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Archive for February 3, 2015

Lee Hoinacki: Conscience & Courage

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February 3, 2015

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Lee Hoinacki: Conscience & Courage

There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but he must take it because conscience tells him it is right.

– Martin Luther King Jr. –

Lee Hoinacki: Conscience & Courage

Lee Hoinacki, author of four books, ex-Dominican priest, scholar and deeply connected with Ivan Illich, was a remarkable man. One example: having left academia to become a subsistence farmer he found he needed money to help his daughter. He began looking for a job, “Then it hit me, why am I trying to get one of these respectable jobs? That’s the worst thing I could do! That’s what I left years ago! So then I got the kitchen job.” Here’s a man who lived his convictions to the utmost. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider the possibility of taking the path less traveled, if even for just one day.

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Awakin Weekly: Difference Between Healing and Curing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Difference Between Healing and Curing
by Michael Lerner, PhD

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1066.jpgIn my thirty years of working with cancer patients, I’ve seen a profound distinction between curing and healing.

Curing is what a physician seeks to offer you. Healing, however, comes from within us. It’s what *we* bring to the table. Healing can be described as a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual process of coming home.

Even if we’re losing ground physically, there’s extra-ordinary emotional, mental and spiritual healing that can go on. One of the most toxic new-age ideas is that we should "keep a positive attitude." What a crazy, crazy idea that is. It is much healthier, much more healing, to allow yourself to feel whatever is coming up in you, and allow yourself to work with that anxiety, depression, grief. Because, underneath that, if you allow those feelings to come up and express themselves, then you can find the truly positive way of living in relationship to those feelings. That’s such an important thing.

Then there’s the ideas we have about ourselves, our lives, about what the disease means. Often, people feel like their disease is some kind of judgment on them: "What did I do wrong?" I’m not sure that’s an idea that serves people very much. When I had my heart-attack, I felt as though I was reborn. Even though I had been working with cancer patients for 18 years, when it was *my* heart attack, there was this profound rebirth experience. My beloved wife says that after the heart attack, I spent the first three months just rearranging the rocks in our garden. The whole world seemed new to me. I was inventing my life all over again. So there is the opportunity that comes with cancer, to ask ourselves how we want to reinvent our lives. And that can be one of the most powerful healing things we can do.

Healing is the most fundamental aspect of our condition, and it’s a continuous rediscovery of what it means to be alive. It spills over into the rest of our life and guides us. It’s not only about some "spiritual experience" of being high all the time. Not at all. It is about living with the ongoing stresses and strains and difficulties — and joys — of life, but doing so in a way that we feel whole.

Living in relationship with the struggles of life is what makes us human.

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Difference Between Healing and Curing
How do you reconcile the practice of equanimity with allowing feelings to come up and express themselves? Can you share an experience of feeling rebirth due to an illness? What helps you live with the “ongoing stresses and strains of life” in a way that makes you feel whole?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Curing comes from outside such as the physician treats the patient to cure. Healing comes from inside. It is an inner work. In curing, a part of the body is treated. In healing , the whole…
david doane wrote: Curing not only implies that something is being done to me from outside, it also implies that whatever was wrong is completely gone and done, while healing means the process of becoming more whole is…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: As in all things, balance. It is helpful to have a positive attitude. At the same time is is healing and helpful to feel all feelings as they come, but not to be overcome by them. The phrase, “…
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