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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...

The Call of God: Hearing the Sacred Across Traditions

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Every faith, in its own language, speaks of a call — a summons from the sacred to awaken, to act, to love. Whether heard as the voice of God, the whisper of the Spirit, or the pulse of universal consciousness, this call invites humanity into relationship with something greater than itself. Though the words differ, the longing is shared. Judaism: The Call as Covenant In Judaism, the call of God is relational — a covenant between the Divine and the people. It’s not merely a summons to belief but to responsibility . The Hebrew prophets heard God’s voice as a call to justice, mercy, and remembrance: “Hear, O Israel.” Listening itself becomes sacred. The call is not abstract; it’s embodied in ethical action — feeding the hungry, welcoming the stranger, repairing the world ( tikkun olam ). To hear God is to respond with deeds. Christianity: The Call as Invitation to Love For Christians, the call of God is personal and transformative — “Follow me.” It’s a call to relationship through Christ,...

How Resilience Shapes Inner Peace

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  Resilience and inner peace may seem like opposites — one active, one still. But they are partners. Resilience is the muscle that protects peace; peace is the breath that sustains resilience. In a world that keeps shifting, the ability to bend without breaking is what keeps the soul steady. 1. Resilience begins where comfort ends We don’t develop resilience in calm waters. It grows in the storms — in loss, failure, and uncertainty. Each time we survive what we thought we couldn’t, peace deepens. Not because life gets easier, but because we learn we can meet it as it is. 2. Resilience transforms reaction into response Inner peace depends on how we handle disruption. Resilience teaches us to pause, to breathe, to choose rather than react. That pause is sacred. It’s where peace lives — in the space between what happens and how we meet it. 3. Resilience reframes struggle Instead of asking “Why me?” resilience asks “What now?” It shifts the focus from blame to growth. Peace follows whe...