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✨ Caturday Reflection: Who Heals Whom? ✨

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  There’s an old bit of cat lore that says a purring cat can help a human heal — that the vibration of a purr can soothe pain, calm the heart, maybe even help bones knit faster. I’ve always filed that under “sweet, probably exaggerated, but not entirely wrong.” And then I broke my ribs. The ER doctor told me six weeks. Jack told me six nights. Every night, he slept on me — all night — warm, heavy, purring into my bones. And somehow, my ribs healed far faster than anyone expected. Maybe it was coincidence. Maybe it was physics. Maybe it was love. But I know this: his presence changed the way my body held pain. I breathed deeper. I slept better. I didn’t brace as much. My nervous system settled because his nervous system was settled on top of mine. And that got me thinking about the reverse . Last night, Tissou had a painful bladder flare — blood, discomfort, restlessness, all the signs that make a cat parent’s heart drop. She was miserable. So she climbed onto me and slept for hours...

When the Night Begins to Lift

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You don’t notice dawn by its brightness — you notice it because you can finally see your hands again. 🌅 1. The return of quiet joy It doesn’t come as ecstasy or revelation. It comes as a subtle warmth — the sense that prayer is no longer impossible. You realize you’re not forcing faith; it’s breathing on its own again. 🌅 2. The light feels different It’s not the old sweetness. It’s gentler, steadier, less dependent on emotion. You begin to recognize God not in feeling, but in fidelity. 🌅 3. The soul feels spacious After the stripping, there’s room for everything — sorrow, beauty, even mystery. You no longer need to control the experience. You simply dwell in it. 🌅 4. Compassion deepens Having walked through darkness, you no longer fear others’ pain. You listen differently. You carry light without needing to speak of it. 🌅 5. The night becomes memory You don’t forget it, but you stop fighting it. It becomes part of your knowing — the way roots remember the soil that shaped them. ...

Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - One Family: Indivisible (Greenebaum)

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  Today's Publisher's Pride is One Family Indivisible by Steven Greenebaum, which reached #341 in Unitarian universalism and #323 among Amazon top sellers in Christian ecumenism. Book Description: Throughout history we have divided ourselves into groupings of "us" and "them". One Family: Indivisible engagingly invites the reader into the deeply spiritual and lifelong journey of the author to find a way to acknowledge our differences without dividing and subdividing ourselves into competing tribes. It is a journey of mountain tops and deep valleys, but it leads to the inclusivity and mutual respect possible with Interfaith. This is a book for seekers of all races, ethnicities, and spiritual paths who search for that elusive goal of a community of love and inclusion that also respects our diversity. AWARDS Eric Hoffer Award Category Finalist, American Book Fest Best Books Award Finalist (religion) Keywords: interfaith, spiritual journey, common humanity, reli...