Practice: Critical Awareness
This spiritual practice is taken from Brené Brown's The Gifts of Imperfection.
Letting Go Practice
Is there a hurt or thought you keep replaying that you’d like to release? Use this interactive Letting Go Practice to help let go of a hurt, injury, or issue in your life. Like forgiveness, it may be something you’ll want to revisit again and again. Take a few minutes to try it and let us know what you think.
Conversation Cards
Incorporate more love, forgiveness, and compassion into your daily life with these conversation starters. 52 cards with quotations, questions to discuss, and actions to take. Designed for you to use on your own or with others at home, school, work, and elsewhere. Also available in Spanish: Tarjetas de Conversación.
Print (on both sides) and cut your own set. Created for use with 8.5 x 11 inch paper.
Practice: Defusing Anger
This practice comes from peace advocate, author, and Buddhist monk, Thich Nhat Hanh, in his book, Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames. "There may be times when you are angry with someone, and you try everything you can to transform your anger," he writes, "but nothing seems to work. In this case, the Buddha proposes that you give the other person a present. It sounds childish, but it is very effective. When we're angry with someone we want to hurt them. Giving them a present changes that into wanting to make them happy.
Practice: Savor Sacred Poetry
In celebration of poetry as spiritual practice, we invite you to join us in this practice from our friends at Spirituality & Practice.
In the clatter and clamor of our lives, we need ways to connect deeply with our souls. Whenever we feel depleted, our favorite poets invariably refresh and refuel us.
Practice: Living in Someone Else's Shoes
This practice, focused on empathy, comes from Bernie Siegel, MD, in 101 Exercises for the Soul.
Practice: Serve Your Community
The usual pitch, when it comes to volunteering, is that it's appropriate to give something back. We're called upon to serve as a fundamental responsibility. What this pitch obscures is that service is actually a privilege. Whether in a soup kitchen, battered-women's shelter, community garden, or Little League, service opens our hearts, connects us to the world, and fills the present moment with meaning. While service provides assistance to those in need and/or to the community, its foremost beneficiary is almost always the one who serves.
Practice: Defining and Defending
Self-observation and conscious awareness are classic spiritual practices that are very helpful for those who want to “practice democracy.” You need to be aware of where you are coming from in order to determine where you might be more open and where you need to stand your ground.
This practice is from Zen teacher Jan Chozen Bays in How to Train a Wild Elephant and Other Adventures:
Practice: Mirroring
Simply put, there is nothing, nothing in the world, that can take the place of one person intentionally listening or speaking to another. —Jacob Needleman
If we don't listen, how will we understand?
Practice: Breathing Compassion for Self
Maintaining our well-being requires finding our center, our sense of balance, our breath, again and again.
Practice democracy with this inspiration from The Sufi Book of Life by Neil Douglas-Klotz. Many people observe their breath during meditation. This is a different way of doing breath meditation, using it to reinforce your sense of freedom, compassion, positivity, and hope. These feelings in turn enhance your resilience.