Showing posts with label Spirituality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spirituality. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2025

Deepak Chopra’s Seven Spiritual Laws of Success Summary



1. The Law of Pure Potentiality – You are pure consciousness

  • Your essence is infinite, creative, and connected to all life.

  • Practice: Spend time in silence or meditation daily. Appreciate nature. Connect with your inner self before acting.

2. The Law of Giving – The universe operates through exchange

  • Giving and receiving create abundance. Share freely—love, attention, or resources.

  • Practice: Compliment someone, offer help, or express gratitude each day.

3. The Law of Karma (Cause and Effect) – Every action has a consequence

  • Every choice generates results. Make conscious, mindful choices.

  • Practice: Pause before decisions. Ask: “Will this action bring happiness or harm?”

4. The Law of Least Effort – Effortlessness comes from acceptance

  • Accept things as they are; don’t resist. Respond instead of reacting.

  • Practice: Let go of unnecessary struggle. Focus on actions aligned with love and purpose.

5. The Law of Intention and Desire – Intentions have power

  • Thoughts and intentions shape reality. Set clear, positive intentions.

  • Practice: Write down your goals and visualize them daily. Release attachment to the outcome.

6. The Law of Detachment – Freedom comes from letting go

  • Letting go of control creates openness to infinite possibilities.

  • Practice: Accept uncertainty. Trust that life can unfold in ways better than you imagine.

7. The Law of Dharma (Purpose in Life) – Everyone has a unique gift

  • Fulfillment comes from using your talents to serve others.

  • Practice: Discover your natural strengths. Ask: “How can I contribute?” Align work and daily actions with this purpose.

In short: Chopra teaches that success and happiness arise naturally when we connect with our inner self, live consciously, give freely, and act with love and purpose.



COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Friday, August 15, 2025

After: A Doctor Explores What Near-Death Experiences Reveal about Life and Beyond Book by Dr. Bruce Greyson


The world's leading expert on near-death experiences reveals his journey toward rethinking the nature of death, life, and the continuity of consciousness.

Cases of remarkable experiences on the threshold of death have been reported since ancient times, and are described today by 10% of people whose hearts stop. The medical world has generally ignored these “near-death experiences,” dismissing them as “tricks of the brain” or wishful thinking. But after his patients started describing events that he could not just sweep under the rug, Dr. Bruce Greyson began to investigate.

As a physician without a religious belief system, he approached near-death experiences from a scientific perspective. In 
After, he shares the transformative lessons he has learned over four decades of research. Our culture has tended to view dying as the end of our consciousness, the end of our existence―a dreaded prospect that for many people evokes fear and anxiety.

But Dr. Greyson shows how scientific revelations about the dying process can support an alternative theory. Dying could be the threshold between one form of consciousness and another, not an ending but a transition. This new perspective on the nature of death can transform the fear of dying that pervades our culture into a healthy view of it as one more milestone in the course of our lives. 
After challenges us to open our minds to these experiences and to what they can teach us, and in so doing, expand our understanding of consciousness and of what it means to be human.




COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

The Signs by Tara Swart MD PhD


The neuroscientist, medical doctor, and powerhouse author of The Source shares the lost art of listening to your intuition and allowing the signs around you to guide the way to achieving the life of your dreams.

"This is more than a book, it’s a healing experience." — Jay Shetty, #1 New York Times bestselling author and host of On Purpose Podcast



Buy:  The Signs (Amazon)

Have you ever thought of someone just before they called? Or experienced a coincidence that felt too unlikely to be true?

It’s all too easy to dismiss synchronicities or signs like these as chance. But what if they weren’t? And what if, by learning to tune into them, you could access a guiding wisdom that would help you overcome challenges and cultivate personal growth?




In this groundbreaking book, world-renowned neuroscientist Dr. Tara Swart explains how. Bringing together breathtaking real-life stories with teachings from cognitive psychology, near-death experiences, and much more, she’ll show you how to:

  • Tap into your most important decision-making tool: your intuition.
  • Break free from the distractions and stress of modern life and focus on what matters most.
  • Shift your mindset from fixed thinking to openness and wonder, so you can see life’s limitless possibilities.




With compelling theories about the nature of consciousness, and transformative tools to create a deep connection with the signs around you, let this book empower you to trust your instincts and thrive like never before.


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Thursday, August 14, 2025

India Reads: Blue, bold, and divine—your favorite Hindu Gods just got a 21st-century upgrade


Imagine if the Hindu Gods walked among us in 2025—liking memes, sipping creamy blue lassis in hip cafés, navigating 21st-century chaos, and still finding ways to save the day.

Blue Lassi is a dazzling, genre-bending collection of short stories where timeless legend collides with surreal modernity, splattering divine brilliance across the unpredictable, endlessly scrolling landscape of our times.

Here, Krishna drops irresistible DJ sets in secret basement clubs that move bodies and awaken hearts. Durga sparks a blue lassi uprising so audacious it flips the world upside down. Kali channels her fierce energy in the kickboxing ring, unstoppable as ever. Hanuman skyrockets to viral fame, flexing both his colossal strength and a kindness as boundless as the horizon.

Woven through each tale is the color blue—otherworldly, eternal, electric—a shimmering thread binding every divine adventure. It is the hue of endless skies, sacred waters, and the lassi that seals their shared vow of joy, rebellion, and unstoppable vitality.

Told with whimsical wit and reverent depth, Blue Lassi reframes the holy for our messy, modern lives—revealing that the divine doesn’t just dwell in temples or sacred texts. It hides in midnight text threads, gridlocked streets, bustling bazaars, and impromptu street parades. Magic is here. Always. You only have to notice.

Whether you’re drawn by the gods, the color, or the glorious pandemonium, you’ll leave with more than stories—you’ll leave with a reminder: the sacred can be playful, the profound can be cheeky, and the blue is always waiting for you.

Blue Lassi by Lee Sunday – Available now worldwide on Amazon. Join the movement. Savor the wonder. Drink the blue.


These tales reimagine the divine, inviting readers to find the sacred not only in temples and scriptures—but in late-night texts, traffic jams, messy lives, and joyful revolutions.




Blue Lassi is a love letter to the Gods, to India, and to everyone searching for magic in the mundane.

ORDER Kindle or Paperback







COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Thursday, July 10, 2025

NEW Book 'Wonder Tender' about Creativity, Personal Discovery, Mind, Body & Spirit

Wonder Tender
by Patti Friday

(Order on Amazon)

Wonder Tender is not a faith-based book. It is a reverent one.

For the poets, the deep feelers, the moon-gazers and soul-listeners… this book is for you.

Born from one woman’s spiritual search through many traditions—Wonder Tender is a love letter to those who believe in beauty, mystery, and meaning… but don’t fit into a single box.

Author Patti Friday names a new kind of path: the Wonder Tender.
Someone who walks gently.
Who lives mythically.
Who sees what others rush past—and names it sacred.

This book is for those who tend to their lives like gardens, who feel the divine in art, in nature, in rest, in ritual. It is for the multi-faith soul, the spiritually curious, the creative seeker, and the quietly devoted.

Inside you’ll find:

  • 18 soulful chapters on themes like presence, myth, creativity, ritual, and compassion
  • Reflection prompts, journaling rituals, and creative exercises
  • Poetic epigraphs, sonnets, and wisdom for the tender-hearted
  • A soft, non-dogmatic space to explore your own spiritual rhythm

If you’ve ever felt too spiritual for the secular world and too questioning for religion—
If you long for a deeper connection to your soul, your senses, and the sacred in the everyday—
Then Wonder Tender is your gentle companion, your invitation home.

.

Order on Amazon

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Patti Friday is a Canadian Multidisciplinary Artist, Writer, and Photographer with a soulful lens on the everyday sacred. A lifelong seeker, she weaves creativity, nature, and wonder into all she creates. With a background in visual storytelling and a heart rooted in spiritual curiosity, Patti invites others to slow down and see beauty in the ordinary. Wonder Tender is her love letter to those who live gently, feel deeply, and walk through the world with reverence.


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Key Traits of a Wonder Tender and Manifesto



Here are the key traits of a Wonder Tender — distilled from the essence of myth, meaning, quiet awe, and soulful care:

Core Traits of a Wonder Tender 

  1. Attentive Presence

    • Listens deeply, notices the sacred in the small.

    • Practices stillness as a way of seeing more clearly.

  2. Curator of Awe

    • Finds wonder in clouds, silence, wrinkles, stories, and shadows.

    • Keeps childlike curiosity alive — not naive, but reverent.

  3. Meaning Maker

    • Weaves ritual, symbol, and metaphor into daily life.

    • Feels the mythic in the mundane and honors it with intention.

  4. Gentle Guide

    • Walks beside others without leading or pushing.

    • Helps people rediscover their own inner compass.

  5. Ethical Dreamer

    • Believes compassion, beauty, and justice are acts of spiritual integrity.

    • Tends to values like they are living things.

  6. Myth-Literate

    • Speaks in archetypes and symbols, not to escape life, but to deepen it.

    • Uses stories to heal, connect, and expand understanding.

  7. Soft Resistance

    • Moves slowly in a world that demands speed.

    • Offers stillness and meaning as quiet rebellion.

  8. Sacred Minimalist

    • Chooses less, but with depth.

    • Believes simplicity can be an altar.

  9. Inner Gardener

    • Cultivates wonder in self and others.

    • Knows that awe must be watered, protected, and sometimes rekindled.

  10. Keeper of the Flame

  • Holds space for grief, joy, mystery, and transformation.

  • Protects the fragile spark of what truly matters — in all beings.

A Wonder Tender isn’t a title. It’s a way of moving through the world with open eyes, soft hands, and a strong heart.




A Wonder Tender is someone who nurtures awe — a gentle guardian of the sacred, mysterious, and beautiful aspects of life. Rather than chasing enlightenment or answers, they care for the flame of curiosity, reverence, and meaning.

What a Wonder Tender Is:

  • A curator of awe – tending to small, fleeting moments with attention and gratitude

  • A keeper of inner light – honoring dreams, myths, symbols, and emotions

  • A soft guide – helping others reconnect with wonder through presence, not persuasion

  • A meaning gardener – planting ideas, stories, and rituals that grow into deeper truths

  • An ethical dreamer – living by values rooted in reverence for life and connection

A Wonder Tender might be:

  • A writer who crafts metaphors like sacred lanterns

  • A teacher who creates rituals out of questions, not just answers

  • A friend who listens as if your story is a myth unfolding

  • A seeker who finds beauty in the cracks of everyday life

  • A researcher with a hunger and relentless passion for knowing.

  • A photographer who feels compelled to document everything.

They don’t claim to know — they care.


Each ritual is gentle yet powerful — meant to anchor you in wonder, connect you to your inner mythmaker, and turn everyday life into sacred practice.

Wonder Tender Ritual Practices 

(with writing, poetry & photography as core tools)

1. Dawn Pages of Devotion (Writing)

Each morning, write three slow pages — not to be productive, but to meet yourself. Let it be prayer, poem, blur, or memory. Title each entry like a sacred scroll.

Prompt: “What is my heart whispering before the day speaks?”

2. Myth Mapping (Writing + Photography)

Take a walk with your camera. Capture five images. Later, write a myth or short fable inspired by what you saw — a cracked sidewalk, a crow’s flight, a forgotten chair.

Prompt: “If this image were a symbol in my life’s story, what would it mean?”

3. Altars of Light (Photography + Ritual)

Create seasonal or emotional altars in your space — using natural objects, candles, old letters, found images. Photograph them in soft light. Let them become visual poems of feeling.

Sacred twist: Change the altar at each moon phase. Honor grief, joy, longing, or hope.

4. The Quiet Poem (Poetry)

Choose one small, ordinary moment each day — the steam from a mug, birdsong through glass, a tear not yet cried. Write a 4-line poem. Keep it private.
This is your daily devotion to the beauty of noticing.

5. The Wonderwalk (Photography + Meditation)

Go for a 20-minute walk with your camera. No goal but this: See the world like a child who believes in fairies.
Photograph shadows, symbols, gestures of nature. Then write one line of poetry for each image.

6. Ancestral Letters (Writing)

Write letters to mythic ancestors — real or imagined. Write to Gaia, Sappho, Rumi, your grandmother, or your future self. Ask them for guidance or tell them what you’ve learned.

Prompt: “What wisdom do I carry that wants to be remembered?”

7. The Candle Question (Ritual + Writing)

Each night, light a single candle. Ask one sacred question aloud. Write freely beneath its flicker.

Examples:

  • What is sacred today?

  • What story am I living in?

  • What must be grieved to be whole?

8. Photopoem Fusion (Photography + Poetry)

Choose a photo you’ve taken — ideally one filled with mystery or subtle emotion. Write a freeform poem across it (physically or digitally).
This is your soul speaking in both light and word.

9. Seasons of the Self (Photography Series + Journal)

Track your inner life like the seasons. Each solstice or equinox, take a self-portrait — not for vanity, but for witness.
Journal what is being born, dying, shedding, or blooming within.

10. The Wonder Binder (Creative Archive)

Keep a physical or digital “tender’s grimoire” — filled with poetry, quotes, photos, symbols, pressed leaves, and fragments of dreams.
This is your sacred document, your growing myth.

A Wonder Tender can be found across time, culture, and form — in writers, poets, photographers, artists, and quiet cultural voices who tend to awe, beauty, truth, and mystery with care.

Here’s a list of Wonder Tenders, both living and departed — souls who gently shaped the world through presence, meaning, and reverent creativity:

Writers & Poets

  1. Mary Oliver – Her poems are daily prayers to the wild and wondrous.

  2. Rainer Maria Rilke – A soul-tender whose letters and poems cradle deep existential mystery.

  3. Ross Gay – Celebrates delight with radical softness and joy as resistance.

  4. Ocean Vuong – Blends pain and grace into lyrical wonder.

  5. Kahlil Gibran – Spoke of love, loss, and the sacred in the everyday.

  6. Patti Smith – Punk priestess who writes like a mystic in denim.

  7. Clarissa Pinkola Estés – Myth-loving storyteller who nurtures the wild soul.

  8. May Sarton – Her journals are contemplative masterpieces of solitude and truth.

  9. David Whyte – A poetic philosopher of presence and courageous living.

  10. James Baldwin – Saw into the soul of a nation with fire and tenderness.

Photographers & Visual Seers

  1. Sally Mann – Explored mortality, myth, and family through haunting images.

  2. Dorothea Lange – Saw the dignity in struggle; tendered truth with her lens.

  3. Vivian Maier – A mysterious observer of small wonders in everyday life.

  4. Francesca Woodman – Made her inner world mythic through haunting, poetic images.

  5. Minor White – Believed photographs were metaphors for the spirit.

Artists, Cultural Icons & Visionaries

  1. Fred Rogers – A quiet revolutionary of empathy and wonder.

  2. Albert Einstein – Not just a scientist, but a philosopher of mystery and awe.

  3. Hilma af Klint – Painter of the unseen spiritual world, ahead of her time.

  4. Leonard Cohen – Poet-songwriter of beauty, brokenness, and grace.

  5. Georgia O’Keeffe – Found sacredness in bones, flowers, and desert silence.

  6. Carl Jung – Tended the deep inner mythic self of modern psychology.

  7. Thich Nhat Hanh – Whispered the sacred into every breath and bowl.

  8. Anaïs Nin – Journaled the mythic feminine and the inner tides of becoming.

  9. Emily Dickinson – Reclusive guardian of inner galaxies, word by luminous word.

  10. Yoko Ono – A conceptual dreamer turning fragments of grief into global art offerings.

These Wonder Tenders weren’t necessarily loud, powerful, or perfect.
They nurtured the unseen — through metaphor, image, ritual, and kindness.


Manifesto of the Wonder Tender 

I do not seek to conquer truth,
but to cradle it.
To warm the quiet flame of mystery
and guard the sacred hush between answers.

I walk with bare feet across the stories of the world,
feeling for the symbols buried in soil and skin,
listening for the forgotten music
between logic and longing.

I tend to wonder like a garden —
watering questions, pruning cynicism,
inviting both wild bloom and slow decay.
I believe awe is not a luxury,
but a necessity of the soul.

I carry no commandments,
only lanterns.
I do not preach, I pause.
I do not demand belief, I invite presence.
My compass is care.
My altar is attention.

In a world that rushes,
I remain — still enough to witness.
Still enough to notice the myth within the mundane,
the divine within the daily.

I believe in meaning that breathes.
I believe we are all stories —
becoming, unraveling,
being stitched back together
by love, loss, ritual, and reimagining.

I am a Wonder Tender.
Not here to lead you.
Here to walk beside you
as you remember the way.


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Are You A Wonder Tender Questionnaire

Here’s a reflective Wonder Tender Questionnaire to help you explore whether this identity resonates with you. Take your time with each question—answer honestly, and see what feelings or insights arise.

Wonder Tender Self-Reflection Questionnaire

  1. How often do you notice small details in nature or everyday life—like the pattern on a leaf, the way light changes, or a bird’s song—and feel moved or curious?

  2. When faced with difficult questions about life or meaning, do you find yourself comfortable sitting with uncertainty rather than needing immediate answers?

  3. Do stories, myths, poetry, or symbols help you understand your experiences more deeply? Can you recall a recent time when one of these touched you?

  4. In your relationships—with people, animals, or the environment—do you naturally prioritize presence, care, and gentle attention?

  5. Does your creative work (writing, photography, art, music) feel like a form of witnessing or honoring life, rather than just producing or performing?

  6. Do you find peace or renewal in slowing down, pausing, or moments of stillness, even when the world around you moves quickly?

  7. Have you ever felt called to support others quietly, walking beside them without needing to lead or solve their problems?

  8. Are acts of kindness, respect, and ethical living important to you as ways to express your values and connect with something greater?

  9. Do you perceive life as a story, a myth, or a sacred journey in which you play an active role?

  10. Do you create or seek out physical or emotional spaces where wonder, awe, or sacredness can be experienced or shared?

Reflection:

Which questions did you feel a strong “yes” or deep connection to? 

Which felt unfamiliar or challenging? 

What might that tell you about your path as a Wonder Tender?





COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Signs You Might Be a Wonder Tender



A Wonder Tender — a gentle guardian of awe, meaning, and care in the everyday:

Signs You Might Be a Wonder Tender (like me)

  • You notice the small things others often overlook—a flower’s subtle color shift, the hush after rain, the way light falls through leaves—and you feel a quiet reverence in these moments.

  • You have a deep curiosity about life’s mysteries but don’t feel the need to rush to answers; you’re comfortable sitting with questions and silence.

  • You’re drawn to story, symbol, and metaphor—you find meaning in myths, poetry, or rituals, and you often use these to make sense of your experience.

  • You feel called to tend relationships with care and presence, whether with people, nature, or creative work.

  • Your creative expressions—whether writing, photography, or something else—are not just about output but about witnessing and honoring life’s subtleties.

  • You find peace in stillness and slowing down, even in a fast-paced world.

  • You often feel like a quiet companion or guide, someone who walks beside others rather than leading or directing.

  • You value ethical living rooted in reverence, believing small acts of kindness and attention are sacred.

  • You have an intuitive sense that life is a living story or myth, and you see yourself as a participant, not just a spectator.

  • You seek to create spaces—physical, emotional, or creative—where wonder can flourish and be shared.

If many of these feel true for you, you might be living as a Wonder Tender, whether you’ve named it or not.



COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

The Elements of Being a Wonder Tender


The Elements of Being a Wonder Tender

  • The Moon
    Guides the rhythm of reflection and renewal; inspires quiet contemplation and intuitive knowing.

  • Flowers
    Teach the beauty of unfolding slowly; reminders of ephemeral grace and delicate strength.

  • Plants
    Symbolize growth, resilience, and the grounding power of roots; living metaphors for patience and nurture.

  • Trees
    Stand as ancient witnesses and anchors; embody wisdom, shelter, and the interconnectedness of life.

  • Lakes
    Reflect inner stillness and clarity; spaces to dive deep into the self and find calm amid change.

  • Rivers
    Model flow and adaptability; show the path of transformation through constant movement.

  • Oceans
    Hold vastness and mystery; invite surrender to the unknown and embrace the power of vast cycles.

  • Creativity
    Is the sacred language of the soul; a way to weave meaning, transform experience, and keep wonder alive.

  • Writing
    Captures fleeting thoughts and feelings; turns ephemeral wonder into lasting witness and communion.

Each of these elements nourishes a Wonder Tender’s way of being—rooting them in nature’s rhythms, encouraging deep care, and inspiring the expression of the sacred through art and presence.


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

The Quiet Work of Wonder



The Quiet Work of Wonder

I tend a garden of quiet miracles—
flowers folding into themselves like secrets,
petals trembling with the weight of sunlight.

Along the shore, I walk barefoot,
letting waves erase footprints,
while my camera gathers moments
too soft to hold, too sharp to forget.

In my hands, a book opens like a window—
words spilling like wild bees,
each poem a quiet prayer
to the life blooming just beyond sight.

I write in the margins of mornings,
scribbling love letters to the ordinary,
crafting verses that sing beneath breath,
a tapestry woven from small wonders.

And around me, the ones I cherish—
their laughter like shells scattered on sand,
their stories the roots that keep me grounded,
their presence the sun that helps me grow.

This is my sacred work:
to hold, to notice, to nurture,
to be the keeper of moments
where beauty and love quietly collide.

- Vendredi 


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

I Am A Wonder Tender



I Am a Wonder Tender

I do not rush the bloom,
nor beg the stars to speak in louder tongues.
I sit with shadows, slow and still,
until their stories spill like warm tea.

I do not seek to solve the sky—
only to witness how the light
folds into cloud,
how the wind cradles the last golden leaf
like a whispered farewell.

I gather symbols like river stones,
each one smooth with memory,
each one humming a quiet myth
no textbook ever taught me.

I write not to explain—
but to remember.
To trace the curve of a feeling
before it vanishes.

My camera is not a hunter.
It is a bowl,
catching the flicker of a bird
or the trembling of my own breath
against the dawn.

I build altars out of ordinary things—
a spoon, a feather, a word unspoken.
I believe holiness lives
in the moments we don’t post,
in the silences we keep like heirlooms.

I do not preach.
I tend.
I do not claim truth.
I light small lanterns and place them along the path,
just in case someone
is walking in the dark
and still believes
in wonder.

- Vendredi 



COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Key Traits of a Mythological Philosopher and Manifesto



A mythological philosopher is someone who explores deep truths about life, existence, and the human experience through the lens of myth—treating myths not just as old stories, but as powerful symbolic maps of meaning.

In simple terms:

A mythological philosopher asks:

  • “What do ancient stories reveal about being human?”

  • “What deeper truths are hidden in legends, gods, and heroes?”

  • “Why do these stories repeat across cultures and time?”

They blend philosophy, psychology, literature, and spirituality—without necessarily being religious.

Key Characteristics:

  • Views myth as metaphor, not literal history

  • Sees stories as tools for personal and collective transformation

  • Draws from many traditions: Greek, Hindu, Norse, Native, Biblical, etc.

  • Often influenced by Carl Jung, Joseph Campbell, Mircea Eliade, James Hillman

  • Believes myths can help us navigate love, loss, fear, purpose, and identity

Famous Mythological Philosophers:

  • Joseph Campbell – The Hero’s Journey

  • Carl Jung – Archetypes and the collective unconscious

  • James Hillman – Soul psychology through myth

  • Mircea Eliade – Sacred and myth in human history

Practice

A daily practice as a mythological philosopher isn’t about rituals in a religious sense—it’s about approaching everyday life with symbolic awareness, inner reflection, and awe for the human story you're living. Think of it as living like your life is a myth-in-the-making.

Here’s what that could look like:

Morning: Begin as the Hero

  • Reflect on your journey: Ask, What part of the Hero’s Journey am I in right now?

  • Journal your inner landscape: What archetype is guiding me today—The Seeker? The Caregiver? The Trickster?

  • Set a mythic intention: Instead of “get through the day,” try “follow the call,” “face the dragon,” or “bring fire back from the mountain.”

Daytime: Live Symbolically

  • See your tasks as quests: Commuting becomes a crossing; a tough meeting is the trial.

  • Notice recurring signs or “omens”: Pay attention to dreams, animals, colors, phrases. What story might they be whispering?

  • Engage with beauty: Art, poetry, or nature as forms of sacred myth. Let them speak to your soul.

Evening: Integration and Descent

  • Read myth, philosophy, or dream journaling: Let symbolic thinking deepen.

  • Ask mythic questions:

    • What did I confront or learn today?

    • What inner monster did I slay?

    • What part of me did I rescue?

  • Name the day like a story chapter: “The Day of the Small Victory” or “The Silence Before the Storm.”

Weekly or Monthly Practices:

  • Create your personal myth map—track turning points, mentors, initiations

  • Dialogue with an archetype: write a letter to your Inner Sage, Warrior, or Orphan

  • Study a myth and apply its pattern to your life now

  • Walk in nature asking, What is the world trying to teach me metaphorically?

Living this way means you’re not just existing—you’re inhabiting your story, with depth, curiosity, and creative courage. It’s philosophy wrapped in imagination, and meaning grounded in metaphor.


Manifesto of the Mythological Philosopher

I walk through this world not as a stranger, but as a seeker.
I believe life is not a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be lived.
Beneath ordinary days, I sense sacred patterns,
And in the language of myth, I find the soul’s deepest truths.

I listen for the call to adventure in the quiet moments.
I recognize dragons not in caves, but in my own fears.
I meet mentors in books, in dreams, in the mirror.
Every heartbreak is a descent. Every return, a resurrection.

I reject the literal and embrace the symbolic.
I see the world as alive with story:
The moon a witness,
The river a path,
The crow a message.

I honor the myths of all peoples—
Not to escape reality, but to decode it.
I believe that myth is not false; it is more than literal truth.
It is the soul speaking in poetry.

I follow wonder.
I ask better questions than I answer.
I live mythically,
Love archetypally,
And seek wisdom in every shadow.

I am not here to conform, but to transform.
Not to consume the world, but to commune with it.

This is my vow:
To walk as both philosopher and poet,
To turn my life into a living myth,
And to help others find the courage to do the same.



COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Key Traits of a Spiritual Humanist and Manifesto


A
spiritual humanist is someone who seeks meaning, connection, and purpose in life through a non-religious, yet deeply reflective and ethical worldview. They value human reason, compassion, creativity, and personal growth, while also appreciating the mystery and wonder of existence—without relying on a belief in a personal god or traditional religious dogma.

Key Traits of a Spiritual Humanist:

  • Seeks awe and transcendence in nature, art, relationships, or inner experience

  • Values science and reason, but doesn’t deny the emotional or mystical aspects of life

  • Lives by ethical principles like empathy, kindness, and justice

  • Feels connected to something larger—whether that’s the universe, humanity, or the web of life

  • Draws inspiration from philosophy, mythology, poetry, and world traditions rather than a single sacred text

In short:

A spiritual humanist says, “I may not believe in a god, but I believe in meaning, beauty, and living a life of integrity and wonder.”


Quotes from Spiritual Humanist Thinkers

Carl Sagan (astronomer, author)

“Science is not only compatible with spirituality; it is a profound source of spirituality.”

Albert Einstein

“The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion that stands at the cradle of true art and true science.”

Joseph Campbell

“God is a metaphor for a mystery that absolutely transcends all human categories of thought.”

Kurt Vonnegut

“I am a humanist, which means, in part, that I have tried to behave decently without expectations of rewards or punishments after I’m dead.”

Rebecca Goldstein (philosopher and novelist)

“Humanism is not just a faith in humanity, but a faith in our capacity for transcendence through reason, empathy, and imagination.”

Examples in Popular Culture

  • Carl Sagan’s Cosmos – Blends science, awe, and ethics beautifully

  • Richard Linklater’s Waking Life – Philosophical animation exploring consciousness and meaning

  • Terrence Malick films (The Tree of Life, A Hidden Life) – Lyrical, spiritual, and non-dogmatic

  • Mary Oliver’s poetry – Deeply spiritual, rooted in nature, wonder, and solitude

A spiritual humanist manifesto:

Live with wonder. See the sacred in sunsets, silence, and the smile of a stranger. Seek truth through reason, but never forget the wisdom of the heart. Be kind—not because of rules, but because compassion feels right. Create beauty, pursue meaning, and stay curious. Find awe in nature, music, and the cosmos. Stand for justice. Laugh often. Grieve fully. Love deeply. You are part of something vast—not supernatural, but no less profound. This life is your miracle. Make it count, and leave the world gentler than you found it.


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Hot New Book Releases in Indian Mythology: Blue Lassi by Lee Sunday


What if the Hindu Gods lived among us in 2025—scrolling through memes, sipping blue lassis in cafés, wrestling with modern dilemmas, and still, somehow, saving the world?

Blue Lassi is a vibrant collection of short stories where ancient myth collides with magical realism, bringing the divine into the chaotic world we know today. Krishna is spinning beats at underground raves, Durga leads a blue lassi revolution that turns the world on its head, Kali finds release in the ring through kickboxing, and Hanuman becomes a social media sensation with a heart as big as his biceps. Throughout it all, ‘the color blue’—mystical, eternal, and electrifying—threads their lives together like a cosmic connection, reminding each deity (and reader) of their unbreakable power and boundless playfulness.

Told with quirky charm, and deep reverence, these tales reimagine the divine, inviting readers to find the sacred not only in temples and scriptures—but in late-night texts, traffic jams, messy lives, and joyful revolutions.

Blue Lassi is a love letter to the Gods, to India, and to everyone searching for magic in the mundane.

ORDER Kindle or Paperback










COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

A Love Poem: The Arab Spring and The Egyptian Revolution



Celebration 2.0


we would have held hands on the streets
and embraced for the journo
swooping me off my feet
wiping the blood and tears from my face
but that was another eleven, eleven
now you find me in the crowd
searching for my name
the likes of which you had not seen
blue eyes blurring, watering
and you chase me, hunt me
on the wall, behind the wall
a toppling message collapses bricks
our palace now empty
we are alone with our new desires
liberating freedom, passionate words
now I find you in the crowd
knowing your name intimately
repeating the comments I had not heard
brown eyes weary, hopeful
and I chase you, hunt you
we could have held hands on the streets
and embraced for the journo
lifting each other off our feet
wiping the blood and sweat from our face
but this was another eleven, eleven
instead, we chose to make love
and it was revolutionary

- Patti Friday, 

Poet Industries 
(From the ebook 'Society of Prophet Men')

Buy your instant ebook copy here.

___________________________


I wrote the above poem to honor the events I watched unfold. Feb. 11, 2011.

The first wave of the Arab Spring culminates in the resignation of Hosni Mubarak after 18 days of widespread protests, marking a pivotal moment in Egypt's modern political history. Mubarak's 30-year authoritarian rule ends with the transfer of power to the Supreme Military Council.

COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.

Monday, February 10, 2025

Blessings over Flowers




Each spring it’s customary to recite a prayer the first time we see the new flowering of a fruit tree. Typically recited in the Hebrew month of Nissan (usually March or April), it’s possible to recite this springtime prayer in a different month if you live in a climate where fruit trees don’t flower in Nissan.




On seeing the blossoming, say:

Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the Universe, Who has made nothing lacking in His world, and created in it goodly creatures and goodly trees to give mankind pleasure.


COPYRIGHT 2007-2025 Patti Friday b.1959.