”The Three Movements of the Spiritual Life“
How can we live our lives with a sense of spirit or wonder and awe at the center?
How can we live our lives with a sense of spirit or wonder and awe at the center?
What practices nourish you? Are you intentional about them? Let’s explore what feeds us and gives fuel for the journey.
How might we incorporate gratitude into our daily lives? How can gratitude help us create a ripple effect of good will that can help transform our relationships, communities, and world?
What have we normalized in our culture that causes trauma to the human spirit? What actions can we UUs take for our individual and collective spiritual well being?
Many of us are likely familiar with the expression, “When one door closes, another opens.” But what do we think about it? Is it an overly-optimistic way of dealing with setbacks and loss? Or, is there a kernel of truth in it for spiritual seekers like us Unitarian Universalists?
Many in our culture view the atheist (and the agnostic) as if they had some sort of disease or virus that one doesn’t want to catch
What about gratitude as a spiritual practice?
I want to invite us to reflect on the spirituality of the ordinary.
“Spirituality” is a slippery, subjective term meaning different things to different people
The traditional Cherokee way of being human, our relationship to our Creator