On the eve of the day to give thanks, I am imagining all the people across the country turning their attention to coming together for this holiday, with love and gratitude as well as wounds and divides. Part of me wants to bundle up my heart in protection, part of me wants to find sanctuary with others who are like minded. WholeHeart has been teaching me that love is not easy. Opening one’s heart lets in the joys and the sorrows, the connections and the longings. The wounds and the worries can be loud, but I do believe that love is louder and softer, gentle and fierce.
Embracing the Light & the Dark
So many great thinkers and spiritual teachers have spoken and written about the light and the darkness, the mud and lotus, joy and sorrow. Knowing that both can be held and that perhaps, more to the point, one can’t be known or felt in the absence of the other, allows us to embrace two seemingly conflicting experiences at once. This is my experience with this concept:
Mindful Breath in Autumn
Layers of Love
WholeHeart makes a bold claim in “envisioning a world with a global operating system based on love.” Love you say? What do you mean by that? What can one organization do? What can one individual do, to stand in what Parker J. Palmer refers to as “The Tragic Gap”-- that divide between reality and a life that we know to be possible? The answer is that we have to be willing to make our hearts more supple so that when they do break, they break open and not into shards.
What Matters in Tough Times
Lately, it seems, there have been too many examples of the endless contagion of fear that eventually breeds distrust and hate. What is a warrior of love and compassion to do in the face of so much that feels "wrong" in the world? How do we go about our daily work when we wonder all the while, does this work today even still matter?
Using the WholeHeart Wellness Model
The WholeHeart Wellness Model is an expression of our wholehearted desire to see individuals and organizations find their right alignment, knowing that the exact look and feel of that alignment will differ for each person or group.
The model offers a tool to help discover, explore, deepen, reflect, and buoy your own wellness wisdom by channeling the six areas of wellness we feel most completely capture true wellness in everyday life experience. The six chambers of the nautilus image are labeled by differing yet interconnected areas of wellness: Grace, Emotional, Intellectual, Physical, Social, and Cultural.