Name: Anna Zoe
Where you live: Pennsylvania
What you do as a vocation or avocation? Independent Singer-Songwriter
Your two favorite books:
"The Omnivore's Dilemma" by Michael Pollan changed my life, and I'm not afraid to admit, I have "Twilight" to thank for getting me sucked into reading fiction again.
Your two favorite songs:
Being a musician, who didn't really listen to much music growing up, it's always too difficult to answer this question or anything like it.
Why you are interested in spirituality?
What else is there to life? Maybe I'm biased since spirituality has guided me my entire life.
Your favorite quote:
"Live your life in such a way that those who don't know God, but know you, will come to know God, through you." -Unknown ... We talk too much in life. Just be and others will see.
Your favorite web sites:
Even if it is a love-hate relationship, I'd be a liar if I didn't say Google and Facebook.
Your hero?
Anyone who had a really tough childhood, and rises above it in their adulthood. So much time is wasted in life by blaming our past for our present or future. Every moment is a moment of possibility.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
To truly fear God, and no one or nothing else. I find the majority of my stress is caused from fear of failing at worldly matters, rather than spiritual matters.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
In my everyday life, Church. I once spent a week in an orphanage in Guatemala City run by Orthodox monastic nuns. I had never felt more content in life than during that week. Nothing else seemed to matter because the energy was purely positive, even though these children had experienced more negativity in life than most Americans can even fathom. So many people see religion and spirituality as a negative part of life, but if you take humans out of it, it is only positive beliefs... we humans create the negative
For more about Anna; to listen to her music, visit: www.annazoe.com
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Monday, January 9, 2012
Erin Dunigan, Interview #158
Where you live: Baja California, Mexico
What you do as a vocation or avocation?
How long do you have? I'm an ordained Presbyterian minister, but make a living through my photography and writing, to put it simply.
Your two favorite books:
I always have a tough time with the word 'favorite.' But recently, two of my favorite reads have been 'Cutting for Stone' and 'A Fine Balance' by Rohinton Mistry.
Your two favorite songs:
Again, see above with the issue on 'favorite.' Two recent favorite albums are Tori Amos' 'Midwinter Graces' and Adele's 21.
Why you are interested in spirituality?
Why do I breathe? Because I cannot imagine much of a life without it.
Your favorite quote:
A modified version of Gandhi: Be the change you wish to see in the world.
Your favorite web sites:
Well, I know it might be silly, but I have to say Google. My dad always used to tell me, and this was way before the mainstream use of the web, that, in learning, you don't need to know it all, you just need to know where to find it. Pretty much sums it up.
Your hero?
At the moment, and I know this is going to sound a bit geeky, it is Catholic priest and Franciscan Richard Rohr. I love how he is giving voice to something that is radical (at the root) from within the tradition, but which is, at the same time, revolutionary.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
I am trying, wanting, hoping, to cultivate a deep mindfulness toward God/Spirit, creation, and 'the other.'
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
Right here in Baja. I live in a beautiful community--a phrase I mean both to describe its 'place' and its people.
Friday, January 6, 2012
Anya Cordell, Interview #157
Name: Anya Cordell
Where do you live: In my body (see below), in Illinois
What is your vocation or avocation:
My journey in this regard began as a beauty-and-fashion obsessed girl. Now, I speak, write, and present programs against the designating of any group as “Other.” I focus on the universal experience of the injustice of “appearance-ism” (appearance-based judging of ourselves and others), as a core issue to inspire everyone to combat all types of bias.
My programs for children through seniors offer practical strategies for bridging divides of religion and ethnicity and for crossing into one another’s lives. I address teasing, bullying, stereotyping, age-ism, racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, homophobia, and discounting associated with age or health-related challenges.
Following 9/11, 2001, although I’m Jewish, I reached out to Sikh, Hindu and Muslim families I did not know, and founded “The Campaign for Collateral Compassion” to raise awareness of the backlash and the murders of innocent members of these groups. In the decade since I have worked passionately around xenophobia and seek connections with others who share this concern.
I am a recipient of the 2010 Spirit of Anne Frank Award and also the author and illustrator of RACE: An OPEN & SHUT Case, a double-sided parable, for kids to adults, which unravels traditional presumptions of what we call “race,” named among the“books to change your life” by N’Digo Magazine.
My widely acclaimed piece, “Where the Anti-Muslim Path Leads”, was recommended by Nicholas Kristof of the NewYork Times, Queen Noor of Jordan, and Eboo Patel of the Interfaith Youth Core, and named among “the best sites to help teach about 9/11.” Comments included: "Should be mandatory reading today in schools," and "This author really nails this…The next Anne Frank hiding in an attic in Amsterdam will be wearing a hijab…and it won’t be from a foreign invading army, but from the locals."
A primary aspect of my work is combating teasing and bullying in schools. A particularly poignant comment was whispered to me by a student following a presentation, “Thank you for your program; I’m Muslim, but no one here knows it,” exemplifying the danger of the very chilling climate we are in, when students and others feel they must “pass” in order to be safe.
My programs emphasize how we are influenced by the media to adopt not just fashions, but fashionable attitudes. I demonstrate how, historically,“just because many people scream something does not make it true,” and how “it is not a crime to be born into any ethnicity, color, configuration, or religion”, though it has sometimes been treated, horrifically, as if it is.
Through sharing my personal issues with appearance-ism, and evoking our common longing for a world in which we all feel safe and valued “as-is,” I discovered a touchstone for us all to imagine a world in which everyone claims their own worth and recognizes the worth of others.
I emphasize the extreme importance of being an ally for others, even outside one’s own group, religion, ethnicity, etc., and for crossing into one another'slives and living rooms, even crossing the lunchroom!
I share practical strategies and effective initiatives for such alliance building, as well as concrete ways to find our strong voices, and become anti-bias allies, and I seek opportunities to network and co-create with others working to heal our world, together. Please see www.Appearance-ism.com
Your two Favorite books (+one):
The Diary of Anne Frank, from which I’ve been so deeply inspired by the heroic non-Jewish supporters who at mortal risk sustained Anne’s family in hiding. It was a particular honor to receive the Spirit of Anne Frank Award for my work.
Also, Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Century Poetry of Witness by Carolyn Forché ; an extraordinary compilation—so sad, yet so important, to read.
And Healing Into Life and Death, by Stephen Levine, which sustains me in times of travail.
Your two favorite songs:
Anthem and Hallelujah, both by Leonard Cohen
Why are you interested in spirituality?:
My sense of spirituality feels deep and personal to me; not codified or articulated in a single expression.
Your favorite quote:
(from Anthem, by Leonard Cohen):
“Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.”
Your favorite websites: It may sound odd as a ‘favorite,’ but I visit and refer people to www.IslamophobiaToday.com all the time, because it serves what I believe is an essential function in today’s chilling climate; culling, compiling and commenting on the dangerous and wholesale smears, stereotyping and scapegoating of all Muslims today. And Facebook, to check in, daily, on an array of phenomenal organizations, doing extraordinary and necessary work in the world.
Who is your hero:
My heroes are those who have crossed gulfs and divides to ally on behalf of groups other than their own, and who have worked to heal seemingly intractable and polarized positions: Anne Frank’s non-Jewish sustainers, described above, especially Miep Gies. People whose names we’ll never know, who have risen to extreme levels of courage and compassion and have stood for justice. Nelson Mandela, who kept South Africa from a bloodbath of retribution after the end of apartheid. Desmond Tutu, who presided over the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Gandhi. Martin Luther King. Currently, Kathy Kelly, of Voices for Creative Non-Violence (www.vcnv.org), the founders of the Iraqi Student Project (www.IraqiStudentProject.org) and Rais Bhuiyan, (www.WorldWithoutHate.org), among extraordinary activists I’m honored to count among my friends.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn:
So much of my story has grown out of the everyday reality of “living life in a body.” I’ve learned my deepest spiritual lessons thus far from relationships and these issues of appearance, and “appearance-ism,” from ‘intuitively’ (for want of a better word) felt knowings, and from aging and health challenges.
Life seems to bring the big ‘spiritual’lessons—not necessarily sought. I seek to be patient and willing to open to them, even when that requires re-evaluation of closely held views, or difficult change from what feels habitual.
Where do you feel spiritually connected:
The moment I first set foot on the ground of Cape Town, South Africa, (to present at the 1999 Parliament of the World’s Religions), I felt I was “home”, as if Africa really was the “birthplace” I knew in my bones. This overtook me, totally unexpectedly.
I feel it when I float in, or drop into, the dimension of creating art and witnessing the creation of others (mostly at Open Studio Project in Evanston, IL www.OpenStudioProject.org ) and through conscious dance, mostly at Five Rhythms workshops (www.GabrielleRoth.com )
Otherwise, I feel most spiritually connected when I’m in diverse settings, experiencing people expressing their deep truths, in whatever form that takes; art, narrative,work, play. I feel this, annually, in my own living room, for our yearly “sharing party” to which we invite diverse friends, new and old, to share music, stories, poetry, work-in-progress, play-in-progress, whatever…and have the huge honor of people sharing their‘souls,’ in the heart of our home.
Anya's recent article: Muslims and Lowes Are Both Integral To Our Society
Where do you live: In my body (see below), in Illinois
What is your vocation or avocation:
My journey in this regard began as a beauty-and-fashion obsessed girl. Now, I speak, write, and present programs against the designating of any group as “Other.” I focus on the universal experience of the injustice of “appearance-ism” (appearance-based judging of ourselves and others), as a core issue to inspire everyone to combat all types of bias.
My programs for children through seniors offer practical strategies for bridging divides of religion and ethnicity and for crossing into one another’s lives. I address teasing, bullying, stereotyping, age-ism, racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, homophobia, and discounting associated with age or health-related challenges.
Following 9/11, 2001, although I’m Jewish, I reached out to Sikh, Hindu and Muslim families I did not know, and founded “The Campaign for Collateral Compassion” to raise awareness of the backlash and the murders of innocent members of these groups. In the decade since I have worked passionately around xenophobia and seek connections with others who share this concern.
I am a recipient of the 2010 Spirit of Anne Frank Award and also the author and illustrator of RACE: An OPEN & SHUT Case, a double-sided parable, for kids to adults, which unravels traditional presumptions of what we call “race,” named among the“books to change your life” by N’Digo Magazine.
My widely acclaimed piece, “Where the Anti-Muslim Path Leads”, was recommended by Nicholas Kristof of the NewYork Times, Queen Noor of Jordan, and Eboo Patel of the Interfaith Youth Core, and named among “the best sites to help teach about 9/11.” Comments included: "Should be mandatory reading today in schools," and "This author really nails this…The next Anne Frank hiding in an attic in Amsterdam will be wearing a hijab…and it won’t be from a foreign invading army, but from the locals."
A primary aspect of my work is combating teasing and bullying in schools. A particularly poignant comment was whispered to me by a student following a presentation, “Thank you for your program; I’m Muslim, but no one here knows it,” exemplifying the danger of the very chilling climate we are in, when students and others feel they must “pass” in order to be safe.
My programs emphasize how we are influenced by the media to adopt not just fashions, but fashionable attitudes. I demonstrate how, historically,“just because many people scream something does not make it true,” and how “it is not a crime to be born into any ethnicity, color, configuration, or religion”, though it has sometimes been treated, horrifically, as if it is.
Through sharing my personal issues with appearance-ism, and evoking our common longing for a world in which we all feel safe and valued “as-is,” I discovered a touchstone for us all to imagine a world in which everyone claims their own worth and recognizes the worth of others.
I emphasize the extreme importance of being an ally for others, even outside one’s own group, religion, ethnicity, etc., and for crossing into one another'slives and living rooms, even crossing the lunchroom!
I share practical strategies and effective initiatives for such alliance building, as well as concrete ways to find our strong voices, and become anti-bias allies, and I seek opportunities to network and co-create with others working to heal our world, together. Please see www.Appearance-ism.com
Your two Favorite books (+one):
The Diary of Anne Frank, from which I’ve been so deeply inspired by the heroic non-Jewish supporters who at mortal risk sustained Anne’s family in hiding. It was a particular honor to receive the Spirit of Anne Frank Award for my work.
Also, Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Century Poetry of Witness by Carolyn Forché ; an extraordinary compilation—so sad, yet so important, to read.
And Healing Into Life and Death, by Stephen Levine, which sustains me in times of travail.
Your two favorite songs:
Anthem and Hallelujah, both by Leonard Cohen
Why are you interested in spirituality?:
My sense of spirituality feels deep and personal to me; not codified or articulated in a single expression.
Your favorite quote:
(from Anthem, by Leonard Cohen):
“Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.”
Your favorite websites: It may sound odd as a ‘favorite,’ but I visit and refer people to www.IslamophobiaToday.com all the time, because it serves what I believe is an essential function in today’s chilling climate; culling, compiling and commenting on the dangerous and wholesale smears, stereotyping and scapegoating of all Muslims today. And Facebook, to check in, daily, on an array of phenomenal organizations, doing extraordinary and necessary work in the world.
Who is your hero:
My heroes are those who have crossed gulfs and divides to ally on behalf of groups other than their own, and who have worked to heal seemingly intractable and polarized positions: Anne Frank’s non-Jewish sustainers, described above, especially Miep Gies. People whose names we’ll never know, who have risen to extreme levels of courage and compassion and have stood for justice. Nelson Mandela, who kept South Africa from a bloodbath of retribution after the end of apartheid. Desmond Tutu, who presided over the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Gandhi. Martin Luther King. Currently, Kathy Kelly, of Voices for Creative Non-Violence (www.vcnv.org), the founders of the Iraqi Student Project (www.IraqiStudentProject.org) and Rais Bhuiyan, (www.WorldWithoutHate.org), among extraordinary activists I’m honored to count among my friends.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn:
So much of my story has grown out of the everyday reality of “living life in a body.” I’ve learned my deepest spiritual lessons thus far from relationships and these issues of appearance, and “appearance-ism,” from ‘intuitively’ (for want of a better word) felt knowings, and from aging and health challenges.
Life seems to bring the big ‘spiritual’lessons—not necessarily sought. I seek to be patient and willing to open to them, even when that requires re-evaluation of closely held views, or difficult change from what feels habitual.
Where do you feel spiritually connected:
The moment I first set foot on the ground of Cape Town, South Africa, (to present at the 1999 Parliament of the World’s Religions), I felt I was “home”, as if Africa really was the “birthplace” I knew in my bones. This overtook me, totally unexpectedly.
I feel it when I float in, or drop into, the dimension of creating art and witnessing the creation of others (mostly at Open Studio Project in Evanston, IL www.OpenStudioProject.org ) and through conscious dance, mostly at Five Rhythms workshops (www.GabrielleRoth.com )
Otherwise, I feel most spiritually connected when I’m in diverse settings, experiencing people expressing their deep truths, in whatever form that takes; art, narrative,work, play. I feel this, annually, in my own living room, for our yearly “sharing party” to which we invite diverse friends, new and old, to share music, stories, poetry, work-in-progress, play-in-progress, whatever…and have the huge honor of people sharing their‘souls,’ in the heart of our home.
Anya's recent article: Muslims and Lowes Are Both Integral To Our Society
Friday, December 2, 2011
Phil Torcivia, Interview # 156
Name: Phil Torcivia
Where you live: San Diego, CA
What you do as a vocation or avocation? Write humorous books about relationships, both for work and fun.
Your two favorite books:
Women by Charles Bukowski, The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
Your two favorite songs:
Great Gig in the Sky by Pink Floyd, Silent Lucidity by Queensryche
Why you are interested in spirituality?
Superstition is fascinating. I wonder how religious types maintain their beliefs when their “God-given” senses provide evidence contradicting many of them. Either their Gods are cruel or are intentionally distracting and misleading them. It’s interesting how similar the Jesus myth is to earlier Greek/Pagan myths. I’m curious how religion explains dinosaurs and the many-million-year gap between them and man. Still, as children need the Santa threat to behave, some adults need the eternal damnation threat to behave. I’m OK with that.
Your favorite quote: A man has got to know his own limitations. – Clint Eastwood
Your favorite web sites: Amazon, Facebook, Twitter
Your hero? Jeff Bezos
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
Religion and spirituality are both necessary to give some people hope and meaning to their lives. I can respect it without subscribing to it and find happiness without it.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
Museums. They provide evidence that religious types can’t truly reconcile with their beliefs. Life has evolved in such fascinating ways.
Where you live: San Diego, CA
What you do as a vocation or avocation? Write humorous books about relationships, both for work and fun.
Your two favorite books:
Women by Charles Bukowski, The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
Your two favorite songs:
Great Gig in the Sky by Pink Floyd, Silent Lucidity by Queensryche
Why you are interested in spirituality?
Superstition is fascinating. I wonder how religious types maintain their beliefs when their “God-given” senses provide evidence contradicting many of them. Either their Gods are cruel or are intentionally distracting and misleading them. It’s interesting how similar the Jesus myth is to earlier Greek/Pagan myths. I’m curious how religion explains dinosaurs and the many-million-year gap between them and man. Still, as children need the Santa threat to behave, some adults need the eternal damnation threat to behave. I’m OK with that.
Your favorite quote: A man has got to know his own limitations. – Clint Eastwood
Your favorite web sites: Amazon, Facebook, Twitter
Your hero? Jeff Bezos
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
Religion and spirituality are both necessary to give some people hope and meaning to their lives. I can respect it without subscribing to it and find happiness without it.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
Museums. They provide evidence that religious types can’t truly reconcile with their beliefs. Life has evolved in such fascinating ways.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Cash Peters, Interview #155
Name: Cash Peters
Where you live: Los Angeles, California
What you do as a vocation or avocation?
I write travel and spirituality books - my latest is A Little Book About Believing: The Transformative Healing Power of Faith, Love, and Surrender'- and have been in radio and TV for years, broadcasting on public radio in the US and the BBC in Britain. That has been my bread and butter since I was in my teens.
But I also have a gift for handwriting analysis, so that would be my avocation, although it's taking up a huge amount of my time these days.
I never studied handwriting, I could just do it. It's a form of channeling, I'm told, and goes very deep. I can stare at a piece of writing and, in seconds, effortlessly, make a connection with the person's soul, often feeling what they feel, understanding why they are as they are, where they hurt, where their own gifts are. It's mind-blowing to people, how I'm able to link their handwriting to their spiritual development. It's all about energy, of course. That's what I seem to be picking up. Then then played a part in my spiritual writing. I became a contributor to Spirituality & Health magazine, and then wrote the 'Believing' book, which combines travel to Brazil with a full-immersion experience in a healing retreat there, which was like a spiritual car-wash for the spirit. It revolutionized my life. Absolutely amazing.
Your two favorite books:
The Seat of the Soul, by Gary Zukav, and I Had It All The Time, by Alan Cohen. But anything by Alan Cohen, Caroline Myss, or Stuart Wilde really. They are true masters of connection, stirring the human heart and spirit. I never grow tired of hearing their take on life.
Your two favorite songs:
Vincent by Don McLean and I Vow To Thee, My Country by Cecil Spring-Rice, set to music by Gustav Holst to part of his Jupiter Suite. I want both played at my funeral, I don't care in which order.
Why you are interested in spirituality?
I don't see myself as having any choice, any more than I choose to breathe air. Everything up to the point of accepting our spirituality is denial of self, and a disconnect. The only way to live congruently, to my mind, and to be sure you're taking one positive step after another is to accept your nature as an eternal being cloaked in mortal flesh and bone, and to have faith and trust that this connection to divine consciousness will sustain you through periods of challenge and doubt. I'm always shocked when people view the world in terms of only what they can see or touch, or they rely on drugs, surgery, and medication to treat the body when they become seriously ill. In other words, they're looking to the external rather than the eternal to resolve their issues, when it's so obvious that the true answers lie on the inside. As I say in my book, you heal from the inside out, not the outside in.
I met a very famous Hollywood actor recently. He'd read A Little Book About Believing and loved it, so he asked if he could take me to lunch. I was understandably a little nervous. I've seen him in movies and thought I might be tongue-tied. But everything was very relaxed. It turns out that he's sick with the late stages of cancer and desperately looking for an answer. In order to heal, he's throwing everything but the kitchen sink at the problem. Non-stop treatment, drugs, doctor visits, clinics, spas, the works. As we sat there eating and chatting, I could almost hear his soul screaming for mercy. The answer was so obvious to me - look within. Stop trying so hard. Quit looking for answers 'out there' somewhere, and instead ask spirit, in stillness and total faith, "What have I done to my body to bring on this cancer? What is my body trying to tell me? What do I need to stop doing in order to help restore balance and harmony to my system?"
I fully believe that this is the road to healing and wellness, not endless treatment, or fighting the disease, which often only makes things worse. Why does everything have to be about struggle, combat, fighting back? Whatever happened to good nutrition, rest, harmony, clean air, a joyful heart. Sound simplistic, but I believe it works.
My parents were rookie Christian Scientists, which is all about healing the body in spiritual ways, but I was unable to embrace any one religion. As a travel writer and TV host on the Travel Channel for my series Stranded, I got to have adventures all over the world, and the more I met different cultures, the more I realized that a religion is just a set of convenient assumptions based on available evidence, then perpetuated by fear and doubt, whereas spirituality knows no such rules and boundaries and promotes reliance on self, as well as trust in the Divine.
Your favorite quote:
"You don't get what you want in life, you get what you are." Dr. Wayne Dyer. Deep and brilliant and so true.
Your favorite web sites:
Anything that provides material nourishing to the soul and which furthers togetherness rather than division. So www.Patheos.com is right there at the top. You could get lost for days in that thing.
Your hero?
I don't do hero worship. I tend not to idolize, and never have, though I can respect astonishing visionaries who inspire us - Caroline Myss, Steve Jobs - and those who believe in something with the utmost conviction and go do it, proving to the doubters what's possible: Mahatma Gandhi, Richard Branson, J.K. Rowling....anyone who brushed the naysayers aside and pursued their vision to success.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
Is relaxation a spiritual lesson? I've always had a high metabolism matched, somewhat perversely, with an inner quiet, which is an odd combo. So although I do yoga and meditate often, in between times I do find it hard not to gush and enthuse and participate and express joy. It's my natural way, even if I think it can sometimes be wearing on people around me. You certainly know when I'm in the room, that's for sure! So calmness, I'd say. Repose. Balance.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
Oh, Brazil definitely. When I got off the plane in Rio de Janeiro that first time, I felt a rush of adrenaline but also peace like I'd never felt before. And after I'd spent two weeks with John of God, receiving treatment, I was an entirely different person. My world has not been the same since. If ever there was a time when I fully understood my connection with the Divine, it was in Brazil.
Editor's Note: To learn more about Cash Peters, go to www.cashpeters.com
--
Where you live: Los Angeles, California
What you do as a vocation or avocation?
I write travel and spirituality books - my latest is A Little Book About Believing: The Transformative Healing Power of Faith, Love, and Surrender'- and have been in radio and TV for years, broadcasting on public radio in the US and the BBC in Britain. That has been my bread and butter since I was in my teens.
But I also have a gift for handwriting analysis, so that would be my avocation, although it's taking up a huge amount of my time these days.
I never studied handwriting, I could just do it. It's a form of channeling, I'm told, and goes very deep. I can stare at a piece of writing and, in seconds, effortlessly, make a connection with the person's soul, often feeling what they feel, understanding why they are as they are, where they hurt, where their own gifts are. It's mind-blowing to people, how I'm able to link their handwriting to their spiritual development. It's all about energy, of course. That's what I seem to be picking up. Then then played a part in my spiritual writing. I became a contributor to Spirituality & Health magazine, and then wrote the 'Believing' book, which combines travel to Brazil with a full-immersion experience in a healing retreat there, which was like a spiritual car-wash for the spirit. It revolutionized my life. Absolutely amazing.
Your two favorite books:
The Seat of the Soul, by Gary Zukav, and I Had It All The Time, by Alan Cohen. But anything by Alan Cohen, Caroline Myss, or Stuart Wilde really. They are true masters of connection, stirring the human heart and spirit. I never grow tired of hearing their take on life.
Your two favorite songs:
Vincent by Don McLean and I Vow To Thee, My Country by Cecil Spring-Rice, set to music by Gustav Holst to part of his Jupiter Suite. I want both played at my funeral, I don't care in which order.
Why you are interested in spirituality?
I don't see myself as having any choice, any more than I choose to breathe air. Everything up to the point of accepting our spirituality is denial of self, and a disconnect. The only way to live congruently, to my mind, and to be sure you're taking one positive step after another is to accept your nature as an eternal being cloaked in mortal flesh and bone, and to have faith and trust that this connection to divine consciousness will sustain you through periods of challenge and doubt. I'm always shocked when people view the world in terms of only what they can see or touch, or they rely on drugs, surgery, and medication to treat the body when they become seriously ill. In other words, they're looking to the external rather than the eternal to resolve their issues, when it's so obvious that the true answers lie on the inside. As I say in my book, you heal from the inside out, not the outside in.
I met a very famous Hollywood actor recently. He'd read A Little Book About Believing and loved it, so he asked if he could take me to lunch. I was understandably a little nervous. I've seen him in movies and thought I might be tongue-tied. But everything was very relaxed. It turns out that he's sick with the late stages of cancer and desperately looking for an answer. In order to heal, he's throwing everything but the kitchen sink at the problem. Non-stop treatment, drugs, doctor visits, clinics, spas, the works. As we sat there eating and chatting, I could almost hear his soul screaming for mercy. The answer was so obvious to me - look within. Stop trying so hard. Quit looking for answers 'out there' somewhere, and instead ask spirit, in stillness and total faith, "What have I done to my body to bring on this cancer? What is my body trying to tell me? What do I need to stop doing in order to help restore balance and harmony to my system?"
I fully believe that this is the road to healing and wellness, not endless treatment, or fighting the disease, which often only makes things worse. Why does everything have to be about struggle, combat, fighting back? Whatever happened to good nutrition, rest, harmony, clean air, a joyful heart. Sound simplistic, but I believe it works.
My parents were rookie Christian Scientists, which is all about healing the body in spiritual ways, but I was unable to embrace any one religion. As a travel writer and TV host on the Travel Channel for my series Stranded, I got to have adventures all over the world, and the more I met different cultures, the more I realized that a religion is just a set of convenient assumptions based on available evidence, then perpetuated by fear and doubt, whereas spirituality knows no such rules and boundaries and promotes reliance on self, as well as trust in the Divine.
Your favorite quote:
"You don't get what you want in life, you get what you are." Dr. Wayne Dyer. Deep and brilliant and so true.
Your favorite web sites:
Anything that provides material nourishing to the soul and which furthers togetherness rather than division. So www.Patheos.com is right there at the top. You could get lost for days in that thing.
Your hero?
I don't do hero worship. I tend not to idolize, and never have, though I can respect astonishing visionaries who inspire us - Caroline Myss, Steve Jobs - and those who believe in something with the utmost conviction and go do it, proving to the doubters what's possible: Mahatma Gandhi, Richard Branson, J.K. Rowling....anyone who brushed the naysayers aside and pursued their vision to success.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
Is relaxation a spiritual lesson? I've always had a high metabolism matched, somewhat perversely, with an inner quiet, which is an odd combo. So although I do yoga and meditate often, in between times I do find it hard not to gush and enthuse and participate and express joy. It's my natural way, even if I think it can sometimes be wearing on people around me. You certainly know when I'm in the room, that's for sure! So calmness, I'd say. Repose. Balance.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
Oh, Brazil definitely. When I got off the plane in Rio de Janeiro that first time, I felt a rush of adrenaline but also peace like I'd never felt before. And after I'd spent two weeks with John of God, receiving treatment, I was an entirely different person. My world has not been the same since. If ever there was a time when I fully understood my connection with the Divine, it was in Brazil.
Editor's Note: To learn more about Cash Peters, go to www.cashpeters.com
--
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Elizabeth Myer Boulton, Interview #154
Name: Rev. Elizabeth Myer Boulton
Where you live: Indianapolis, Indiana
What you do as a vocation or avocation?I am President and Creative Director over at the SALT Project, Inc. We’re a small, not-for-profit production company dedicated to creating beautiful, devotional resources for small groups, congregations, and individuals!
Your two favorite books:
Guess How Much I Love You, Sam McBratney and Anita Jeram
The Nativity, Julie Vivas
Your two favorite songs:
My first favorite song was written by my husband, Matthew Myer Boulton, and is entitled, "Great and Small."
There's an amazing collection of Jewish Hasidic folk-tales entitled, "Tales of the Hasidim Later Masters." And in that collection, there's a wonderful little gem that has always stuck with my husband, so he decided to write a song about it.
Here's the gem:
"Rabbi Bunim taught: Every person should have two pockets. In one pocket should be a piece of paper saying: 'I am but dust and ashes' (Genesis 18:27). When one is feeling too proud, reach into this pocket and take out this paper and read it. In the other pocket should be a piece of paper saying: 'For my sake was the world created' (Talmud: Sanhedrin 38a). When one is feeling disheartened and lowly, reach into this pocket and take this paper out and read it."
From my point of view, this is the perfect life lesson for all of us (from 2 to 92!), and it vividly evokes what it's like to live a religious life: always evolving, tacking back and forth, endeavoring to stay both humble and courageous.
My second favorite song is “Amazing Grace” on the bagpipes -- need I say more?
Why you are interested in spirituality?
"Why spirituality and why Christianity?"
A woman at the coffee shop asked me this the other day. I was working with the scriptures, trying to craft a sermon, and out of no where came that question, "Why Christianity?"
I stumbled. I hemmed. I hawed. I wasn't elegant in the least...
So, without further adieu, I will kill two birds with one stone (so to speak!) and answer both questions at the same time:
For me, Christianity (my form of spirituality) is a poem. A beautiful and broken poem that soars to the highest heavens, but not before it slugs through the trenches of violence, shadows, betrayal, abandonment, and finally, death.
For me, life wouldn't make sense without Christianity. Without Christianity, without a God who chooses to become flesh, to become breakable; without a God who, through Christ and the church, continues to side with the poor; without a God who stands in solidarity with every victim of every hate crime; without a God who transforms, redeems, and declares in the face of death, “You will not have the final word!" - without this God, I couldn’t make it through the day, I couldn't read the paper, I couldn't bring children into the world.
I choose Christianity because, for me, the world would be a veil of tears without it. For me, this beautiful, broken poem contains life and life in abundance.
Your favorite quote:
Those who don't feel this Love pulling them like a river,
those who don't drink dawn like a cup of spring water or take in sunset like supper,
those who don't want to change, let them sleep.
Rumi
Your favorite web sites:
Etsy, Apartment Therapy, Text This Week, and SALT (I couldn’t resist!)
Your hero?
My mom!
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
How to be love, to serve well, to give to everyone who begs of me, to pick up my cross, and to follow...
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
The place I feel most spiritually “connected” is in front of a “Madonna del Latte” or "Madonna of the Milk." She’s everywhere in Italy and every time I catch a glimpse of her the whole world seems to melt away...
Back in the 14th century, artists were positively enamored with her. They painted her, carved her out of stone, prayed to her, and painted her again.
More often than not, she's either actively nursing the baby or preparing to nurse. And sometimes, Jesus is actually fighting to get inside her robes.
If you ever have the privilege of going to Sicily's national art museum in Palermo, she will be there again and again and again. Not one, not two, but twenty, maybe twenty-five renditions of Madonna del Latte.
Again and again and again: Mary, the “Theotokos” (“House of God”). Mary, figure for the Church, one of the marvelous ways in which God is letting down God’s milky love, God’s grace, God’s tenderness, God’s mercy, God’s peace, God’s healing.
In the halls of that museum, you can hear the wisdom of tradition singing across the centuries, “Come to me, all who are weak and heavy laden. Come to me if you are going through a broken relationship, battling depression, struggling with an addiction, or surviving an eating disorder. Come to the church; come and drink deeply from the grace of God. Come and see, come and pray, come and be made whole.”
Where you live: Indianapolis, Indiana
What you do as a vocation or avocation?I am President and Creative Director over at the SALT Project, Inc. We’re a small, not-for-profit production company dedicated to creating beautiful, devotional resources for small groups, congregations, and individuals!
Your two favorite books:
Guess How Much I Love You, Sam McBratney and Anita Jeram
The Nativity, Julie Vivas
Your two favorite songs:
My first favorite song was written by my husband, Matthew Myer Boulton, and is entitled, "Great and Small."
There's an amazing collection of Jewish Hasidic folk-tales entitled, "Tales of the Hasidim Later Masters." And in that collection, there's a wonderful little gem that has always stuck with my husband, so he decided to write a song about it.
Here's the gem:
"Rabbi Bunim taught: Every person should have two pockets. In one pocket should be a piece of paper saying: 'I am but dust and ashes' (Genesis 18:27). When one is feeling too proud, reach into this pocket and take out this paper and read it. In the other pocket should be a piece of paper saying: 'For my sake was the world created' (Talmud: Sanhedrin 38a). When one is feeling disheartened and lowly, reach into this pocket and take this paper out and read it."
From my point of view, this is the perfect life lesson for all of us (from 2 to 92!), and it vividly evokes what it's like to live a religious life: always evolving, tacking back and forth, endeavoring to stay both humble and courageous.
My second favorite song is “Amazing Grace” on the bagpipes -- need I say more?
Why you are interested in spirituality?
"Why spirituality and why Christianity?"
A woman at the coffee shop asked me this the other day. I was working with the scriptures, trying to craft a sermon, and out of no where came that question, "Why Christianity?"
I stumbled. I hemmed. I hawed. I wasn't elegant in the least...
So, without further adieu, I will kill two birds with one stone (so to speak!) and answer both questions at the same time:
For me, Christianity (my form of spirituality) is a poem. A beautiful and broken poem that soars to the highest heavens, but not before it slugs through the trenches of violence, shadows, betrayal, abandonment, and finally, death.
For me, life wouldn't make sense without Christianity. Without Christianity, without a God who chooses to become flesh, to become breakable; without a God who, through Christ and the church, continues to side with the poor; without a God who stands in solidarity with every victim of every hate crime; without a God who transforms, redeems, and declares in the face of death, “You will not have the final word!" - without this God, I couldn’t make it through the day, I couldn't read the paper, I couldn't bring children into the world.
I choose Christianity because, for me, the world would be a veil of tears without it. For me, this beautiful, broken poem contains life and life in abundance.
Your favorite quote:
Those who don't feel this Love pulling them like a river,
those who don't drink dawn like a cup of spring water or take in sunset like supper,
those who don't want to change, let them sleep.
Rumi
Your favorite web sites:
Etsy, Apartment Therapy, Text This Week, and SALT (I couldn’t resist!)
Your hero?
My mom!
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn?
How to be love, to serve well, to give to everyone who begs of me, to pick up my cross, and to follow...
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?"
The place I feel most spiritually “connected” is in front of a “Madonna del Latte” or "Madonna of the Milk." She’s everywhere in Italy and every time I catch a glimpse of her the whole world seems to melt away...
Back in the 14th century, artists were positively enamored with her. They painted her, carved her out of stone, prayed to her, and painted her again.
More often than not, she's either actively nursing the baby or preparing to nurse. And sometimes, Jesus is actually fighting to get inside her robes.
If you ever have the privilege of going to Sicily's national art museum in Palermo, she will be there again and again and again. Not one, not two, but twenty, maybe twenty-five renditions of Madonna del Latte.
Again and again and again: Mary, the “Theotokos” (“House of God”). Mary, figure for the Church, one of the marvelous ways in which God is letting down God’s milky love, God’s grace, God’s tenderness, God’s mercy, God’s peace, God’s healing.
In the halls of that museum, you can hear the wisdom of tradition singing across the centuries, “Come to me, all who are weak and heavy laden. Come to me if you are going through a broken relationship, battling depression, struggling with an addiction, or surviving an eating disorder. Come to the church; come and drink deeply from the grace of God. Come and see, come and pray, come and be made whole.”
Monday, October 10, 2011
Daniel Walker, Interview #153
Name: Daniel Walker
Where you live: New Zealand
What you do as a vocation or avocation? Detective and Author
What are your two favorite books? The Bible and A Wolf Story by Jes Byron Huggins
Your two favorite songs: "The Power of Love" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood and "I want to know what love is" by Foreigner.
Why you are interested in spirituality? Because I have found it to be the essence of who I am as a human being and as a man. It has allowed me to "suck the marrow" out of life without it passing me by.
Your favorite quote: "All men die one day. Not all men truly live."
Your favorite web sites: www.hagarinternational.org and www.compassion.com
Your hero? Jesus is my hero, because he seems to me to be the most "unreligious" person who ever lived and was yet the most fully alive human being who ever lived. I love it that it was the "religious" people he upset the most and who ultimately wanted him dead.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn? I hope to learn how to love more fully and become more fully alive, even as my body ages and decays.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?" New Zealand has so many beautiful places where I have felt "connected" and for that we are very spoilt.
Where you live: New Zealand
What you do as a vocation or avocation? Detective and Author
What are your two favorite books? The Bible and A Wolf Story by Jes Byron Huggins
Your two favorite songs: "The Power of Love" by Frankie Goes to Hollywood and "I want to know what love is" by Foreigner.
Why you are interested in spirituality? Because I have found it to be the essence of who I am as a human being and as a man. It has allowed me to "suck the marrow" out of life without it passing me by.
Your favorite quote: "All men die one day. Not all men truly live."
Your favorite web sites: www.hagarinternational.org and www.compassion.com
Your hero? Jesus is my hero, because he seems to me to be the most "unreligious" person who ever lived and was yet the most fully alive human being who ever lived. I love it that it was the "religious" people he upset the most and who ultimately wanted him dead.
A spiritual lesson you hope to learn? I hope to learn how to love more fully and become more fully alive, even as my body ages and decays.
A place in the world where you feel spiritually "connected?" New Zealand has so many beautiful places where I have felt "connected" and for that we are very spoilt.
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