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Religions are metaphorical systems that give us bigger containers in which to hold our lives. A spiritual life allows us to move beyond the ego into something more universal. Religious experience carries us outside of clock time into eternal time. We open ourselves into something more complete and beautiful. This bigger vista is perhaps the most magnificent aspect of a religious experience. There is a sense in which Karl Marx was correct when he said that religion is the opiate of the people. However, he was wrong to scoff at this. Religion can give us skills for climbing up on onto a ledge above our suffering and looking down at it with a kind and open mind. This helps us calm down and connect to all of the world's sufferers. Since the beginning of human time, we have yearned for peace in the face of death, loss, anger and fear. In fact, it is often trauma that turns us toward the sacred, and it is the sacred that saves us.


Mary Pipher


#spiritual #anger



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Did you know about Mary Pipher?

She became the object of others’ lives and lost her subjective true self. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in anthropology from the University of California Berkeley in 1969 and a PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 1977. The book combines case studies with exposition of theory regarding the trial-ridden formative adolescent years.

She returned the one Mary Pipher received in 2006 as a protest against the APA's acknowledgment that some of its members participate in controversial interrogation techniques at Guantánamo Bay and at US "black sites". Mary Elizabeth Pipher also known as Mary Bray Pipher (born October 21 1947) PhD is an American clinical psychologist and author. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in anthropology from the University of California Berkeley in 1969 and a PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in 1977.

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