Posts

🌍 How My Cat Made Me a Better Diplomat

Image
  My cat doesn’t speak any human language. Yet somehow, he’s fluent in peacekeeping. He negotiates treaties daily — between rival cats, between me and my deadlines, between the couch and the scratching post. Watching him, I realized diplomacy isn’t about words. It’s about presence. Listen before you speak. My cat listens with his whole body — ears forward, tail still, eyes soft. I learned that silence can be the most persuasive argument. Respect boundaries. He never crosses another cat’s invisible line without permission. I learned that borders, whether territorial or emotional, deserve reverence. Find common ground. When two cats disagree, he suggests a neutral zone: the sunny patch on the floor. I learned that shared warmth dissolves tension faster than rhetoric. Keep your dignity. Even when negotiations fail, he walks away with his tail high. I learned that grace in retreat is as important as victory. Celebrate small wins. A peaceful nap beside a former rival coun...

How Judaism Fits Naturally Within Interfaith Work

Image
  Judaism doesn’t just tolerate interfaith engagement—it offers a deep well of wisdom that makes it uniquely compatible with it. The Jewish tradition has always balanced identity and dialogue, particularity and universality. That tension, far from being a barrier, is what gives Judaism its strength in interfaith spaces. 1. A theology of relationship At its core, Judaism is relational. The covenant between God and Israel is not a private contract—it’s a model for how humans relate to one another and to the world. The Hebrew Bible’s insistence on justice, compassion, and hospitality toward the stranger creates a moral foundation that resonates across faiths. When Jews enter interfaith dialogue, they’re not stepping outside their tradition; they’re extending its relational logic outward. 2. A tradition of argument and listening Jewish learning thrives on debate. The Talmud is a centuries‑long conversation where disagreement is not only permitted but sacred. That intellectual humility...

🌿 Transformation Tuesday: Franco Zeffirelli — Finding Faith in Assisi

Image
Franco Zeffirelli came to Assisi as an artist, not a believer. He wanted to capture the beauty of St. Francis — the poet of poverty, the troubadour of peace. But as he filmed Brother Sun, Sister Moon , something deeper unfolded. The story he was telling began to tell him . Amid the quiet of Assisi’s hills, Zeffirelli found what Francis had found centuries earlier: simplicity, humility, and joy. The film’s light and music became more than art — they became prayer. Those who were there, including Sr. Maria del Rey, saw the change firsthand: the director who came to portray conversion experienced his own. Zeffirelli later said that Brother Sun, Sister Moon was his most personal work — not just a film, but a confession. His transformation reminds us that beauty can be a doorway to belief. When art seeks truth, it often finds grace. post inspired by A Believer-in-Waiting's First Encounters with God  by Elizabeth Mahlou. Book description: It begins with a single, transforming encounter ...