Read The Four Agreements Online
Authors: Don Miguel Ruiz
Also by don Miguel Ruiz
T
HE
F
IFTH
A
GREEMENT
A Practical Guide to Self-Mastery
T
HE
F
OUR
A
GREEMENTS
C
OMPANION
B
OOK
Using The Four Agreements to Master the Dream of Your Life
T
HE
M
ASTERY OF
L
OVE
A Practical Guide to the Art of Relationship
P
RAYERS
A Communion with our Creator
T
HE
V
OICE OF
K
NOWLEDGE
A Practical Guide to Inner Peace
L
OS
C
UATRO
A
CUERDOS
Una guía práctica para la libertad personal
C
UADERNO DE
T
RABAJO DE
L
OS
C
UATRO
A
CUERDOS
Utiliza Los Cuatro Acuerdos para gobernar el sueño de tu vida
L
A
M
AESTRÍA DEL
A
MOR
Una guía práctica para el arte de las relaciones
O
RACIONES
Una comunión con nuestro Creador
L
A
V
OZ DEL
C
ONOCIMIENTO
Una guía práctica para la paz interior
A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom
A
Toltec
Wisdom
Book
DON
M
IGUEL
R
UIZ
A
MBER
-A
LLEN
P
UBLISHING
S
AN
R
AFAEL
, C
ALIFORNIA
Copyright © 1997 by Miguel Angel Ruiz, M.D.
Published by Amber-Allen Publishing, Inc.
P. O. Box 6657
San Rafael, California 94903
Editorial: Janet Mills
Cover Illustration: Nicholas Wilton
Cover Design: Michele Wetherbee
Author Photo: Ellen Denuto
All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review; nor may any part of this book be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other, without written permission from the publisher.
Note: The term “black magic” is not meant to convey racial connotation; it is merely used to describe the use of magic for adverse or harmful purposes.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Ruiz, Miguel, 1952– The four agreements : a practical guide to personal freedom/Miguel Ruiz. p. cm. — (A Toltec wisdom book) (alk. paper)
1. Conduct of life. 2. Toltec philosophy — Miscellanea.
I. Title. II. Series: Ruiz, Miguel, 1952– Toltec wisdom book.
BJ1581. 2. R85 1997 299′.792 — dc21 97-18256 CIP
ISBN 978-1-934408-01-8
To the
Circle of Fire;
those who have gone before, those who are present, and those who have yet to come.
I
WOULD LIKE TO HUMBLY ACKNOWLEDGE MY
mother Sarita, who taught me unconditional love; my father Jose Luis, who taught me discipline; my grandfather Leonardo Macias, who gave me the key to unlock the Toltec mysteries; and my sons Miguel, Jose Luis, and Leonardo.
I wish to express my deep affection and appreciation to the dedication of Gaya Jenkins and Trey Jenkins.
I would like to extend my profound gratitude to Janet Mills — publisher, editor, believer. I am also abidingly grateful to Ray Chambers for lighting the way.
I would like to honor my dear friend Gini Gentry, an amazing “brain” whose faith touched my heart.
I would like to pay tribute to the many people who have given freely of their time, hearts, and resources to support the teachings. A partial list includes: Gae Buckley, Ted and Peggy Raess, Christinea Johnson, Judy “Red” Fruhbauer, Vicki Molinar, David and Linda Dibble, Bernadette Vigil, Cynthia Wootton, Alan Clark, Rita Rivera, Catherine Chase, Stephanie Bureau, Todd Kaprielian, Glenna Quigley, Allan and Randi Hardman, Cindee Pascoe, Terry and Chuck Cowgill, Roberto and Diane Paez, Siri Gian Singh Khalsa, Heather Ash, Larry Andrews, Judy Silver, Carolyn Hipp, Kim Hofer, Mersedeh Kheradmand, Diana and Sky Ferguson, Keri Kropidlowski, Steve Hasenburg, Dara Salour, Joaquin Galvan, Woodie Bobb, Rachel Guerrero, Mark Gershon, Collette Michaan, Brandt Morgan, Katherine Kilgore (Kitty Kaur), Michael Gilardy, Laura Haney, Marc Cloptin, Wendy Bobb, Ed Fox, Yari Jaeda, Mary Carroll Nelson, Amari Magdelana, JaneAnn Dow, Russ Venable, Gu and Maya Khalsa, Mataji Rosita, Fred and Marion Vatinelli, Diane Laurent, V.J. Polich, Gail Dawn Price, Barbara Simon, Patti Torres, Kaye Thompson, Ramin Yazdani, Linda Lightfoot, Terry Gorton, Dorothy Lee, J.J. Frank, Jennifer and Jeanne Jenkins, George Gorton, Tita Weems, Shelley Wolf, Gigi Boyce, Morgan Drasmin, Eddie Von Sonn, Sydney de Jong, Peg Hackett Cancienne, Germaine Bautista, Pilar Mendoza, Debbie Rund Caldwell, Bea La Scalla, Eduardo Rabasa, and The Cowboy.
T
HOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO, THE
T
OLTEC WERE
known throughout southern Mexico as “women and men of knowledge.” Anthropologists have spoken of the Toltec as a nation or a race, but, in fact, the Toltec were scientists and artists who formed a society to explore and conserve the spiritual knowledge and practices of the ancient ones. They came together as masters
(naguals)
and students at Teotihuacan, the ancient city of pyramids outside Mexico City known as the place where “Man Becomes God.”
Over the millennia, the
naguals
were forced to conceal the ancestral wisdom and maintain its existence in obscurity. European conquest, coupled with rampant misuse of personal power by a few of the apprentices, made it necessary to shield the knowledge from those who were not prepared to use it wisely or who might intentionally misuse it for personal gain.