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Where the Spiritual but Not Religious Belong

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  Not everyone fits neatly inside a faith tradition. Some people pray, meditate, or simply stand in awe of the world without belonging to any institution. They call themselves spiritual but not religious —and they often wonder where they fit. Interfaith spaces quietly answer that question: right here. Curiosity over creed Interfaith gatherings aren’t built on agreement; they’re built on curiosity. The spiritual independents who value exploration over doctrine find that refreshing. They can ask how others experience the sacred without being asked to sign on the dotted line. Experience as authority In interfaith circles, lived spirituality counts. Whether it’s compassion, mindfulness, or service, the emphasis is on authenticity—how you live your values, not where you worship. That makes room for people whose faith is personal, evolving, or unconventional. Community without conformity Leaving organized religion doesn’t mean wanting to be alone. Interfaith offers belonging without boun...

How Marriage Affects Inner Peace

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  Marriage is often imagined as a sanctuary — a place of safety, companionship, and shared purpose. But even sanctuaries require maintenance. In 2026, marriage carries new pressures: dual careers, digital distractions, shifting expectations of equality and independence. Inner peace within marriage is not automatic; it’s cultivated through awareness, boundaries, and grace. 1. Marriage mirrors the inner self The person we marry becomes a mirror of our own emotional landscape. Their reactions reflect our habits; their silence echoes our fears. Peace in marriage begins not with changing the other, but with understanding what their presence reveals about us. The more self-aware we become, the less reactive we are. 2. Marriage tests patience and forgiveness No one lives in harmony all the time. Differences in temperament, priorities, and communication styles create friction. Peace grows when we learn to pause before responding, to forgive before forgetting, and to see conflict as a chanc...

This week's editor's choice: Nothing So Broken (Chris Richards)

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   This week's editor's choice is Chris Richards' book, Nothing So Broken . Book description:  In the shadow of loss, a path to healing begins. Chris Richards grew up in a small New England mill town, where life was tough and loyalty ran deep. At just 19, his world was shaken when a close friend was left permanently disabled by a devastating accident. At the same time, Chris’s father began to show troubling symptoms linked to his service in the Vietnam War—unseen wounds that would slowly unravel the man he once knew. The weight of watching two people he loved unravel under the strain of trauma and physical decline left deep scars—ones Chris carried silently into adulthood. For years, he buried his grief and fear, never imagining that one day, facing his own crisis, he would turn to their stories for strength. This powerful and moving memoir explores the enduring impact of trauma, the quiet power of resilience, and how even the most broken lives can become sources of inspi...