Daily Question, February 16 What supports me in “going deep”? 41 Reflections Share Click here to cancel reply.Please log in or Create a Profile to post a comment. Notify me when someone replies to my comment via e-mail. Blossom4 months agoBlossommy soul 1 Reply Elle4 months agoElleMy Spirituality & my curiosity. 0 Reply KC4 months agoKCSlowing down. Pausing. Being quiet, still, intentional enough to listen, be with what is, attend… and resisting the temptation to run away, or madly off in all directions – whether in mind, body or spirit. Rooting in one place, whether in stillness or conscious movement. Connecting with nature, music, good company, a beautiful space… 2 Reply Mary Pat4 months agoMary PatMeditation, slowing down and journaling. Sometimes walking in our wooded areas. 2 Reply Chung van Gog4 months agoChung van GogHolding my breath.. 🙂 3 Reply Malag4 months agoMalagMeditation, somatic movement, retreats. And also the abundant wisdom that is so readily available nowadays; and sometimes the wisdom to know when it is not wisdom. 5 Reply Sae4 months agoSaeA long car ride with some soft country music or reflecting on my experience/feelings with my closest friend aid me in “going deep”. 4 Reply Layla4 months agoLaylaThe quietude and slower pace of life through this pandemic has been an unexpected blessing. 4 Reply Hot Sauce4 months agoHot SauceReflecting on the experiences and learnings from my life helps me to “go deep.” 4 Reply Elaine4 months agoElaineMy friends. Just now a dear friend expressed her gratitude for our deep friendship. What a gift. 3 Reply Hilary4 months agoHilaryAlAnon; my sponsor; my therapist; 6 Reply Don Jones4 months agoDon JonesAligning with the geometry of creation and gently letting go. Picture in the 1960’s when you had to get your TV antennae at just the right location and angle, carefully let go, then see the whole world come flooding into your lounge room. 4 Reply Malag4 months agoMalagOr using a metal coat hanger, Don, when the antenna was dodgy. 2 Reply pkr4 months agopkrMeditation. Prayer. Poetry. Walking amongst the big trees, Redwoods. Music, especially classical. 4 Reply Javier Visionquest4 months agoJavier VisionquestIt’s fine to keep pace most days with a little gutter yoga, a skeptic’s prayer, and the gratitude of a beggar. But even those days stack up after a while and the world permeates me with its grief, its indifference, its pessimism. Our unresolved emotions accumulate like so much spiritual cholesterol to obscure the light of our radiant divinity; those energetic arteries to and from our hearts, the vessels of gratitude and generosity, begin to harden. Perspective supports me in shifting the hu...It’s fine to keep pace most days with a little gutter yoga, a skeptic’s prayer, and the gratitude of a beggar. But even those days stack up after a while and the world permeates me with its grief, its indifference, its pessimism. Our unresolved emotions accumulate like so much spiritual cholesterol to obscure the light of our radiant divinity; those energetic arteries to and from our hearts, the vessels of gratitude and generosity, begin to harden. Perspective supports me in shifting the human assemblage point (“going deep” is a phrase I reserve for the psychedelic experience); perspective and enough time to decipher the signs I’m shown, particularly from a vantage in unspoiled nature where the overt expressions of our normalized collective pathology: pollution, deforestation, the sclerosis of urbanization, have yet to metastasize. Read More2 Reply Michele4 months agoMicheleI loved your simile – spiritual cholesterol, vessels of gratitude…. if I were an English teacher you’d get an A + for that writing! 1 Reply Javier Visionquest4 months agoJavier VisionquestYeah, Michele. I’ve been feeling like a rusty old Tin Man, lately. Probably time I got my ticker checked. I hope your vessels of gratitude and generosity are as clear as a whistle! 1 Reply Mica4 months agoMicaSpiritual cholesterol – a delightful phrase – thanks Javier 3 Reply Javier Visionquest4 months agoJavier VisionquestHappy to help, Mica! 1 Reply F4 months agoFOn different days I’m led differently into going deep – some days its my breath, some days its my heart, some days its yoga and some days its a good book. The more noisier my head has beed during the day, the more time it takes to break the loop, find myself and go deep. 3 Reply Carla4 months agoCarlaSophia (Holy Spirit) leads me into “going deep”. A community of raga muffin spiritual pilgrims on their similar journey supports me. We seek spiritual progress not spiritual perfection. 6 Reply Yram4 months agoYramGoing deep for me means seeing a larger picture. I get that view from authors, musicians, artists , and children. Be-ing and not so much do-ing centers me. The recent death of 2 close friends, has put a new perspective on my many years of living and what legacy I will leave. 6 Reply Yram4 months agoYramThank you! 3 Reply Carla4 months agoCarlaYram, my condolences, may you continue to know their love never leaves you. 3 Reply Ose4 months agoOseMusic does; friends who inspire and allow be inspired so that meeting at a deeper level of being is possible; suffering of another fellow one if invited to share and care; letting go of fear in terms of being vulnerable; and love does. 4 Reply Laura4 months agoLauraCalm, quiet, journaling. An activity, like drawing or doodling, that induces flow to take me out of my head for a bit. 5 Reply sunnypatti4 months agosunnypattiMeditation. Connecting to my inner Self/light/God. Journaling. Yoga. Walking or even just sitting in nature. 4 Reply 1 2 Next » My Private Gratitude Journal Write an entry in your private gratefulness journal Get Started This site is brought to you by A Network for Grateful Living, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. All donations are fully tax deductible in the U.S.A. DONATE https://gratefulness.org/content/uploads/2015/03/GX-Gold-Participant-L.png Community Engagement Guidelines Privacy Policy [email protected] Connect with us on Social Media: © 2000 - 2022, A Network for Grateful Living Website by Briteweb