Praying as Self-discovery
Prayer is not, first and foremost, saying prayers. It is opening the most intimate part of ourselves to God. It is discovering that in the deepest part of our body and our being there is a source, and that source is God. God is the power that unites the universe and gives everything meaning.
- Jean Vanier, Our Journey Home, p. 215 Prayer is not, first and foremost, saying prayers. It is opening the most intimate part of ourselves to God. It is discovering that in the deepest part of our body and our being there is a source, and that source is God. God is the power that unites the universe and gives everything meaning.
Personal disclosure. Several instances this week have brought personal disclosure to mind. Most recently, learning about a new search engine—Blekko—that I wanted to try. I am a research geek mind you. Logging on to Blekko called for me to reveal information about me, my life, and my values. I am not embarrassed about myself, my life, or my values. It has taken me many years to arrive at that point. Personal disclosure is the price to be paid for learning, and exploring.
Personal disclosure. Facebook. This week, a number of friends, family members, and organizations made me aware of the degree to which I am comfortable in sharing about myself with other people. Looking at the Facebook pages of friends, and younger relatives, who are at varying degrees of involvement with Facebook reveal what my boundaries are. Some question the privacy concerns of being involved on Facebook. My view is that it is not the medium, but, how I or others use it that establish its value in my life.
Personal disclosure. My threshold for personal disclosure are being tested currently. How? PrisonTalk would allow me to gain insight I need to understand prison life, so that I may be more supportive. I am drawn to PrisonTalk by the opportunities to learn about and gain insight into prison life. Trust is clashing with personal disclosure. I find personal disclosure regarding my own life, and values to be fairly easy. Yet, I do not want to make disclosures about someone else in hopes of gaining the information I am seeking that would endanger them in any way.
[Friday evening] I succeeded. Fears of having lost my capacities to work in the work world again were for naught--the fear of revealing my human imperfection.
Personal disclosure. In conversations we have had about sympathy versus empathy, Mom said that we could never understand what another person experiences. To some degree that is true. Yet, I believe understanding another person's experiences--truly understanding someone else's experiences is possible, if we are willing to invest our experiences in communion with other individuals.
Personal disclosure. I consider myself to have principles. Or, I have considered myself to be a woman of principles. Yet, Jean Vanier, Blekko, Facebook, and PrisonTalk challenge my principles. Jean Vanier leads me to question whether I want to be a woman of principle, or am I willing to be a woman of personal disclosure.
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