Tag Archives: Spiritual

The Unshakeable Road to Love Blitz

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(VALUE-CENTERED RELATIONSHIPS)

 

Spiritual, Self Help, Relationships / Zen

Date Published: October 15, 2022

Build your relationships upon an Unshakeable Foundation, based upon Eternal
Principles of Real Love.

Based upon the teachings of All World Scriptures, including Zen, the book
explores the difference between Real and Counterfeit Love. As we do, it is
easy to see that all suffering in relationships is due to being caught in
the trap of Counterfeit Love.

This is a Book of Practice, which provides many insights, exercises,
turning points and interventions, so we can apply the powerful principles in
all our relationships.

As we do, pain, upset and conflict dissolve on the spot.

About the Author

Brenda Shoshanna

Brenda is a psychologist, author, speaker, playwright and long term
practitioner of Zen.

Her work focuses upon integrating the practices and principles of East and
West and making them real in our everyday lives.

Brenda offers on going Zen talks for the Morningstar Zen community, founded
by Fr. Robert Kennedy, Roshi. She has spent many years involved in
Interfaith work and dialogue. She also offered talks on Zen and Psychology
at the New York Zendo for eight years.

For the past four years Brenda has presented a weekly podcast, Zen Wisdom
For Your Everyday Life. Over the years she has provided many talks ad
workshops dealing with personal and spiritual development and living an
authentic, meaningful life.

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Website

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The House Virtual Book Tour

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Nonfiction, Self-Love, Self-Help, Empowerment, Spiritual, Reinventing

 

 

Release Date: 8/8/21

 

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In a time of emotional upheaval, change, and uncertainty, The House offers us a story of hope, with new and empowering perspectives. This two-part awakening journey speaks to the wounded child, left to believe they were anything less than pure magic, who lives within all of us.

As we learn how to open ourselves up to divine grace, to embrace our shadows, and see life’s challenges as opportunities for growth, only then can we gain the keys needed to free ourselves from our self-imposed prison of limiting beliefs.

By helping one go within ‘The House,’ to see all that has been stored, hidden, and cast aside there, one can discover their brilliant truth. By going within, we find what lies at the core of the human experience: compassion, forgiveness, and love.

In this pivotal time of restructuring on a global level, as we strive to create a New World, with a solid foundation based upon peace and harmony, we need to begin with ourselves first.

With joyful surrender, courage, and trust in the process, our vision that truly anything is possible will become clear.

The House tablet

 

EXCERPT

As the family begins to create their new world according to the child’s desire, by planting the good  seeds of positivity and hope, they unknowingly plant  the bad seeds alongside, for they are one in the same.  The child is the seed, you see…  

They intend to create a world of unconditional love, however, since everything ‘bad’ has been locked away,  it is blocking the ‘good’ from fully rooting. The child  doesn’t know that to grow your own Heaven on the Earth, the good must be able to wrap its arms around  the bad, through forgiveness.” 

About the Author

Dr. Melissa Crane

Dr. Melissa Crane has committed herself to a path of self-discovery and spiritual awakening. She willfully shares the wisdom she has gained and received, through her personal experiences and divinely channeled messages, with those who also seek to discover, remember, and awaken to the truth of who they are.

As a Holistic Chiropractor and Massage Therapist, Melissa has spent countless hours supporting and helping her clients heal through physical and emotional trauma.

Melissa now shares her wisdom and experience through teaching the sacred union of feminine, masculine and the child within; through traversing the dark night of the soul; by expounding the wisdom of Mother Earth; and by teaching you how to connect with Spirit.

Melissa serves as a Wayshower, a Teacher, a Healer, and a Guide to help you live a life of freedom and authenticity, and to assist you in co-creating your Heaven upon this New Earth.

Contact Links 

Website

Instagram: @melissa.a.crane & Clubhouse: @macranedc 

 

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Stumbling Toward God Tour

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A Prodigal’s Return, 2nd ed.
Spiritual/Religious
Date Published: March 11, 2020
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STUMBLING TOWARD GOD traces a woman’s spiritual search with an unusual twist – from an “atheist who prays” to unorthodox membership in two contrasting churches: Unitarian and Episcopal. In the second edition of her forthright memoir, McGee shares new adventures on her spiritual quest, culminating in personal encounters with a God of love. An honest, satisfying read for anyone questioning or seeking a spiritual path. First Place for Nonfiction Book in the PNWA Literary Competition. Includes Reading Group Guide.
“An offbeat, engagingly written, appealingly uncertain spiritual memoir.” – Publishers Weekly
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EXCERPT

In the fall of 1986, I was an atheist. All the same, I wrote this prayer: 

Dear God, sustain me in my hour of need.
Stay with me; be my friend.
When I misstep, light my path.
When I hurt, comfort me.
Help me see that I’m not the only one in pain.
Give me the strength to accept myself for what I am.
Amen. 

I didn’t believe the universe was created by the deliberate act of a sentient Being. I believed that no such Being watched over us, heard or responded to our prayers, loved us, felt joy when we were good or sorrow when we were bad, or felt anything at all for that matter. 

Holding that opinion, I wrote my prayer. After writing it, I cried and felt better. I read it again the next day, taped it to my computer monitor, and prayed it on an almost-daily basis for weeks. As an atheist, what did I think I was doing? 

The only thing I knew was that something had changed inside me. Like many people who have a paradoxical experience with God, I was in a mess—a mess that involved other people—and looking for a way out. 

A year previously, I had been invited to join the board of a regional writer’s conference. I got the invitation in response to an angry letter I wrote to the board president explaining what was wrong with the way they did things. I didn’t have much experience with board work at that time, so it was a big surprise to me when they responded to my angry letter by asking me to join up and help them solve all their problems. I accepted the invitation. I was eager to do good. 

As it turned out, I hated virtually every aspect of board work: the endless phone calls and meetings, the political gymnastics required to get more than one person to agree to anything, the shocking realization that not everyone on the board saw me as their savior. After the first year of my three-year term, half of me longed to resign. The other half was sick at the thought. It wouldn’t be the first time I quit a worthy project because I couldn’t take the heat. Was I incapable of teamwork? Too sensitive to get things done with other people? I admired people who succeeded in work like this. Was I too small to be one of them? 

One afternoon, having fielded the third phone call that told me secondhand what some other committee member thought of my latest idea, I sat at my desk, put my head in my hands, and said, “Dear God. Dear God, help me.” Then I lifted my head, picked up a pen, and wrote the prayer. 

Right away, I felt different. As if I’d been drowning in stormy waters and my flailing arms struck something buoyant. Or as if a cool sheet had fallen over me during a fevered dream. The next day when I read the prayer again, I felt better again. I tinkered with the wording a bit, but the essential message didn’t change. I felt as if this prayer had been given to me. It was easy to write, unlike other things I write. I felt that the prayer engaged me in a two-way conversation. My side of the conversation had content. The other side didn’t have any content that I could tell, but neither was it like talking to a blank wall. The conversation moved me from one place to another. It changed me. 

Ripe for grace 

I was in trouble when I wrote that prayer, and the prayer helped. It contained the elements I needed to calm down and focus. It reminded me that I wouldn’t find my way out of the forest until I admitted I was lost. It helped me remember that other people hurt as much as I do, which helped me forgive them for the pain I thought they caused me. And finally, it gave me permission to be myself. To accept myself. Which was not to say, “I guess I’m just a screw up. I can accept that!” No, I had to face wrongs and try to get them right. But when I did that and at the same time accepted myself in all my fallibility, a glimmer of light appeared in the distance, and I wasn’t lost anymore.

In retrospect, the prayer seems wiser than I was at the time—wiser than I am today. I have a certain amount of common sense, but I’m not a dependable source of eternal truths. At the moment I wrote that prayer, I was about as far from eternal truth as you can get. 

It had been years since I’d thought or read much about religion, so the underlying principles in the prayer weren’t on my mind. I resented the people I worked with and their interference in my plans. I hated my job on the writer’s board and longed to quit. The only thing that stopped me was an intense desire not to fail, or not to appear to fail. 

This was not the mountain top where sages see clearly; this was the tangled bog where fools trip and fall in the muck. 

And yet the situation was ripe for grace. It’s easy to see the signs of a fruit ready to fall: the brittle stem, the yellowed skin. I thought I knew best, a frame of mind begging for a fall. I was brittle with anger, and anger is not a bad starting point on the road to grace. Also, I was pushing for change. Mostly I wanted to change other people, but I knew it might be good for me to change, too. 

I just didn’t expect to suffer in the transformation.  

© Margaret D. McGee, 2020 

About the Author
Margaret D. McGee writes books about being alive in the cosmos, paying attention, and making connections. Her parents were both preacher’s kids, and her father pursued a successful career in public education. These two themes—applied faith and applied intellect—returned in her middle years when she joined the Episcopal parish and Unitarian Universalist fellowship in her small town. She says, “Going back and forth, week on, week off, between the “prayer-book” Episcopalians and the free-thinking
Unitarians provided an essential bridge in my spiritual path—a bridge that led me to a new place.” McGee has had a varied career, including a time at the Microsoft Corporation, where she was employed as a master writer. She now lives in the Olympic Peninsula with her husband, David. In addition to Stumbling Toward God, her books include Sacred Attention and Haiku – The Sacred Art, both published by Skylight Paths Publishing. Her liturgical prayers and skits have been used by faith communities across the United States, and can be found at her website, InTheCourtyard.com.
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