“What does spiritual citizenship look like through a feminist lens?”
Existence is bondage to bodily experiences of emotion, excrement, illness, pain, and death.
….and experimentation with psychedelics is becoming increasingly mainstream, and considered in a positive and hopeful light.
It is only through contemplation, prayer, and a commitment to love that I can see the collateral damage that results when anyone is believed to be or believes….
We start to see that our worldview is constructed, agreed upon by the dominant culture, and that it is not the only way of seeing…
We live in the 21st century, a brave new world wherein communication, expression, and the exchange of ideas, feelings, and information….
In Indian traditions, the spirit of sevā (Sanskrit, “selfless service”) often centers around bhakti-yogis for whom this practice is the sole aim of life.
My formulation of spiritual citizenship grew out of what I learned over two decades in Trinidad working with dynamic religious communities informed by ancestral and contemporary West African faith practices….
One of the biggest questions I get in my practice is what is body awareness? I teach Pilates and Yoga,…
Often aligned with evil, death appears as the grim reaper, the nefarious gambler, in scary movies, and in ghost stories,…