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From the blog posts of MSI Press authors: Julia Aziz on Imposter Syndrome

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  In her recent post, Julis Aziz ( Lessons of Labor ) addresses the issue of imposter syndrome:  When you’re doubting yourself as a professional: a conversation on imposter syndrome | Julia Aziz, LCSW-S, OIM Book Description What if labor-raw, painful, and unpredictable-wasn't something to be feared or managed, but something to be learned from ? What if motherhood wasn't about doing everything the way the experts tell you but about growing as a person? In Lessons of Labor , Julia invites readers into the intimate, unfiltered stories of her three births and one miscarriage, each illuminating different key turning points in her journey through motherhood. But this is not a how-to guide. It doesn't offer advice or prescriptions. Instead, it offers something more powerful: an honest exploration of how birth and motherhood, with all their chaos and intensity, can become one of life's most profound teachers. With grace and vulnerability, Julia challenges the cultural obsessio...

What does spiritual ritual look like outside the Church?

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Spiritual ritual outside the Church tends to look less like a single institution’s liturgy and more like a wide landscape of practices—some ancient, some contemporary—organized around the same human impulses: meaning‑making, connection, transformation, and reverence. The core takeaway is that ritual persists even when formal religion is absent , but it shifts its symbols, settings, and authorities. It becomes embodied, place‑rooted, often communal, and frequently oriented toward nature, ancestors, or inner states rather than doctrine. 🌿 Forms of ritual beyond institutional religion Across cultures, spiritual practice outside the Church often takes the shape of methodical disciplines designed to cultivate altered states, insight, or connection. These are not casual improvisations; they are structured, repeatable systems passed down through teachers or communities. Yoga and meditation lineages — The eightfold path of classical Yoga moves from ethical living to breathwork, concentratio...

Morning Prayer: "Night is waning...dawn glows with light and splendor"

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  Light and darkness are among the most ancient and persistent metaphors in human religious imagination. In the Bible, they form a foundational symbolic pair—so foundational that Genesis opens with God separating light from darkness. That same contrast becomes a way of talking about truth vs. falsehood, good vs. evil, God’s presence vs. God’s absence, and spiritual awakening vs. spiritual blindness. This pattern appears across Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and many non‑Abrahamic traditions—but with important differences in nuance and meaning. ✨ Core Biblical Pattern: Light as Divine Presence, Darkness as Chaos or Estrangement The biblical tradition consistently uses light to signify God’s creative order, guidance, revelation, and salvation. Darkness represents chaos, danger, ignorance, or moral corruption. Old Testament Themes Creation: Light is the first act of divine ordering (Genesis 1:3–4). Guidance: God’s presence appears as light—pillar of fire, lamp, radiance (Exodus 13:21...