surrounded by seagulls just sitting watching me as I was grounding and spoke Light Language to the sea It was a magical experience I shared this with a friend who then commented and said You had High Council watching then sent me this video What a beautiful story to listen to and such truth Know thyself through transcendence, all things are possible only believe❤
Are there any other audiobooks as good as this? Extremely well written, profound with perfect narration as this? If yes, please comment below. I'm looking for more such experiences. Thank you! Much love.
Hi. Richard Harris and his three sons recorded his book of poetry, I, In The Membership of My Days. It's beautifully done and I think you'll really enjoy it. Also Richard Harris recorded The Prophet. Both these masterpieces are available on KZread. Richard's poetry is particularly deep, emotional and extraordinary. Hope you will love it. ❤
It is a wonderful story that awakens the soul and takes you in a journey of self-realization
Fantastic
❤
Guys pls listen to this. I got a copy of the book when I was in high school. A friend and classmate lent me a copy that was owned by her late father. Somehow that where I started breaking boundaries of myself in a good way. It's not easy. Know that it's not easy but worth it guys over here. Peace and love®️🙏💥💥💥💖💖💖❤️❤️❤️💝💝💝💝💝💝😘
My grandfather who I didn’t know well died and left this book in his bedside table, apparently he read this book often. I think I know my grandfather more the more I read this book. Truly a treasure.
That’s awesome right
Normal american day
My first time hearing this superior reading. I am awed.
Someone told me a seagull is the only bird that can shit while flying, all the rest have to land first, that's insane
I am the exact 8000 the person to like, it may not be an achievement to others, but it's an achievement to me. also, this video teaches you to not become suppressed by the words of others and prove you can do better than they think you can (that's what I learned from this)
Outlast as a Outcast
I was the nerdy bookworm, reading this in grade school, ignored by my teacher. Bullied by the other 5th grade kids. Thank you seagull. Taught me to live and love myself in my minds eye. Where it did me the most good.
I found this album in mother's stuff after she died in 1981. She was my only parent growing up. After she died, I was living in her house alone. I was only 18. I played this album over and over on an old console record player my mom had also left behind. It was one of the most beautiful stories I'd every heard (before I read The Dhammapada). It gave me hope because I was already beginning to think differently than the "flock". My family deserted me soon after my mom died. Joined the military, found success blah blah blah. I haven't heard the album in years and thanks to this post, I can hear it again. Thank you.
And how are you today? Just a stranger here, was touched by what you shared.
it was her gift to you always remember it
@@davejenkins1460 I will, always, my friend. My mom has made her presence known throughout my life. Thank you.
first book I ever read cover to cover without putting it down. on a flight from Tennessee to ny
🥹
Cahows dominated the islands of the Atlantic before heathenistic vultures took the hook and arrived by desperate means feeding off swine grease .
Brilliant
I think this book formed a subtle inspiration for my life when I read it as a child some 42 years ago. My father learned that I could dispute many accepted popular beliefs and be right. Some of it was the arrogance of a teenager but I was bright, inventive and I researched hard. Follow the theme of this book and you can go a long long way.
Whatever you were created to do and love to do...do it well.
Part 36:48
I remember this book was very popular. I was a young child and only thought it was very strange for a bird to have a middle name.
😅
If Sampha brought you here you a real one
I'm really disappointed in *this* version. I found the link and sent it to a friend to listen to...but when I listened myself, I found out it SKIPPED the whole.last 5 or 6 minutes, which is the best part, where it talks about separating loving someone from their actions. I had to send him another link that had the whole thing.
Even though the narration cuts out parts of the book, it maintains the essence of the story that inspired millions. It was written in 1970, a year before I was born. My grandmother loved the story, and bought the original hardback book for my 6th birthday as a present, and then my parents bought me the LP record of this exact narration. I didn't know who Richard Harris was at the time--it would be many years before I would see him in movies like Gladiator, Camelot, Smilla's Sense Of Snow, Unforgiven and his last great role as Dumbledore in the first 2 Harry Potter movies. To me, he embodied every role he played as if born to it, and his performances defined the roles he played. Jonathan Livingston Seagull was no different. His voice is unmistakable, full of passion and verve, and for me as a child, it brought that story to life, where I preferred to play the LP, sit back and close my eyes...and for me, he WAS Jonathan Seagull. My grandmother and I were always more offbeat, which was why we shared so many things for decades. I would be reading a book...call her up to tell her about it...only to find she had been reading the same book. My life has always been different than most. I had two Near-Death Experiences, 7 years apart, at 7 and 14. What I saw, heard, felt and experienced during them completely changed my life...and the only person in my life who believed me, accepted what I told her completely, and helped me to share my stories with others like me...was my grandmother. There were several people who influenced my young life, and shaped who I would become. Richard Bach/Jonathan Livingston Seagull/Richard Harris was the first. Carl Sagan/Cosmos was the 2nd (and meeting him during a 7th grade science class field trip to Cornell University was like other people meeting their favorite celebrity actor or singer). But the one who influenced me every single day, from my birth in 1971 til her death in 2015...was my grandmother. And Jonathan Livingston Seagull was the very first story/experience we ever shared together. So for me, this will ALWAYS be in the core of my being, and to this day...only 3 things ever inspired me to want to fly. The last was my cousin, who was a Naval aviator, and retired not long after the first Top Gun movie, so I was hooked on fighter jets. In the middle was Superman, which was the very first movie I ever saw, in 1978 at age 7 with my dad. But the first...a year prior to that...was my grandmother, Richard Bach, Richard Harris...and Jonathan Livingston Seagull. ❤❤❤❤❤
And by the way...to this day, 46 years later...I STILL have the original book!
This was a very well-known book back in the 1970s. Hardly hear about it anymore.
BIBLE FOR JESUS. MOON, SUN, HEAVEN, STARS FOR JESUS. OCEAN FOR JESUS AND FISHES. OCEAN SEAGULL FOR JESUS. WAS DIED, HIM. ALWAYS HIGH. FATHER!
CONTENT-FREE TROLL BOT
gold gold gold
One if not the only childhood book that still stays with me to this day is “ Johnathon Livingston seagull” . I recall my grandmother reading it to me at bedtime, all snug & safe. I bought a couple of copies from Amazon a couple of years ago and wrote a message on the blank first page . This book contains the wisdom of your grandparents, it has all the moral codes a young person needs & gives strength and understanding when facing a choice of going with the crowd or being brave enough to follow your own path. If your a grandparent that has found this book , please read it first and you will understand that it should only be read by you to your grandchildren . After you have finished using this book, please set it free for the next grandparent to find . I set both books free into the world, I left one on a bench in Manchester railway station and the other on a table in Costa Coffee on Chester railway station. I sincerely hope both books are now being passed from one set of grandparents to another’s 🙏
....yeah....we got some of those sea gulls that learned to fly inland....most of them die in the winter.
I could listen to Richard Harris read the phone book!
You should see "Camelot". Great dialog, great singing, yeah, a musical.
@@Telephonebill51 I’ve seen it, a lot! I even got to see him in the live performance
Anyone here for How Did This Get Made?
My choir teacher read this to our class in 2008 towards the end of the school year, the class didn't wanna finish the book so I'm glad I remembered it and got to hear the end.
like all gteat mam he knows evrything is meaningless his bore work so become fame
A NEW BRANCH OF LITERATURE BUT ANOTHR NO ONE DOES THIS TYPE.. COMPLETLY EMOTIONLESS HUMOURLESS WORK. ITS TRAIT OFGREAT MENS WORKS ANDY WILIAM ONCE LOST IN TIME DUST. BUT NEIL DIAMONDS BORE QUALITY WILL ALIVE TILL DISASYER OF EARTH. UNIVERSAL LAW
😮😅
Yes how absolutely true infact Mary Baker Eddy wrote this line in her book Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures "We are all capable of more than we can do"
Same here.
I’m a bird enthusiast- both wild and exotic, and I have an old copy of this story, but the words are too small and my eyes are too blurry to read it. And now they are even more blurry. What a beautiful story!
I just listened this and again and will listen again. Wonderful. 😢
Unable to listen because the music is too much.
Such a classic on spiritual growth
The background music is annoyingly loud and for me it is difficult to focus on the narrative.
TrTa sobre cómo el ignorante confunde espiritualidad con fanatismo religioso, dos cosas muy diferentes. Confundir la convicción de una experiencia vivida , un conocimiento adquirido, con una tradición basada en creencia y torcer el objetivo de la misión inicial con una práctica ciega sin base, sin sabiduría ni consciencia
Creo que es Juan Salvador gaviota en espanol
Thank you for sharing this on KZread. My bootleg CD copy that I bought online from Germany is now scratched and skips...
First, maybe 2nd book I read (8-9 age?) No wonder, life defined itself around adrenaline rushes the moment I finished the last chapter 🙏🏼 Worth a bedtime listen :) Hanina ⚜️ 15:09