Topic
Peace
What pilgrimage means even if you never leave home
The Camino, the Hajj, the Ganges — great pilgrimages have drawn millions for centuries. But the inner journey they represent is available to everyone, wherever you are.
Learning to sit with uncertainty
Anxiety thrives on ambiguity, and our instinct is to resolve it fast. But some of the wisest people in history learned to do the opposite — and it changed everything.
The holiness of play and rest
In our productivity-obsessed culture, rest can feel like failure and play like a luxury. The world's wisdom traditions beg to differ — strongly.
When someone you love is dying
Being with the dying is one of the most profound — and least prepared-for — experiences in human life. Wisdom from many traditions can help us show up well.
How to apologize well
A real apology is rarer than it should be. Spiritual traditions have long understood that a genuine apology is one of the most powerful acts of repair available to us.
The gift of not knowing
In a world that rewards certainty, choosing not to have all the answers can feel like failure. But the great spiritual traditions honor the mystery — and so can you.
What traditions say about wealth and enough
Every major faith tradition has something to say about money — and almost all of them are more radical than we might expect.
The spirituality of the natural world
Long before there were buildings of worship, there was sky, forest, ocean, and fire. Every tradition holds nature as sacred — and we are just beginning to remember why.
Prayer without words
Across traditions, some of the deepest prayer happens in silence. Contemplative practices from around the world invite us to stop talking and start listening.
What different traditions say about death
Every culture and every faith has wrestled with what happens when we die. Their answers differ — but the questions they are really asking are the same.
Spiritual but not religious — what does that mean?
Millions of people describe themselves as "spiritual but not religious." Far from being vague or non-committal, this identity has a rich and serious tradition behind it.
The sacred in the ordinary
Every tradition has a word for it — the holy breaking through the everyday. A meal, a sunrise, a stranger's kindness. The divine is closer than we think.