That's pure rubbish, if you took all of the above teaching and put them together they don't even come close to anywhere to what the Catholic Church teaches
A good and basic start is this little book
The Imitation of Christ, by
Thomas à Kempis, is a
Christian devotional book first composed in
Medieval Latin as
De Imitatione Christi (c. 1418–1427).
[1][2] The devotional text is divided into four books of detailed spiritual instructions: (i) "Helpful Counsels of the Spiritual Life", (ii) "Directives for the Interior Life", (iii) "On Interior Consolation", and (iv) "On the Blessed Sacrament". The devotional approach of
The Imitation of Christ emphasises the interior life and withdrawal from the mundanities of the world, as opposed to the active imitation of Christ practised by other friars.
[1] The devotions of the books emphasise devotion to the
Eucharist as the key element of spiritual life.
[1]
The Imitation of Christ is a handbook for the spiritual life arising from the
Devotio Moderna movement, which Thomas followed.
[3] The
Imitation is perhaps the most widely read Christian devotional work after the
Bible,
[2][4] and is regarded as a devotional and religious classic.
[5] Its popularity was immediate, and it was printed 745 times before 1650.[6] Apart from the Bible, no book had been translated into more languages than the Imitation of Christ at the time.[7]