Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Kip Foster's avatar

Parker Palmer is a great resource on this front. He has also influenced our friend Emily P. Freeman.

https://emilypfreeman.com/podcast/319/

Jamie Winship is another good resiliency source.

https://www.youtube.com/live/VDoFdDy237g?feature=shared

Those mentioned here would tend to lean toward us being spiritual and religious because we're human (a given as Rob Bell would say, not a choice). To not acknowledge that reality is to just participate and be influenced by such realities and influences while pretending to operate with a different frame/lens. That awareness, atuneness, honesty, integrity would seem to be a genesis or exodus invitation of its own.

Dr. Lucy Hone is my favorite most recent voice on this front:

https://youtu.be/NWH8N-BvhAw?feature=shared

Thanks for diving us deep and initiating/ instigating. Subversive challenges, holy curiosity, openness to feedback. All good healthy habits to keep us expectant, receptive, responsive.

Expand full comment
Tim Schuster's avatar

Amazing, Claire. Thank you. Iโ€™ll dive in here -

For most of human history, we operated pre-rationally (mythical, magical). Then modernity/enlightenment gave us the gift of rationality (science, medicine, markets, etc.). As you note, many (myself included!) have a longing to explore how spirituality intersects with work and leadershipโ€”without being an HR nightmare! We can call this trans-rational because it transcends rationality/logic but includes it, too!

So, if the emergence of human consciousness and evolution is from pre-rational to rational to trans-rational, could it be that both pre- and trans- appear to rational culture as ir-rational? And, if so, could it be that the most frustrating thing today about spirituality is that those who value rational thought but also want to transcend it (spirituality, wholeness, meaning) are lumped in with pre-rational (magical/mythical) thinking? After all, both pre- and trans- will appear irrational!

I am very interested in experiencing spirituality, wholeness, and the journey back home toward meaning and wholeness, but how can we do it without coming of overlay woo, judgmental, and, yes, religious?

And - I think your post does exactly THAT. Thank you, Claire!

- Tim Schuster

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts