dying
Aging: Senescence as Creative Inspiration
By Brian Alger on 01/20/2012
[Exploring Life] It is strange to contemplate aging. The process of getting older often seems so gradual as to be imperceptible. The idea of getting older can create a sense of discomfort since the very mention of it requires us to come into closer proximity with the reality of our own impermanence. We have an [...]
Posted in 5. EXPERIENCE | Tagged aging, attention, awareness, death, disease, dying, emotions, fear, gratitude, grief, impermanence, inevitables, journey, loss, memory, presence, regret, sadness, spirituality, transience, well-being | Leave a response
Aging: Creating A Foundation for Fulfilment
By Brian Alger on 11/04/2011
[Exploring Life] November mornings somehow inspire reflection. It’s strange to wake-up while it is still dark and this seems to be something that I never quite adjust to. Our natural internal rhythms somehow feel more forced as the amount of available light during the day decreases during the fall and winter months. On this November [...]
Posted in 5. EXPERIENCE | Tagged aging, attention, death, disease, dying, fear, fulfilment, gratitude, impermanence, inevitables, life, mystery, presence, regret | Leave a response
Experience: Release From Self-Sabotage
By Brian Alger on 10/21/2011
[Exploring Life] When we are sabotaged we are in some manner undermined, injured, attacked, or vandalized. Sabotage retrieves imagery of warfare in which one side secretly attempts to destroy or disable critical facilities, structures, or positions of the enemy. The essence of sabotage lies within opposition and hostility directed toward a perceived threat to our [...]
Posted in 5. EXPERIENCE | Tagged aging, attention, authenticity, awareness, concentration, connectedness, death, dying, ecopsychology, fear, gratitude, imagination, inevitables, magic, mindfulness, mindlessness, mortality, natural, nature, sabotage, soul, unlived-life | Leave a response
Breathing: A Confluence of Body, Mind, and Spirit – 2
By Brian Alger on 09/16/2011
[Exploring Life] Breathing Into Discernment: The first article in this series explored the importance of developing breath awareness as a means to explore the intuitive and deeply integrative realm of thoughts, feelings, and emotions that flow throughout the confluence of our everyday lives. Breathing affects everything in our experience, and our first task is to [...]
Posted in 5. EXPERIENCE | Tagged attention, awareness, balance, breathing, confluence, death, discernment, dying, emotions, fear, gratitude, grief, healing, impermanence, inevitables, intuition, journey, loss, memory, point-of-no-return, regret, sadness, soul, spirituality, stress, suffering, threshold, transience, well-being | 1 Response
Nature of Belief: Dying to Live
By Brian Alger on 06/24/2011
[Exploring Life] How do our beliefs change when we are faced with our own mortality? Our lives are fragile and inexorably transient. Our presence will transform when we die. The nature of our transformation at death is an unknown and, in spite of our proficiency in creating fanciful stories that propose an explanation and perhaps [...]
Posted in 5. EXPERIENCE | Tagged aging, awareness, beauty, belief, belonging, breathing, conditioning, confinement, death, dying, emotions, fear, impermanence, inevitables, journey, mortality, regret, spirituality, transience, wisdom | Leave a response
Spiritual Quality: Presence – Internal Rhythms
By Brian Alger on 05/11/2011
[Exploring Life] The spiritual dimension is the space in which we journey into our most divine essence, as well as our darkest shadow. A spiritual quality is an intuitive source of inspiration we inhabit in order to orient ourselves to the mysterium tremendum et fascinans. The word presence embraces an essential spiritual quality and creative [...]
Posted in 3. SPIRIT | Tagged attention, awareness, balance, conditioning, confinement, confusion, death, dying, fear, gratitude, impermanence, inevitables, mental discipline, presence, soul, spirituality, threshold | Leave a response
Points of No Return: On the Loss of My Parents – Last Words
By Brian Alger on 05/04/2011
[Exploring Life] Closure means to find a resolution to a significant event in a person’s life. With respect to the loss of a loved one, closure ultimately means to find contentment and gratitude as the final and most significant outcome of death. This is the twelfth and final entry I will dedicate to the series [...]
Posted in 5. EXPERIENCE | Tagged aging, death, dying, emotions, fear, gratitude, grief, healing, impermanence, inevitables, journey, loss, memory, point-of-no-return, presence, regret, sadness, spirituality, suffering, threshold, transience | 2 Responses