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by Stuart Wilde.
Our life's journey of
self-discovery is not a straight line rising from one level of consciousness to
another. Instead, it is a series of steep climbs and flat plateaus that take
place within our spiritual perception and psychology. The plane of
day-to-day existence that...
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by Bill Plotkin.

What does it mean,
exactly, to be "lost"? Perhaps this: we don't know how to get from where we are
to where we want to be. I may know where I am physically but be
lost because I have no idea what I want to do next in my life or where I want
to go. We can also be
lost intellectually, emotionally, or spiritually...
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by Rosalyn Harwood.
As I sit at the computer, reading my email, I am also blow drying my hair, typing with one hand. My back starts to ache from sitting in one position for too long. As I tune into my body, I realize that this is insane... That I am somehow pursuing goals instead of living in joy. That I have lost the juice, the joy, and the flow of events in my life...
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by Cathy Holt.
Our calling, according to theologian Frederick Buechner, is the place where "our deep gladness and the world's deep hunger meet." Many people believe that we are born with a "soul purpose," some task that we feel drawn to complete or a gift that we long to express. Now, more than ever before, the world needs the unique gift that each person has to give.
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by John Benson
For many dissatisfaction with career or current employment is leading them to search for a new path or direction. John Benson shares his experience and insights on this process.
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by Katherine Gibson.
Meaningful work matters. At its most basic level, work satisfies our economic imperatives and signals our position in society. Through it, we pay the rent, buy groceries, and prepare for the future. But our work can also express who we are and provide reasons for getting on with life..
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by Martha Beck, Ph.D.
I base all my counseling on the premise that each of us has these two sides: the essential self and the social self. The essential self contains several sophisticated compasses that continuously point toward your North Star. The social self is the set of skills that actually carry you toward this goal.
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by Rick Lewis.
The straight-up and simple standard for right livelihood is that we find work that does not harm others and, ideally, which serves others with maximum benefit. If the work we engage gives us some degree of satisfaction and serves in general as a point of connection and opportunity for cooperation...
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by Meredith Young-Sowers.
As we allow our authentic selves to guide us, trusting our inner vision, our way emerges in bits and pieces. We find the path we're meant to walk in the same way that we walk over rocks to cross a stream, one step at a time. We have to put effort, often for many years, into finding...
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