Olga Yahontova, známá také jako Olga Kharitidi, čerpá z rozsáhlých cest po Sibiři a Střední Asii. Její dílo zkoumá starodávnou moudrost, která se šířila z její rodné Sibiře až do Himálaje. Skrze své psaní sdílí hluboké poznání sibiřských tradic a pokračuje v cestě objevování, aby tuto moudrost přiblížila čtenářům. Její texty jsou mostem mezi vzdálenými kulturami a duchovními tradicemi.
Why don't people heal? Why do they stay wounded--some even driven to suicide by their pain-despite the best that organic and psychological medicine can offer? To find the answers, Russian--born psychiatrist Olga Kharitidi traveled to exotic Samarkand, a major cultural and spiritual crossroads, and ancient capital of Uzbekistan, in the heart of Central Asia. No stranger to mystical and shamanic experiences, Dr. Kharitidi had already immersed herself in Siberian native traditions of seeing and healing. Now, at the invitation of an emissary from an ancient secret brotherhood, Dr. Kharitidi set out to learn first-hand the secrets of healing deep emotional wounds. As she quickly discovered, to master these methods she would first have to heal herself. Under the tutelage of the mysterious and charismatic Michael, the master of lucid dreams and protector of esoteric teachings first given millennia ago, Dr. Kharitidi entered another world altogether. There, she saw how our deepest emotional traumas are held in place by baleful spirits and can only be overcome by the technique of dreaming while awake. A major contribution to experiential psychology and a vivid revelation of little-known ancient teachings, The Master of Lucid Dreams describes a startlingly different and effective approach to inner healing.
In Das weiße Land der Seele und Samarkand erforschte Olga Kharitidi die alten rituellen Praktiken Sibiriens und Zentralasiens und konnte so eine neue Methode zur Heilung psychischer Traumata entwickeln. Ihre Suche nach der Kraft spiritueller Geheimnisse ist spannend und faszinierend – 'die eindrucksvolle Schilderung einer bewegenden Reise in die Landschaft der Seele' (New York Times).