KarunaNews: Meet The 22nd Girl To Play In Little League World Series

KarunaNews: Art Therapy Offers Relief To Afghan Women Struggling With Mental Health

KarunaNews: Ocean Cleanup Group Removes Record 25,000 Pounds Of Trash From Great Pacific Garbage Patch In One Extraction

KarunaNews: São Paulo's Micro-houses Keeping Homeless Families Off The Streets

"I write a lot in Sacred Medicine about the paradoxes of healing and one of them is to be clear in your intention to heal, to do whatever's in your power to change your life, and go for it. And don't be passive, make it happen. Let go of attachment to outcomes, surrender to what is, accept the limitations that sometimes we're limited, we're not limitless. Sometimes just being able to accept those limitations creates like an opening of peace. That peace can actually calm the nervous system, which paradoxically can sometimes actually create the outcomes that we wanted in the first place that we can't get when we're revving our engines, grasping for our miracle." Lissa Rankin is a best-selling author, ob-gyn, linear thinker, and evidence-informed scientist. In the same breath, however, she also describes herself as a mystic -- an open-hearted, spiritually alive, empathic healer who has witnessed countless miracles of healing and has also experienced them firsthand herself. More in this in-depth interview. [Full Story]

KarunaNews: Why The Staff Of Europe's Most Valuable Company Is Getting 'Climate Training'

KarunaNews: Thousands Of Stem Cell Donors Sign Up To Help Liverpool Baby

KarunaNews: He Died Before Rebuilding His Jeep. High School Students Finished The Job.

KarunaNews: Nearly 1 In 5 Stay-at-Home Parents In The US Are Dads

"Being in the presence of Barbara Brown Taylor's wonderfully wise and meandering mind and spirit, after all these years of knowing her voice in the world, is a true joy. I might even use a religious word -- it feels like a "blessing." And this is not a conversation about the decline of church or about more and more people being "spiritual but not religious." We both agree that this often-repeated phrase is not an adequate way of seeing the human hunger for holiness. This is as alive as it has ever been in our time -- even if it is shape-shifting in ways my Southern Baptist and Barbara's Catholic and Methodist forebears could never have imagined." More in this On Being interview between Krista Tippett and Episcopal priest, public theologian and author, Barbara Brown Taylor. [Full Story]

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