Getting Back to the Garden is a short, reflective work exploring the story of Adam and Eve as a map of human awareness, exile, and return. Drawing from Lurianic Kabbalah and the theological language of the Ramchal, this book offers a creative re-telling of the fall not as a moral failure, but as the birth of perception, distinction, and selfhood. This is not a translation of classical texts, nor an academic study. It is an accessible meditation on how infinite awareness becomes experienced as separation, how the serpent represents the pull toward definition and identity, and how rectification is found not in erasing distinction, but in integrating it with the underlying unity from which it arises. Written clearly and simply, this work is intended for readers interested in Jewish mysticism, and the inner meaning of the biblical narrative, in the context of Lurianic thought without requiring prior background in Kabbalah. A project of The Baal Shem Tov House. www.baalshemtovhouse.com