mental-health

  • From Covenant to Consciousness

    On the Evolution of the Divine Image ✨📜🕯️ There comes a moment on any sincere spiritual path when the old questions no longer suffice. Not “What does this text say?”But “What kind of consciousness does this text arise from?”And perhaps… Continue reading

    From Covenant to Consciousness
  • 🌅 A Blessing for the First Day

    New Year’s Day is not loud. It doesn’t demand resolutions or declarations or a polished vision board. It arrives softly, like light finding the edge of a window. It asks only that we notice we are still here. Today is… Continue reading

    🌅 A Blessing for the First Day
  • 🎆 New Year’s Eve: Between the Last Spark and the First Breath

    There is something tender about New Year’s Eve.Not loud—despite the fireworks.Not frantic—despite the countdowns. It’s a liminal night. A pause between exhale and inhale.The year behind us still humming in our bones, the year ahead not yet asking anything of… Continue reading

    🎆 New Year’s Eve: Between the Last Spark and the First Breath
  • 🌿 Smoke, Science, and Sacred Responsibility

    Rethinking Smudging in an Ethical, Earth-Honoring Way For many of us, smoke has always felt like a threshold—a visible prayer, a breath made tangible, a way of clearing not just a room, but a field. Smudging, most commonly associated with… Continue reading

    🌿 Smoke, Science, and Sacred Responsibility
  • We Survived the Year. That Counts as a Miracle.

    🕯️ Sacred Snark Sunday: End of the Year Edition If you are reading this, congratulations.You made it. Not thriving, not ascending, not manifesting your highest timeline with perfect posture — just here. Breathing. Still listening. Still feeling. Still questioning. And… Continue reading

    We Survived the Year. That Counts as a Miracle.
  • Historical Mirrors: Hannah Arendt — Thinking as a Moral Act 🕯️🧠

    Some figures in history don’t descend into the depths of the psyche through visions or dreams — they arrive there through thinking. Not abstract thinking. Not cleverness. But the kind of thinking that refuses numbness, refuses slogans, and refuses the… Continue reading

    Historical Mirrors: Hannah Arendt — Thinking as a Moral Act 🕯️🧠
  • 🎄 Thirsty for Truth Thursday

    Christmas Day: Making Room for What’s Real There’s something about Christmas that slows time—if only for a moment. Even in the busyness, even in the noise, there’s often a pause. A breath. A remembering. We return, year after year, to… Continue reading

    🎄 Thirsty for Truth Thursday
  • ✨ The Hopes and Fears of All the Years ✨

    (Listening more closely this Christmas) I was listening to old Christmas songs today—the oldies, the ones that have lived in the background of a thousand Decembers—and something stopped me cold. A single line. From O Little Town of Bethlehem: “The… Continue reading

    ✨ The Hopes and Fears of All the Years ✨
  • ✨🕯️Sacred Counterparts: Marguerite Porete & Jakob Böhme 🔥🌑

    There are mystics who speak about God.And then there are mystics who speak from inside the rupture where language fails. Marguerite Porete and Jakob Böhme never met, never read one another, and never belonged to the same spiritual moment —… Continue reading

    ✨🕯️Sacred Counterparts: Marguerite Porete & Jakob Böhme 🔥🌑
  • Mythic Mondays: Odin: The Masculine Who Kneels to Know 🐦‍⬛🗝️

    When we speak of the masculine in myth, we’re often handed a narrow script: conquest, dominance, certainty, the hero who never doubts. But Odin—the All-Father, the Wanderer, the one-eyed god of wisdom—fractures that story completely. Odin is not powerful because… Continue reading

    Mythic Mondays: Odin: The Masculine Who Kneels to Know 🐦‍⬛🗝️