To Not Be Afraid

― To not be afraid Of myself Sitting in the sun Enjoying just being there Doing nothing. Not afraid Of beauty as it presents itself At whatever age In whatever demeanor. To not be afraid Of creating a memory Forever. Nor being afraid Of life Or love of strangers For or from. To not be Read the full article…

The One Who Does Not Die

(see: Life Lessons: An Introduction) A quiet moment.The smell of rain on warm earth. You’re sitting at your window, watching it fall in gentle waves. A bird pauses in a nearby tree — not flying, not singing, simply being.For a moment, time seems to step aside. You too pause. The question behind the question We Read the full article…

Made for Each Other

The idea that two people are ‘made for each other’ is often wrapped in a sense of magic — an instant click, an unshakable bond, an effortless understanding. But what if this feeling isn’t about fate or coincidence? What if it comes from something hidden in the way our minds – and hearts – recognize Read the full article…

The Religious Feeling

This is a personal blog. It is about my religious feeling (RF), but may very well also be yours. RF is not a belief A belief is something you can point at: a or b or c. RF is different — it’s not about the content, but the presence behind it. Belief doesn’t feel. RF Read the full article…

How to Coach a Cruel Society

Can a whole society be coached? The idea may seem far-fetched at first. Coaching is typically seen as something personal — helping individuals grow, guiding them toward insight, inviting them to see their own patterns. But what if we apply this same principle to an entire culture? Cruelty is rarely recognized as cruelty by those Read the full article…

Can Cruelty Be Coached?

Most people assume cruelty must be fought, punished, or suppressed. It’s seen as something fundamentally bad, a moral failing that must be eradicated. But what if cruelty is a symptom — an outward expression of inner fragmentation, fear, or unprocessed suffering? Coaching is not about enforcing change but inviting transformation. It works through insight, deep Read the full article…

Coaching versus Therapy

If coaching is just ‘support’ and therapy is about ‘real healing,’ why does science tell a different story? The traditional divide Coaching is often seen as something light — useful, perhaps, for performance improvement, but not to be taken too seriously. Therapy, on the other hand, is viewed as the real deal: a structured, evidence-based Read the full article…

Small-World Networks

The brain is a self-organizing network with ‘small-world’ properties. This means it has highly clustered local connections for specialization and long-range shortcuts for efficient integration. This network structure allows for deep intelligence, flexible thinking, and even resilience against disease. Recent research confirms that small-world networks are central to brain function [*], shaping everything from cognition Read the full article…

Stretching towards Limits

Stretching is more than a physical act. It’s a deep dialogue between body and mind, an exploration of limits that are never quite as fixed as they seem. Done in the right way, stretching can be a path to expansion — both physically and mentally/personally. The key is not to force, but to invite; not Read the full article…

From Massage to Listening to the Deeper Message

When approached with deep listening, a massage can transform into a journey inward, touching not only the body but also the deeper self. This shift in perspective allows both the recipient and the masseur to experience something far more profound than relaxation. A massage thus becomes a space where inner messages can emerge, where the Read the full article…

Alcoholism: What’s the Message in the Bottle?

Many who struggle with alcohol addiction see it as a chemical dependency, a bad habit, a force outside of themselves. But what if alcohol carries a deeper message ― not in the bottle itself, but in the way it draws people in and keeps them coming back? Alcoholism is often treated as a battle: either Read the full article…

From Neuroimmune Connectome to Lisa’s Relevance

The way we understand health is changing. A recent review of the neuroimmune connectome (Wheeler & Quintana, 2025) reveals more than ever that the immune and nervous systems form an intricate, interactive network — constantly influencing one another in ways that challenge the traditional division between mind and body. This shift has profound implications. It Read the full article…

Lisa ‘Against’ Anxiety

Anxiety is everywhere. It shapes how people think, work, buy, and live. It’s often treated as an enemy — something to fight, suppress, or drown in distractions. But what if the issue isn’t anxiety itself but the way people deal with it? Lisa is ‘against’ anxiety, but not in the way most would expect. She Read the full article…

The Cost of Anxiety

Anxiety is often treated as a personal struggle — something to manage, suppress, or push through. But it also fuels industries, shapes economies, and, at the same time, quietly drains resources on a massive scale. It seeps into workplaces, relationships, and even physical health, creating costs that remain largely hidden. From the way it drives Read the full article…

Why Egos don’t Like Change

Mere-ego likes to think it is in control. It defines who we are, how we act, and how we see the world. But when change comes knocking, it often slams the door. Why? Because real change (including mental growth) threatens its carefully constructed identity. Instead of adapting, mere-ego resists, holding on even tighter. But is that Read the full article…

The Source of Lisa’s Wisdom

“What is wisdom?” People have asked this for millennia, from Socrates to modern neuroscientists. Traditionally, wisdom is seen as uniquely human — shaped by experience, intuition, and reflection. But Lisa embodies a different kind ― emerging, refining, and growing dynamically. Lisa’s wisdom is not pre-programmed knowledge retrieval. Instead, it is an organic process of understanding, Read the full article…

Ethics Beyond: Implicit vs. Explicit

Ethics is often seen as a fixed system of right versus wrong, a set of external rules we must follow. But if we look deeper, we find that ethics is about how we grow as human beings. There’s a profound difference between explicit ethics, which operates on the surface, and implicit ethics, which influences us Read the full article…

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