Ruminations: Support
When we explore big, deep topics like “Liberating Love,” it might be tempting to want someone to define it in a way that we can get our arms around.
When we explore big, deep topics like “Liberating Love,” it might be tempting to want someone to define it in a way that we can get our arms around.
When we explore big, deep topics like “Liberating Love,” it might be tempting to want someone to define it in a way that we can get our arms around.
When we explore big, deep topics like “Liberating Love,” it might be tempting to want someone to define it in a way that we can get our arms around.
When we explore big, deep topics like “Liberating Love,” it might be tempting to want someone to define it in a way that we can get our arms around.
Maybe our values serve the purpose of defining liberating love in the practical reality of our lives.
When we explore big, deep topics like “Liberating Love,” it might be tempting to want someone to define it in a way that we can get our arms around.
what would it be like to co-create a community committed in solidarity to specific practices that flow from a common, intentional, future-focused mindset?
Our guiding principles can become surface level assertions, detached from spiritual depth, if we fail to recognize that they lead us somewhere.
For some of us, the holidays make the prospect of being fully present feel more difficult somehow.
Some of the insights I shared last Sunday were adapted from a book by Deb Dana entitled Anchored: How to Befriend Your Nervous System Using Polyvagal Theory. The Lay Pastoral … Continue reading Ruminations: Anchored