I like this quote a lot. I'm looking more and more these days for those who live their spirited lives without focusing just on the "spiritual" aspects. All of life can be spiritual -- even if we don't use those words.
Writers and musicians and chemists and lawyers and housekeepers and gardeners and mountain climbers and doctors and nurses and physicists and even religious practitioners -- all have the potential of being and living spiritual lives. These days I aim to discover the kernel of whatever it is that separates the spirited from the non-spirited; the hopeful from the hopeless; the ordinary from the extraordinary; the fabulous from the mundane.
What do you think that kernel can be?
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1 comment:
Is it separated? Is there a difference, or is it all in the beholder? I find cooking mundane but gardening divine -- might there not be people who reverse that?
I dunno. Fortunately I don't need to know. You know what one of the original Friends (Quakers) said: "There is that of God in everything." Or maybe it was in all of us. She had a point, seems to me. We can either acknowledge "that of God" that is in everybody or not. I know what you do! :-)
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