liberation
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The Ancient Cross-Cultural Anatomy of the Human Soul
From the Egyptian Heart to the Hebrew Lev 🤍 Throughout history, cultures separated by deserts, seas, and centuries described something remarkably similar: the inner landscape of a human being. Long before psychology existed as a formal discipline, ancient civilizations were… Continue reading
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🌿 The Tree in the Midst: Awakening Consciousness in the Garden
Sometimes the deeper meaning of a story doesn’t appear until we slow down and look at the language itself. Recently I found myself doing exactly that with the Genesis garden narrative—sitting with the Hebrew words, tracing their roots, and letting… Continue reading
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When Truth Speaks in Many Tongues
On the Paradox of the Perennial Philosophy There is a quiet realization that begins to dawn when one studies the mystical threads running through the world’s spiritual traditions. 🤍 Not the institutions.Not the doctrines.Not the theological arguments that divide camps… Continue reading
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When the Cactus Bloomed 🌺🤍🌒
A meditation on patience, perception, and quiet trust This morning nothing changed — and yet everything did. ✨ The cats wrestled in their usual tumble of fur and tail.The sitar and tabla hummed softly through the room.The rocking chair creaked… Continue reading
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Abandoning the Theology of Suffering
There was a time when I believed that suffering made me sacred.That enduring pain was proof of my devotion.That if I could just love enough, stay long enough, endure quietly enough — something holy would be born from it. But… Continue reading
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The Soul is Spacious Enough
Individuation and the Architecture of the Inner World “The soul becomes spacious enough to host divine life without annihilating its particularity.” There is a persistent misunderstanding in modern spirituality: the belief that contact with the transpersonal requires the diminishment of… Continue reading
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🌿 Thankfulness for the Selves That Carried Me Here 🌿
There is a quiet misunderstanding that often slips into spiritual growth. We imagine that awakening means shedding our past like an old skin — that to become who we are now, we must distance ourselves from who we were. We… Continue reading
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The Mercy of Seeing: Jung, Yeshua, and the Shape of Healing 🤍
There was a moment — quiet, almost ordinary — when I realized that understanding someone’s wounds did not make me responsible for carrying them. I was sitting with the familiar ache that follows an old pattern of over-explaining another person’s… Continue reading
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🏛️ The Myth That Keeps Rebuilding Itself
New Templar States, New Jerusalems, New Atlantean Dreams There is a myth that refuses to stay buried. It rises under different names, different flags, different gods — but it always carries the same promise: A purified world.A restored order.A people… Continue reading
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Ke-tu-rah 🌬️Life as Fragrance Now
Most people meet Keturah only as a footnote. Abraham’s other wife.After Sarah.After the covenant.After the drama. She’s treated like an appendix to a life already lived. But names tell the truth scripture often hides. Ke-tu-rah means incense.Fragrance.Smoke rising.Scent without form.… Continue reading









