View Full Version : time for a focus on spirituality?
Since the last post in this forum section was a little over a month ago, I thought it might be nice to discuss some positive personal spiritual benefits folks may have achieved during the last couple of months.
My actual spiritual practice has increased since mid-March to include daily morning online prayers with my temple, as well as live online teachings by both teachers at the temple and HHDL, himself. The morning prayers have become "habit" and I hope to be able to continue them once I am back working. I will admit that I find starting the day off with the morning prayers has helped me to reduce/better control my own responses of anger, frustrations, etc. from my own situation as well as events happening nation-wide and world-wide.
That is very inspiring, happystuff. Great point about starting the morning with prayer.
I pray, journal, work my tarot cards, talk to Jesus, whatever....just try to spread kindness that I would like to receive back. I am not always good, sometimes I am down right rotten, especially with just plain old rude people, but I keep trying. I never have been able to meditate, rather I just "meditate" throughout the first 30 minutes of my day, enjoying the process of being alive and having a routine!
I, too, have cemented my meditation practice--I do a combination of Zen Buddhist-style meditation and Catholic centering prayer. I do 11+ minutes every morning. I've always been a huge devotee of Thich Nhat Hanh as well as many Christian saints past and present and I've read and enjoyed spiritual teachings by mystics of many different religions, so I try to do some spiritual reading every day. These days I'm into James Finley.
I've been able to establish a more rigorous discipline thanks to a great self-mastery program I'm doing, so I'm hoping my new habits get baked in long after this pandemic is over. .
I don’t know if you’d call it spiritual or philosophical, but I’ve been re-reading some of the later Stoics lately. There are a lot of newer writers publishing regurgitated versions with a selfy-helpy candy coating, but I find the original stuff more useful. Also reading from GK Chesterton, as much for the language as the insight.
I love GK Chesterton--wonderful theology.
I love GK Chesterton--wonderful theology.
I agree.
How have we gone from Chesterton and Mencken to Krugman and Dowd in a single century?
How have we gone from Chesterton and Mencken to Krugman and Dowd in a single century?
I personally don't see much similarity between Chesterton and Mencken aside from their early 20th Century erudite prose (which I believe your writing style has been heavily influenced by). The biggest thing Chesterton has done for me is outline a fair and just alternative to both capitalism and socialism.
JakeSilva231
9-3-20, 1:55am
Personally helps me focus on the spiritual daily reading of the Bible. Helps me always understand what really matters in life.
I have made a point of sitting outside very early for my meditation and gratitude session each morning before my morning prayers. Watching the sun come up and outline the trees and flowers with light, hearing the chirps of the birds as they wake up, feeling the freshness of a new day has been very helpful in dealing with today's challenges.
The most spiritual practice has been to restrict watching the news. I get the basics of local, national and international news, give the situations thoughtful prayerful support and then let it go, for the most part.
Neat thread, Happy stuff!
Wonderful thread, Happystuff. I enjoy seeing so many different ways to connect with the world, inner self and peace. I write a joy every day-it is inspiring to read all I've noticed that I so easily forget. I do Deepak Chopra meditations, some hypnosis tapes, Daily Bread readings and an old Lenten meditations I picked up on a church tour many years ago by Henri J.M. Nouwen, do one page of Julie Cameron's 3 page Morning Pages, a few notes in the garden journal as I sit on the porch and watch the hummingbirds, butterflies, the sky and the yard. Being retired I had already been doing most of the above, but now I take more time, try to limit the news of the world.
I agree with you both on limiting the news. I'm also trying to extremely limit my forays into the political threads on these forums.
Starting this thread back in June - it seems so long ago. I am still doing daily morning prayers with the temple online, although it is now only M-F. It's good practice/discipline for me to do them on my own over the weekends - lol. I am also trying to memorize more prayers. There are some that, if I knew them from memory, would actually be very helpful at specific times. I'm also continuing my daily practice of greeting people I pass with waves, hellos, good morning, etc. - no exceptions.
iris lilies
9-3-20, 11:21am
Personally helps me focus on the spiritual daily reading of the Bible. Helps me always understand what really matters in life.
The bible?
Srlsly now, dude you are trollin’ us.
Somehow I missed this thread when it began. I've got more of a spiritual style similar to Razz's. But I have a question for all of you.
IF you share an abode with another person, do you find it more challenging to practice your spiritual ritual/discipline? I keep wondering about those of you who are able to keep these practices, whether you are single or not.
(Trying not to say) my DH is very disruptive. I guess I could carve out some time in the middle of my day when he's not around, but then I'm at work.
I really feel like this would benefit me a great deal right now. But it seems too hard to get it established. I have a number of readings and meditations all ready.
Usually in the mornings I listen to The Moth or some other podcast, but this morning everything was a D-R-A-G. I needed something uplifting. Do you have anything you listen to in the morning which is positive, not heavy or newsy?
IF you share an abode with another person, do you find it more challenging to practice your spiritual ritual/discipline? I keep wondering about those of you who are able to keep these practices, whether you are single or not.
For me, this is a challenge. Especially when my 35 y.o. son comes up on his days off. Then I have no room to escape to, except the mudroom. Because I'm doing the self-mastery program I mentioned, which really has beat it into me the importance of instilling good habits, I really have become desperate to not let anything get in the way of my morning meditation.
At first I was afraid to tell my husband I was meditating, for fear he would make fun of me. Then I said to myself, if I'm going to commit to this practice, I have to tell him. So now, I just say something like "I'm going to shut the door now because I'm going to meditate." And he hasn't said a word.
And then I had to find alternate places to sit. I use a candle as a meditation "prop" so I had to find 3 different spots for my makeshift "altar" so I could be flexible in case both DH and DS were still sleeping.
So far so good. I have missed VERY few days since February. And now it's a non-negotiable in my day.
As far as podcasts.. I don't listen to anything at all. I do pick up a favorite book by a spiritual author and try to snatch a paragraph or quote to meditate on. And Richard Rohr has daily email meditations that are pure gold.
We have people with different religious practices in the household. When I am doing my daily prayer sessions or have my skype classes, dh is aware and waits until it is over to interact. The same with his Sunday online church service. Nothing has ever come up to warrant an interruption.
Lately, my little motivations just come in the form of prayers or mantras - if I remember them, lol. Just little things to remind me of the kind of person I want to be, to be aware and responsible for what I say and do, etc.
One morning prayer I try to say is, "I thank you for another day. I ask that you give me the strength to walk worthily this day so that when I lie down at night I will not be ashamed." (from The Wind Is My Mother by Bear Heart)
One morning prayer I try to say is, "I thank you for another day. I ask that you give me the strength to walk worthily this day so that when I lie down at night I will not be ashamed." (from The Wind Is My Mother by Bear Heart)
That's beautiful, happystuff!
My closing morning prayer is somewhat similar--a verse from Thich Nhat Hanh:
Waking up this morning I smile
24 brand new hours are before me!
I vow to live fully in each moment
And view all beings with the eyes of compassion.
My closing morning prayer is somewhat similar--a verse from Thich Nhat Hanh:
Waking up this morning I smile
24 brand new hours are before me!
I vow to live fully in each moment
And view all beings with the eyes of compassion.
Oh, I really like that! I'm definitely going to add it to my repertoire.
Lately, my little motivations just come in the form of prayers or mantras - if I remember them, lol. Just little things to remind me of the kind of person I want to be, to be aware and responsible for what I say and do, etc.
One morning prayer I try to say is, "I thank you for another day. I ask that you give me the strength to walk worthily this day so that when I lie down at night I will not be ashamed." (from The Wind Is My Mother by Bear Heart)
Love that....thank you
Since I’m off work with Covid I’ve reverted to my internal clock of staying up until midnight. And because of covid I tend to sleep 12 hours a night. (Yes, still after 2 months ... it’s a slow recovery and at this point I’m hoping I’m not one of those long haulers who goes on disability). My husband generally goes to bed at 7 and gets up at 4.
This is a foreshadow of when we are both retired, and it works. He gets mornings alone and I get evenings alone and we have about 8 hours together.
And yes, it would bother me to be quarantined together and on the same sleep/wake schedule. I need time alone.
My late DH knew that I was doing my prayer/meditations and simply sat in his recliner beside me, closed his eyes and stayed quiet. It was such a special time of harmony for both of us which I do miss now.
My husband is the meditator in our house and he goes into his spot each morning. I don't bother him. What is particularly cute is that the dogs meditate with him, lying there really quiet on the floor.
iris lilies
9-3-20, 4:17pm
This spiritual practices and the sayings/ chants are really nice!
DH will occasionally make fun of me for something and I tell him to go...well I think you can figure out what I tell him.
But as I have mentioned several times, an aid to meditative contemplation and the centered life is: having two homes!There are days where I have no interruptions.
This spiritual practices and the things are really nice!
DH will occasionally make fun of me for something and I tell him to go...well I think you can figure out what I tell him.
But as I have mentioned several times, an aid to meditative contemplation and the centered life is: having two homes!There are days where I have no interruptions.
I like my solitude, and boy howdy do I have it now! If I had a partner, I would definitely be up for two houses, or at least a duplex.
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