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Does Everyone Experience Both Dark Nights?

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  Every soul is invited to purification, but not every soul is led through both nights in the same way. πŸŒ’ 1. The Night of the Senses — common and necessary Most people who take prayer seriously will encounter this first night. It’s the weaning from emotional dependence on spiritual sweetness. It teaches faith without feeling — a universal stage of growth. πŸŒ’ 2. The Night of the Soul — rare and radical This deeper night is not ordinary. It is reserved for souls being drawn into profound union — those called to complete interior transformation. It’s not a badge of holiness; it’s a grace of surrender. Many live faithful, luminous lives without ever entering this second night. πŸŒ’ 3. The same purpose, different paths Both nights serve the same end: purification of love. But God tailors the journey to each soul’s capacity. Some are refined through suffering, others through service, others through quiet fidelity. The form varies; the essence is the same — love stripped of self. πŸŒ’ 4. The...

When Visions and Visual Impressions Cease

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  Some souls never experience a vision. Others glimpse one sacred image in a lifetime. Some see them for a season, then they fade. And a few—very few—receive visual impressions throughout their lives. As with locutions, the pattern is not a measure of holiness but of divine pedagogy: God teaches each soul in the way it can best understand. 🌿 The Four Patterns of Vision 1. The Silent Majority — No Visions Most people never see a vision. Their spiritual life unfolds through faith, imagination, and the ordinary sacraments of daily life. Teresa of Ávila reminds us that seeing is not believing; faith without visions is the normal and safest path. 2. The Singular Glimpse — One Vision Some receive a single, unmistakable image—a moment of grace that imprints itself forever. It may come in prayer, illness, or conversion. Teresa herself saw Christ once in a way that changed her life, but she warned that such experiences are rare and not to be sought. 3. The Season of Sight — Visions for a ...

When Adult Brains Change: What Indonesia Taught Me About Language Learning

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  Six weeks before a short-term assignment in Indonesia, I dutifully opened Duolingo and began working through the Bahasa Indonesia course. It was slow. Painfully slow. And the sentences — “my cat drinks milk,” “I see the bread on the table” — felt like linguistic postcards from nowhere. I kept wondering when, exactly, I would need to announce the dairy preferences of a hypothetical cat. Still, I persisted. I arrived in Indonesia with a handful of phrases and a vague sense of the language’s rhythm. And then something happened that no app had prepared me for: I needed Indonesian immediately. A small complication at the airport. A hotel check‑in with no English. A first dinner out with my American colleague — at a lovely, inexpensive local restaurant where the staff spoke only Indonesian. A winding walk home through unfamiliar streets. Without Indonesian, we would not have eaten. We would not have found our way back. We would not have been able to function. The next day, as we were b...