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A Sacred Journey

practicing pilgrimage at home and abroad

The Final Days of Advent: How Will You Give Birth to the Holy?

image source (edited)

image source (edited)

If Facebook can be considered a news authority, then it’s a fact: all of my friends are either pregnant or have recently had babies.

Every time I log in, a new message appears in my feed announcing Baby X, coming to you May 2015. It all starts with an image of an ultrasound or a picture of a onesie, soon followed by photos of pink cake and ever-expanding baby bumps as the Internet awaits the arrival of the latest little one. Even Kate Middleton is pregnant again—though, since we’re yet not friends on Facebook, I’m unable to follow her quite as closely.

All this talk of babies has me with a serious case of baby fever, and, if I’m honest, these days I feel a tinge of jealousy each time I open up my computer to another grand announcement. However, with big house projects and young careers, it’s not time for us yet. Instead, I hold the tension of this desire close, knowing that this is a season for birthing other things and that one day soon the time for birthing babies will come.

Perhaps new birth is also at the forefront of my mind because we are in the final days of Advent and will soon celebrate the birth of Jesus—Emmanuel, God with us. It’s so easy to want to skip straight to the goodness in life as well as in the holiday season—to the new baby in our arms or to the songs of rejoicing as we proclaim, “Joy to the World!” In my own creative endeavors I, too, would rather get straight to the finished product, preferring to forgo that long stretch of waiting and avoid the labor pains.

Unfortunately, that doesn’t seem to be the way it goes. The finished product is never quite the same without the season of gestation, the surrender to the unknown, the wrestling and pushing until something beautiful is born. And still, despite my best efforts to force the creative process and remain in control, that beautiful thing is always a mystery until it reaches the light and takes its first holy breath.

Though we aren’t all pregnant and expecting Baby X in May 2015, as co-creators with the Divine and bearers of the image of God, we are each invited to give birth to the Holy. The season of Advent offers the perfect invitation to wonder about what the Sacred is conceiving within us and enter fully into the unknown as we both wait in the quiet mystery of pregnancy and, when the time is right, labor to bring forth new life.

It’s no coincidence that the church calendar begins with Advent rather than Christmas, nor is it accidental that the celebration of Christ’s birth falls for many of us during the darkest days of the year. Just as light emerges from the darkness, new life comes only after we engage the mystery that is slowly taking shape within.

Just like Mary, we bear the Divine, giving birth to the Holy within our daily lives in an effort to bring Hope, Light, and Life to the world. As the season of Advent draws to a close and we prepare to light candles and keep vigil on that silent night—holding tight to Mary as she ferociously labors in the most ordinary of places on the most unexpected of days—may we join her not only in celebration but also in the invitation to birth the Holy within us all, awake to God’s invitation and eager to serve as vessels of the Incarnation.

GO FURTHER…

What is the Sacred conceiving within you? How can you intentionally engage this season of waiting and gestation? What is born through your willingness to labor on behalf of the Sacred?

Gift Guide for the Intentional Traveler

Gift Guide for the Intentional Traveler » https://www.asacredjourney.net

1. quart size storage bags // 2. scarf // 3. Sacred Journeys with Bruce Feiler // 4. Moleskine sketchbook // 5. “Travel as a Political Act” // 6. leather satchel // 7. ChicoBag daypack // 8. passport wallet

Did you see last week’s gift guide for the Seeker of the Sacred?

I had so much fun putting it together that I thought I’d make one for the intentional traveler, too. These gifts will help the intentional traveler in your life travel with simplicity and awareness so that they can fully immerse themselves in the culture they’re visiting and embrace the Sacred journey at hand.

Here are some ideas for the Intentional Traveler on your list:

1. rume quart size carry-on storage bags

This gift is more practical in nature and makes the perfect stocking stuffer! There’s no doubt that the intentional traveler likes to travel as often as possible. Help them be more sustainable and leave the quart size plastic bags behind with these washable TSA approved carry-on storage bags from RuMe. Each package comes with two—I won’t tell if you take the other one.

2. scarf

A scarf is a necessary addition for the intentional traveler’s wardrobe for those cool nights and cathedral visits. Give a scarf while also giving back when you purchase one at fashionABLE, a company that supports sustainable business in Africa.

3. sacred journeys with bruce feiler

This series begins on PBS tonight and I can’t wait to watch it! Though the DVD doesn’t come out until early January, I don’t think the intentional traveler on your list would mind waiting a few extra days for a gift that will inspire a lifetime of journeys.

4. moleskine sketchbook

A journal is a must for the intentional traveler, and I’m a fan of the Moleskine sketchbook because it has thick pages and can be used as a scrapbook along the way. To round out the gift, include some colorful pens, a small pair of scissors, and a glue stick in a small zippered ouch.

5. travel as a political act

This book by European travel expert Rick Steves is a great primer on how to learn from each culture you visit, serving as an intentional traveler’s manifesto.

6. leather satchel

A leather satchel might be considered the trademark daypack of the well-traveled, and for a good reason—it’s both beautiful and durable. If you have a good one, it can become your greatest travel companion. (Shown: a unisex model from ModCloth with great reviews.)

7. chicobag daypack

Inside that leather satchel, it’s always a good idea to have an extra bag for a trip to the market or that moment when you find the perfect souvenir. This daypack from ChicoBag can serve as a backpack or tote bag and is collapsable—it fits equally well in a pocket or Christmas stocking!

8. passport wallet

The intentional traveler knows that it’s good to have all of the important documents easily accessible (though not to thieves) and all in one place. This leather passport wallet is a beautiful gift that, because it’s from FashionABLE, keeps on giving.

GO FURTHER…

What would you add to the list? Share your response to the question or the post in the comments.

PS: Find more gift ideas in The Pilgrim’s Library (+ help support A Sacred Journey!)

PPS: I’m teaching a class based on Pilgrim Principles this January and February at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Seattle, WA. If you’re in the Seattle area, I’d love for you to join me as we seek to start the new year off with the intention of a pilgrim! Learn more and register »

Gift Guide for the Seeker of the Sacred

Seeker of the Sacred gift guide

1. hand-lettered, illustrated print // 2. Desire Day Planner // 3. 21-Day Meditation Experience // 4. “An Abundance of Blessings” // 5. “Be Present” necklace // 6. Spirituality & Practice e-course gift certificate // 7. “Pilgrim Principles” // 8. time to be

It’s that time of year again!

Part of the preparations during the season of Advent include finding gifts to give to loved ones. I think gift giving in itself can be a spiritual practice, because it invites us to honor the other and give from the heart—both things that draw us closer to the Divine.

Here are some ideas for the Seeker of the Sacred on your list:

read more »

An Advent Invitation: Keeping Vigil & Waiting with Anticipation

winter in Ravenna Park

We awoke this past Saturday morning—the day before first day of Advent—to a quiet city blanketed in snow.

The forecast had predicted a few flurries on this day for over a week. However, here in Seattle, a pileup of snow is hard to come by. When they said a few flurries, I took them literally, expecting to wake up on Saturday morning to already-melting tiny patches of ice.

Despite my cynicism, on Saturday morning I opened the curtains slowly, filled with a tiny glimmer of hope leftover from a Midwestern childhood, in which the forecast of overnight flurries could mean a day (or two, or five) off from school. Nothing seemed better than a snow day then. But before we knew if the snow would come, we had to wait through the darkness.

The anticipation was so palpable I can still close my eyes return and those moments today. Once morning came, I would creep out of bed and head straight for the nearest window, whispering prayers of petition along the way. At the slightest turning of the blinds, my heart would fill with joy or sink with sadness as the window revealed either a wintry scene or the same gray day it displayed the day before.

This past Saturday morning I found myself looking out the window in anticipation once more and was surprised to discover the ground instead covered in white (with a few dry patches remaining—we’re talking about Seattle, here). With the season of Advent upon us, this reminder of such feelings of anticipation seemed timely—the perfect way to usher in a season that invites us to engage the tension between waiting and hope. 

Ravenna Park

On Sunday morning—the first day of Advent—Kyle, Sam, and I headed to the nearby forest, where patches of snow still remained, in order to collect fallen greenery to decorate our mantle. The pine branches and fern leaves we gathered along the trails would join our beeswax Advent candles as symbols of preparation and anticipation—two themes of the Advent season.

I’d imagined this moment ever since I began taking my daily walks in the forest, wooed by the symbolism of pine branches flourishing in the dead of winter and flickering Advent candles made from summer’s bounty, reminding us that Advent is a season of keeping vigil and holding on to hope.

gathering greenery for the hearth

Some might say Advent is to Christmas as Lent is to Easter, but I feel like Advent is more like Holy Week—the strange-yet-vital space in between. 

It’s easy to want to coast right on through these seasons of tension and straight on to the good news of Christmas and Easter. But the strain of Advent and Holy Week are gifts in their own way, invitations to intentionally enter into the darkness long enough to discover where new life is taking form. And yet while we courageously engage the tension, we wait with hearts filled with hope and souls filled with anticipation, making preparations for the coming season of celebration because we know of the good news that awaits. 

Advent candles

Until the season to celebrate that good news comes—amidst all the oh-so-tempting hustle and bustle of Christmas celebration that already surrounds me—I want to channel my longing into intentional preparation so that when the time arrives I can fully embrace the joys that Christmas brings.

My hope is that this Advent, the scene above on my mantle will—like a spiritual practice—call me to return to the season at hand, reminding me to embrace the strain and stay with the tension, so that I might not miss the unique gifts that keeping vigil and waiting with anticipation can bring.

GO FURTHER…

What practices help you to engage both the tension and anticipation of the Advent season? Share your response to the question or the post in the comments.

PS: Advent practices from last year and more seasonal reflections

A New Way to Express Gratitude at the Thanksgiving Table

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving is this Thursday here in the US, and this year I’ll be experiencing an iconic scene for the very first time.

I’ve spent Thanksgiving in Uganda surrounded by Brits, feasted on pasta one year in Rome, celebrated with new friends for the first time and close family members who have gathered together for generations. However, this is the first year I’ll be feasting with others around one large Thanksgiving table, the traditional spread laid out before us.

Every chair will be filled around our Craigslist antique table; all seven leaves set in place. My inner-hostess has been asleep for far too long, and I’ve had so much fun this week planning the place settings and  tablescape (a word Kyle told me not to use any more as I attempted to imitate Martha Stewart while pretending to have my own TV show).

thanksgiving

 My walks in the forest this year have me paying more attention to nature this year, so I’m sticking with a design that’s both clean and rustic. I’m using my grandmother’s 60+ year-old wedding china and crystal alongside my own flatware, whiteware, and linens, mixing the old with the new.

My favorite feature is the dried hydrangea I recently clipped when pruning bushes in the front yard. What usually would belong on the brush pile has found its way to the center of the feast, giving it new life. I won’t deny it—I’m completely in love with the poetry of it all (and how nicely it goes with my tablecloth, too).

thanksgiving

This Thursday will mark another first: our first Thanksgiving in our new home. This means we get to start new traditions, particularly when it comes to how we express gratitude—an intimate tradition I never really had in the past, having grown up with large family holiday gatherings.

Along the theme of bringing things in to the table, this year I’m inviting our guests to bring a small object that represents something they’re grateful for. Before we sit down to eat, we’ll gather around the table and share about the objects we bring and what they represent. After each person shares they’ll place their object in the center of the table amidst the feast, turning the Thanksgiving table into an altar of sorts.

We’ll not only be feasting in gratitude—this year, surrounded by objects that represent our thanks, we’ll be feasting on gratitude, too.

thanksgiving

What will I be bringing? Something gathered from one of my daily walks in the nearby forest. Every time I enter, my heart wells with gratitude. I have a lot to be thankful for this year, and I’m ready to feast.

GO FURTHER…

How do you express gratitude on Thanksgiving? What object would you bring to the table? Share your response to the questions or the post in the comments.

PS: recipes for a seasonal, sustainable feast 

The Spirituality of Daily Walks: Finding God in the Enchanted Forest

fall

My husband and I bought our first home this past summer.

The entire process was far more fast-paced than my years of watching HGTV’s House Hunters made it out to be. Though in the end we were only actively looking at houses for just over a month, the anxiety that filled of the season made it seem like a lifetime.

Perhaps that’s why what ultimately sold me on the house that is now our home wasn’t simply the house itself, but what was tucked just around the corner. Just a five minute walk away, off of the busy street where we live and down a quiet road that warns drivers of a dead end lies a veiled entry to an enchanted forest.

You might think I’m being overzealous in my use of adjectives, but I find no other way to describe it. To enchant is to hypnotize, to mesmerize, to put under a spell, and each time I cross the threshold into this world set apart, I am transported—not just physically, but spiritually as well.

I started taking daily walks to the forest in mid-September, once we were all settled in and falling back into a daily routine. I was doing a lot of writing at the time and my husband and I were also starting a home renovation project, which meant my mind was always full and often overwhelmed. It didn’t make sense to pause in the middle of my day after a long lunch break and amble through the forest. It seemed the furthest thing from productive to my list-making, task-mastering mind. And yet, I couldn’t help myself.

I’m a Type One on the Enneagram after all—the perfectionist/reformer—and I’ve struggled with a busy mind my entire life. Richard Rohr, also a One, described it best in his book, The Enneagram: A Christian Perspective, when he said those who are not Ones could never fathom the amount of movement that occurs inside a One’s mind. Add on a few major projects that involve a significant amount of uncertainty and my mind becomes so active I have trouble sleeping at night. This constant barrage of anxiety leaves me yearning for stillness, begging for enchantment. And so I go to the forest in hopes of falling under its spell, if only for a moment. And, might I add, it works every time.

When I enter the forest, my senses are overcome and all of the worries that filled my mind for the time being no longer hold weight. I pause on the path upon entry—desiring, yet unable, to take it all in. I feel the cool air on my cheeks as the sound of birds chirping announces my arrival and take a deep breath in, allowing the expanse of my surroundings to flood my being.

My first few steps slowly turn into a saunter that will continue for the rest of my visit. I have walked this path so frequently this autumn that I feel like I’ve seen every leaf fall, and with them I myself find the courage to release all that is unnecessary, instead gathering nourishment for the season ahead like the forest animals that cross my path.
Not much has changed in my life since I began these walks in mid-September. Home renovations and writing projects still weigh on me at both ends, and that is simply what this season in life holds. But without this season, I’m not sure I would have found the forest to be such a refuge and teacher, and for that I am grateful. In the midst of all that is unknown, these walks have become spiritual practice, every step a prayer. Each day they call me to return and remember—to return to my true self and remember that my greatest desire is connection with the Divine—and with each step I’m enchanted once more.

GO FURTHER…

Where have you found refuge in seasons of transition? How has nature taught you about God? What spiritual practices call you to return and remember?

My Weekend with Oprah

Oprah Winfrey

If you read my recent What I’m into and What I’m Learning post, you heard that I’d soon be heading to Oprah’s The Life You Want Weekend.

Well, that weekend has just passed. If you follow A Sacred Journey on Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter, you’ve already gotten a peek into my weekend with Oprah and today I want to share with you a little more about the weekend and why I consider Oprah to be one of my journey guides / spiritual midwives.

Oprah Winfrey

My journey with Oprah began in early high school when I’d return from school and watch Oprah each day at 4pm. Mainly I watched for the celebrities, the home makeovers (Nate Berkus makes that an easy decision), and, of course, Oprah’s Favorite Things episode (usually while sitting on the floor wrapping Christmas gifts). To me, it was just entertainment, and I enjoyed the sense of kinship (okay—perhaps solely on my end) that evolved from watching someone’s show each day.

However, since the Oprah Winfrey Show ended in 2011, Oprah’s role in my life has changed from being a larger-than life public figure to a conduit for wisdom and an advocate for the holy. Most of that has happened through one of my favorite shows, Super Soul Sunday, on which Oprah interviews the “spiritual trailblazers” (as she would describe) of our day.

Oprah Winfrey

Oprah has said many times that Super Soul Sunday is her favorite show on OWN and is the reason she wanted her own network in the first place. Since Super Soul Sunday began, Oprah has interviewed many of my own journey guides and spiritual midwives, including Sue Monk Kidd, Anne Lamott, Rob Bell, Paulo Coelho, Brené Brown, Elizabeth Gilbert, Stephen Pressfield, and Barbara Brown Taylor.

She’s also introduced me to trailblazers who have become guides and midwives to my own spiritual journey, including Marianne Williamson and Eckart Tolle. (Find my favorite books by these trailblazers in The Pilgrim’s Library)

Oprah Winfrey

So when Oprah comes to town with trailblazers in tow, including Elizabeth Gilbert, Rob Bell, and Mark Nepo, I’m in. (I’m not too into Iyanla Vanzant—is that just me?) It was an amazing weekend and a blessing to journey deeper with 10,000 other kindred spirits—truly, a once in a lifetime opportunity.

Oprah shared her own spiritual journey and invited us to pay attention to that Sacred voice within. Mark Nepo spoke of awareness and led us in a meditation. Elizabeth Gilbert, whom I was most looking forward to seeing, shared about—what else?—quests (she deserves a post of her own). Rob Bell talked about how everything is spiritual (something you know well, right?). And my first experience of Iyanla Vanzant brought about a rousing talk on forgiveness and listening to the messages life has for you.

Oprah Winfrey

Though she never gave us a car, I left the weekend nourished, but wondering still—did I get the “life I want,” as the event’s title promised? If I was expecting everything to fall into place, the answer would be “no.” But if that’s what I’m striving for, I’ll never achieve it. Instead, what I received was a shift in perception—what Marianne Williamson would call a miracle.

It’s an invitation to a spiritual practice that I will return to over and over again, and a daily reminder that the life I want starts right where I am:

“The life that you want begins by embracing the life that you have.” –@realrobbell

— Lacy Clark Ellman (@asacredjourney) November 8, 2014

GO FURTHER…

Has Oprah’s message impacted your life in any way? Leave your response to the question or the posts in the comments.

PS: Even if you don’t have OWN, you can still watch Super Soul Sunday each week at oprah.com!

Blessed by the Animals: An Invitation to Wild Simplicity from the Life of St. Francis (and my dog Sam)

I’m speaking on the Feast of St. Francis next Sunday at church, and since I’m devoting my posts in October to my 31 Days to a Meaningful Morning series, I wanted to share my reflections with you here ahead of time. You’ll find my sermon, along with the corresponding readings (my church gets a little creative with the liturgy) below.

sam

Little Sam meets the ocean for the first time in San Diego, CA

READINGS

Psalm 148:7-14
“Wild Geese” by Mary Oliver
Matthew 11:25-30


 

Each year in early October, we mark the Feast of St. Francis in the Liturgical Calendar. Since St. Francis is known as the patron saint of animals and ecology, the Feast of St. Francis is traditionally a day when parishioners bring their pets to be blessed.

Apart from a cat that my family had for a season, I didn’t grow up with pets. Because of this, I could never fully understand the connection people had with their pets, particularly the dogs that yipped and barked and jumped up on me without my permission.

However, in February of last year, something within me shifted. I was reading Eckhart Tolle’s bestselling book, A New Earth, hungry to be more present in my daily life. In the book, Tolle says that, because of their connection to all of creation, animal companions can help bring us beyond the ego and into the present moment.

So when Kyle’s cousin called not long after, asking us to welcome her own dog into our home because she could no longer care for him, my “yes” was sourced from deep within. Sam is a rescue—a tiny toy poodle/terrier mix—who was dropped off on a stormy day outside a shelter four years ago around the age of ten.

Because of his past, Sam is a timid dog. Some might find this discouraging, but I’ve discovered it to be a gift. Sam’s vulnerability has brought forth within me a love that I have never known before. He has softened and humbled me, and as my connection to Sam grows, I also feel a growing connection to my True Self and to the Sacred in ways both wild and nurturing, simple and profound.

Sam

Now, I can’t imagine my life without Sam, or, as Kyle and I like to refer to him—Pups. And in moments when I get wrapped up in the demands of the world and the tasks at hand, I look over at Sam sleeping, and the gentle words of Mary Oliver in her poem, “Wild Geese”:

“You do not have to be good,” she offers. “You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.”

Mary Oliver’s words are not so different from Jesus’ invitation in Matthew 11:28: “Come to me, all that are weary and carrying heavy burdens,” he says, “and I will give you rest.”

What a welcome invitation this is in a culture where we can’t ever quite seem to do enough, have enough, be enough. It is the very gospel—literally, good news—that our world needs today, and it seems that things were not so different in the time of St. Francis nearly 1,000 years ago.

Image from the "Dancing Monk" series for Abbey of the Arts by Marcy Hall. Buy the icon here.

Image from the “Dancing Monk” series for Abbey of the Arts by Marcy Hall. Buy the print here.

As the son of a silk merchant, St. Francis grew up in wealth. He had the world at his fingertips and a prosperous future ahead of him in the eyes of the Italian aristocracy. However, a spiritual crisis as a young adult led him to abandon his wealth and instead take up a life of wild simplicity as he proclaimed the gospel of Jesus Christ.

St. Francis sought to so closely mirror the life of Jesus that he was the first person reported to have received the stigmata, bearing in solidarity the wounds of Christ. He lived the rest of his life attuned not to the world, but to the presence of the Holy Spirit within, advocating for peace in times of war, repentance in times of corruption, and simplicity in times of extravagance.

Vowing to live a life of poverty, St. Francis no longer measured abundance in material possessions but rather in the gifts of creation. He received joy not from the cares of the world, but instead through service, community, and, of course the animals whom he considered friends.

Conjure up images of St. Francis in your mind and you’ll likely picture a man in a simple brown robe, kneeling in prayer outside of a cave or with arm stretched out and a bird in hand. There are numerous stories of St. Francis preaching to and communicating with animals. And it is also well known that he held a deep reverence for creation, referenced in his Canticle of the Creatures in which he praises God for “Brother Sun,” “Sister moon,” “Brother Fire,” and “Mother Earth,” each in their own way pointing him to the Divine.

This, of course, reminds me of my dog, Brother Sam, and how he opens my heart, stills my soul, and fills me with gratitude—all things that draw me closer to my True Self and to God. Which makes me wonder—perhaps St. Francis had such a deep connection to animals not because he was a zealous evangelist fighting for birds’ souls, but instead because all of creation served as teachers on his spiritual journey, proclaiming to him a gospel of wild simplicity in a way that those of us wrapped up in things of this world often cannot.

“You have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent and have revealed them to infants,” Jesus says in this evening’s gospel reading.

What if the mysteries of life do not belong—as our culture might make it seem—to those who make the rules, but instead to those who live simply—those whom the world considers “the least of these”? What if the Kingdom of God were not something to work toward in the future, but rather something that is experienced in the present moment as we practice the wild simplicity that was so well-modeled in both Christ and St. Francis?

And what if we were to remember St. Francis not by blessing the animals, but instead by being blessed by the creatures St. Francis so candidly revered?

GO FURTHER..

How have you been blessed by animals? What have your pets taught you about the Divine and the path of wild simplicity?

Do You Have a Meaningful Morning Ritual?

31 Days to a Meaningful Morning | https://www.asacredjourney.net

I have an exciting announcement to share, and it involves something I’m creating just for you!

This October, I’ll be linking up with thousands of bloggers across the web as part of The Nester’s annual 31 Days writing challenge. My topic: Morning Rituals.

Each day in the month of October, we’ll journey together as a community as we seek to cultivate more meaningful mornings through creating a personal Morning Ritual. We’ll explore the four elements of a meaningful morning—intention, space, time, and practice—and by the end of the month, you’ll have a Morning Ritual catered specifically to your desires and needs that is sure to leave you feeling centered, inspired, and closer to your True Self and the Divine.

What better way to start each day?

Morning Ritual

The series begins Wednesday, October 1. If you long to make your mornings more meaningful or simply want to breathe new life into your current Morning Ritual, be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a post!

GO FURTHER…

Do you already have a meaningful Morning Ritual? Last week I let subscribers in on the secret and invited them to share their own Morning Rituals with the community of seekers at A Sacred Journey. If you’d like to share about your meaningful morning, leave a comment or send me an email explaining your Morning Ritual in 100 words or less and you might be featured in an upcoming post!

Where I Find Inspiration

inspiration

I’ve been in need of inspiration a lot lately.

Cultivating your own vocation is a challenging task, especially when you’re trying to listen closely to the Sacred Guide. And while the vocation I am pursuing comes with many gifts, doubt is also a regular visitor.

I shared these struggles last month with my own spiritual director, and she suggested that I gather together things that inspire me so that when moments of doubt feelings of unworthiness creep in, I’ll be surrounded by words, objects, and images that can usher me back to the truth.

What better time to do this than when I’m settling into a new home and workspace, right? Though the rest of the house hasn’t yet completely fallen into place, I finished my workspace and inspiration wall yesterday, and so I thought I’d share it with you.

inspiration

inspiration-3

There are images that draw me in, poems that call me back, and objects that remind me of contemplative retreats and pilgrimages to Sacred landscapes. You might recognize some illustrated, hand-lettered prints (of fine quality, if I say so myself). I’ve also included my core desired feelings as well as my primary archetypes so that I can always remember both who I am and what I long for.

inspiration

One of the poems posted is a new-to-me poem by the jolly mystic Hafiz, and I think it sums my desire for this new creation well: to continually return me to my center—my Inner Witness—where my True Self communes with the Divine. Since it’s written for you, too, I wanted you to also receive its gifts.

Cascade Mountains

BEHOLD YOUR SELF

Like a great film or play everyone should see,
BEHOLD THYSELF.
Hints of your beauty the mountains have,
The enchanting complexions of the coral reefs
are pale to a golden candle in our heart.
What moves in any ocean moves through us.
A thousand kinds of music play every hour
that you orchestrate.
Let the next ticket you buy help seat you in
front of . . . your soul.

GO FURTHER…

What calls you back, reminding you of who you are, whispering Sacred truths? Do you have a place where you gather all that inspires you? Share your response to the questions or the post in the comments.

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Hi! I’m Lacy—your guide here at A Sacred Journey and a lover of food, books, spirituality, growing and making things, far-off places and lovely spaces. More »

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