Post
by CatharineTheGreat » Thu Dec 18, 2008 5:37 pm
Hello:
I haven't even purchased the program as of yet. I do own Panic to Power and am currently reading it, and my psychiatrist highly recommended this site when I ask him about it.
I am thrilled to find this thread as well. I have just sat and read the entire thread.
I tried the way of faith and the way of no faith and my position was one of profound confusion. This is a quote, actually.
I so admire people who have the courage to examine their own beliefs, and start a journey to find the shoes that fit.
Mine is a long story, and journey over a time of approx. 35 years, starting from a position of faith, losing that faith, floundering, finding a 12 Step program that really worked.
And then with some sobriety rediscovering that even the program as I knew it, was only a stepping stone to bring me back to at least a sane and sober place to begin a new search, for meaning, and substance and beliefs that are genuinely my own.
I think the most spiritual day in my life was an afternoon when i sat quietly and honestly listen to the still quiet voice. And I began to abandon old beliefs and searching and seeking for something that fit.
If someone had told me 20 years ago I would one day convert to Judaism, I would have clearly told them they were out of their mind.
I was a student at the time, actually I'm always a student, but I took some courses on the Hebrew prophetsand found I really enjoyed those courses. Many years passed, and with the internet so new and excited. One day I searched again for Jewish Studies, and up popped a whole course line of Jewish study from a site in Jerusalem. So I took all of their courses.
Years went by.....and one day a Jewish friend said to me how sad she was, it was a Jewish holiday and she missed her deceased parents, and celebrating the holidays with them.
So we actually made preparations and celebrated a Jewish holiday together.
And the big discovery was, that "practicing" brought a whole new Joy, "doing" brought a whole new light. So for the first time in my life I actually walked into a synogogue, trembling and shaking.
And even then, it took another 10 years to officially go through the process of an official conversion.
And I found my path, I found the shoes that fit, I found a whole new world.
But it was more like Judaism took me, long before it ever crossed to mind to go there. Just studying for the credits I needed.
And now I'm back in university again, like an elderly student, once again studying for credits in a Jewish studies program.
All of this over 30 years. A very long story, made as short as I could.
I love reading about your spiritual journeys. And I'm so glad this is the very first thread I happend to come across.
So as someone else said several pages back, there is much to learn in books, and from teachers but I say there is much to learn from the discipline of practice.
I look forward to sharing more with you. I esp. liked reading the Native American ways, I've only ever met a couple of people who study and practice their native religion, but those few that I have met, or just read, speak with a certain truth that I find attractive.
My username name is CathareTheGreat because somebody else is using Catharine, but please just refer to me as Catharine.