2022/08/30

Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation eBook : Palmer, Parker J.

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Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation 1st Edition, Kindle Edition
by Parker J. Palmer (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.5 out of 5 stars 1,290 ratings



PLEASE NOTE: Some recent copies of Let Your Life Speak included printing errors. These issues have been corrected, but if you purchased a defective copy between September and December 2019, please send proof of purchase to josseybasseducation@wiley.com to receive a replacement copy.
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Dear Friends: I'm sorry that after 20 years of happy traveling, Let Your Life Speak hit a big pothole involving printing errors that resulted in an unreadable book. But I'm very grateful to my publisher for moving quickly to see that people who received a defective copy have a way to receive a good copy without going through the return process. We're all doing everything we can to make things right, and I'm grateful for your patience. Thank you, Parker J. Palmer

With wisdom, compassion, and gentle humor, Parker J. Palmer invites us to listen to the inner teacher and follow its leadings toward a sense of meaning and purpose. Telling stories from his own life and the lives of others who have made a difference, he shares insights gained from darkness and depression as well as fulfillment and joy, illuminating a pathway toward vocation for all who seek the true calling of their lives.
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From the Inside Flap
"Is the life I am living the same as the life that wants to live in me?" With this searching question, Parker Palmer begins an insightful and moving meditation on finding one's true calling. Let Your Life Speak is an openhearted gift to anyone who seeks to live authentically.

The book's title is a time-honored Quaker admonition, usually taken to mean "Let the highest truths and values guide everything you do." But Palmer reinterprets those words, drawing on his own search for selfhood. "Before you tell your life what you intend to do with it," he writes, "listen for what it intends to do with you. Before you tell your life what truths and values you have decided to live up to, let your life tell you what truths you embody, what values you represent.

"Vocation does not come from willfulness, no matter how noble one's intentions. It comes from listening to and accepting "true self" with its limits as well as its potentials. Sharing stories of frailty and strength, of darkness and light, Palmer shows that vocation is not a goal to be achieved but a gift to be received.

As we live more deeply into the selfhood that is our birthright gift, we find not only personal fulfillment. We find communion with others and ways of serving the world's deepest needs. --This text refers to the hardcover edition.
From the Back Cover


A Compassionate and Compelling Meditation on Discovering Your Path in Life

With wisdom, compassion, and gentle humor, Parker J. Palmer invites us to listen to the inner teacher and follow its leadings toward a sense of meaning and purpose. Telling stories from his own life and the lives of others who have made a difference, he shares insights gained from darkness and depression as well as fulfillment and joy, illuminating a pathway toward vocation for all who seek the true calling of their lives.

"Parker Palmer's writing is like a high country stream-clear, vital, honest. If your life seems to be passing you by, or you cannot see the way ahead, immerse yourself in the wisdom of these pages and allow it to carry you toward a more attentive relationship with your deeper, truer self."--John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal

"An exuberant and passionate book. I was deeply moved and I cannot, nor do I want to, shake off the haunting questions that it raises for me. This book penetrates the soul, and it will definitely stir you to explore more of your own inner territory. What an extraordinary achievement."--Jim Kouzes, coauthor, The Leadership Challenge and Encouraging the Heart; chairman, Tom Peters Group/Learning Systems--This text refers to the hardcover edition.

About the Author
PARKER J. PALMER holds a Ph.D. from the University of California Berkeley. He is a founder and senior partner of the Center for Courage and Renewal, senior associate of the American Association for Higher Education, and senior advisor to the Fetzer Institute. In 1998, he was named one of the thirty most influential senior leaders in higher education. He is the author of the widely praised books The Courage to Teach and To Know As We Are Known. --This text refers to the audioCD edition.


Review
"Parker Palmer's writing is like a high country stream-clear, vital, honest. If your life seems to be passing you by, or you cannot see the way ahead, immerse yourself in the wisdom of these pages and allow it to carry you toward a more attentive relationship with your deeper, truer self." (John S. Mogabgab, editor, Weavings Journal)

"An exuberant and passionate book. I was deeply moved and I cannot, nor do I want to, shake off the haunting questions that it raises for me. This book penetrates the soul, and it will definitely stir you to explore more of your own inner territory. What an extraordinary achievement." (Jim Kouzes, coauthor, The Leadership Challenge and Encouraging the Heart; chairman, Tom Peters Group/Learning Systems)

"At a time when our culture is seeking a new language for expressing the spirit in everyday life, Parker Palmer is our leading voice of clarity and wisdom. In Let Your Life Speak, Palmer continues to deepen our ways of understanding the relationships between the inner life of spirit and the outer life of action." (Rob Lehman, president, The Fetzer Institute)

"In our search for authentic vocation, this book should be the starting point and deserves a prominent place in every home, school, and college. It is vintage Parker Palmer, providing his unique insight to the interconnectedness of selfhood and vocation with eloquence and personal experience." (Doug Orr, president, Warren Wilson College) --. --This text refers to the audioCD edition.

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Jossey-Bass; 1st edition (18 May 2009)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 128 pages



Parker J. Palmer



PARKER J. PALMER is a writer, teacher, and activist whose work speaks deeply to people in many walks of life. Author of ten books—including several best-selling and award-winning titles—that have sold nearly two million copies, Palmer is the Founder and Senior Partner Emeritus of the Center for Courage & Renewal. He holds a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of California at Berkeley, as well as thirteen honorary doctorates, two Distinguished Achievement Awards from the National Educational Press Association, and an Award of Excellence from the Associated Church Press. In 1998, the Leadership Project, a national survey of 10,000 educators, named him one of the 30 most influential senior leaders in higher education and one of the 10 key agenda-setters of the past decade. In 2010, he was given the William Rainey Harper Award (previously won by Margaret Mead, Marshall McLuhan, Paulo Freire, and Elie Wiesel). In 2011, the Utne Reader named him as one of "25 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World.” In 2021, the Freedom of Spirit Fund, a UK-based foundation, gave him their "Lifetime Achievement Award” in honor of work that promotes and protects spiritual freedom. For 20-plus years, the Accrediting Commission for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has given annual Parker J. Palmer “Courage to Teach” and “Courage to Lead” Awards to directors of exemplary medical residency programs. "Living the Questions: Essays Inspired by the Work and Life of Parker J. Palmer," was published in 2005. Born and raised in the Chicago area, he has lived in NYC, Berkeley, CA, Washington, DC, and Philadelphia, PA. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin.

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JANUARY 10, 2019
LET YOUR LIFE SPEAK
BY PARKER J. PALMER

This is my second pass through Let Your Life Speak. Thank you Parker Palmer for the insights into the "voice of vocation." "Vocation does not come from willfulness. It comes from listening," writes Palmer." His contention: How we are to listen to our lives is a question worth exploring. This book will help you listen! It is a vocational must read!

Palmer is not going to give you an ABC or 123 step-by-step plan, but his insights into vocation are great road signs to point you in the right direction. Here are a number of my takeaways:

10 Takeaways:

1. The Hasidic tale of Zusya: In the coming world, they will not ask me: 'Why were you not Moses?' They will ask me: 'Why were you not Zusya?' (yourself). I never forgot that from my first reading years ago. We find our authentic callings by being who we are, not trying to be someone else. "Ask me whether what I have done is my life." So good.

2. The Clearness Committee: See pages 44ff, 92. Having participated in a Clearness Committee, I can testify this is a powerful practice. Sitting among a small group of trusted advisors who are prohibited from offering "fixes," but instead can 0nly ask probing questions to help the one seeking clarity come to their "inner truth."

3. Frederick Buechner's definition of Vocation: The place where your deep gladness meets the world's deep need. From Wishful Thinking: A Seeker's ABC, p. 119.

4. The heart of my vocation: Teaching is at the heart of his vocation and will manifest itself in any role he plays. I'm asking: "What is the at the heart of my vocation that will manifest itself in whatever I do?" I will discover, create, equip.

5. Vocation as something I can't not do. Vocation at its deepest level is, "This is something I can't not do, for reasons I'm unable to explain to anyone else and don't fully understand myself but that are nonetheless compelling." 25 "Our strongest gifts are usually those we are barely aware of possessing." 52

6. Truth through weakness. We are led to the truth of our vocation by our weaknesses as well as our strengths. I must "take an unblinking look at myself and my liabilities." 28 "There is as much guidance in what does not and cannot happen in my life as there is in what can and does -- maybe more." 39; -- Contrary to popular belief, you can't be anything you want (see 44ff). How do your limitations (nature:physical makeup, personality; context: place and season of life) help define and clarify vocation?

7. Burnout: "One sign that I am violating my own nature in the name of nobility is a condition called burnout." 49 That thought is worth a lot of thought!

8. Depression: Chapter 4, "All The Way Down" is very helpful for understanding depression, how to process it and how to help others in the midst of it. Depression became part of God's means to help Palmer determine vocation. Such helpful insights in these pages.

9. Leadership: "A leader is someone with the power to project either shadow or light onto some part of the world and onto the lives of the people who dwell there." 78 "Good leadership comes from people who have penetrated their own inner darkness and arrived at the place where we are at one with one another, people who can lead the rest of us to a place of 'hidden wholeness' because thy have been there and know the way." 81

10. Identity: Identity does not depend on the role we play or the power it gives us over others. It depends on the simple fact that we are children of God, valued in and for ourselves.




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Top reviews from Australia


Mike Riddell

5.0 out of 5 stars A cracking read!Reviewed in Australia on 6 June 2020
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Read this as part of a unit requirement at Bible College. For years I’d heard of Palmer’s influence on leaders who have positively influenced me. Now, after seeing firsthand the wisdom shared in this shirt book, I see why.

Highly recommend for those discerning their journey in life- where they’ve been and where they’re going.


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Andrew Pearce

5.0 out of 5 stars Best book on vocation I have ever readReviewed in Australia on 11 September 2014
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Best book on vocation I have ever read. So honest and vulnerable. Shows how God uses every season of our lives.


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meditatecreate

5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring, heartful...a must readReviewed in Australia on 12 February 2018

Every time Parker comes out with a new book I get excited. He is a poet, and a treasure of our times. This book will inspire you and re-connect you with what really matters in life. It's an absolute must read!


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Dawne Kovan
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful, Wise and GentleReviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 October 2015
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This is a delightful and insightful book. The warmth of the author's heart shines through his wise words. It was a revelation to me that our "Way" forward is revealed as much in the doors that close behind us as those that open in front of us. Like Dr Palmer, I have found that the doors that have shown me my own Way have always done so by closing behind me. The only issue for me is that the book isn't available as a regular book, but only as Used or on Kindle. I prefer my "work books" to be in paper rather than on screen. However, I give it 5 Stars anyway.

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Pippa
3.0 out of 5 stars MehReviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 June 2021
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This book seemed promising in the beginning, but ended up delivering little. Still, it contains some interesting points and take-aways.
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Jogger Jayne
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking readReviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 May 2018
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Bought this preloved product. As described although an older hardback version it is in good condition & much cheaper. Palmer shares honestly his deep reflections on how he has journied through His life searching for his vocation. Helpful to anyone wrestling with find a purpose & meaning to their life.


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RevJen
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful, gentle, honest, wiseReviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 October 2017
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Wonderful book with deep wisdom and insights into the spiritual life and vocation. I wish I had read this book years ago before my own discernment process as it integrates so many questions of identity, calling, gifts and listening to the Inner Teacher that would have helped me along the way. But now in my 40s I find it just as inspiring as I consider where and what I am being called to now. I like all of Parker Palmer's books and his blog but so far this is my favorite. Very good.

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Sue Heatherington
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful, life changing little bookReviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 March 2022
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I am profoundly grateful for the honesty and clarity with which Parker Palmer explores how to listen to your life.
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July 9, 2011
I read this too fast, like eating an incredibly rich piece of cake that gives you a stomachache and a desire to never eat again. I read this too fast, because it's only 109 pages, and these days that's a Post-It note to me in a world of dissertations.
I will buy this book, and I will read it again, and I will take at least ten minutes for each page.

The thing about Palmer's writing is not that it is lofty or erudite or accompanied by some hidden soundtrack of thunderous drums and resonant string sections. It is that it is simple, and quiet, and in acceptance of brokenness. This is not a how-to-figure-out-what-you-are book, which is what I had been looking for; it is a why-to-accept-what-you-could-be book, which is what I actually needed. I applaud Palmer's honesty and willingness to discuss not knowing, not understanding, to admit that depression was a part of his journey without sensationalizing or diminishing it. It is the brevity that encourages me to go seek my own ideas of community and fellowship, to listen to my own life's voice, to disagree with his ideas of seasons and agree with his notions of soul solitude and fight to hold these oppositions, as we no longer learn to do. This is a book among the books that require thinking, praying, mulling, expanding, and never reading in a handful of days and gleefully moving on to the next volume. That makes it a worthwhile book--that I am not content to stop with this, and that Palmer never meant for his readers to do so.

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September 10, 2019

This is a reflective short book.

Parker talks about the difference between a goal and a calling in relation to a vocation. ...
...listening to our inner truths....our gifts, our limitations, regrets and mistakes...in the area of vocation.

His shares about his own life’s journey with depression, ( the ultimate state of disconnection), and shares about his position in leadership, and his connection with community.

By Parker sharing his experiences....his trials and tribulations.. we contemplate the different perspectives on what empowers and what dis-empowers our own choices.

As he reflected on his human modesty - authenticity - and consciousness- in human responsibility... we do the same. We look into our own lives.

I especially resonated with this excerpt: Its one I’ve looked at and explored a few times with Elkhart Tolle in his book “A New Earth”... awakening to your life‘s purpose”:
“Without a global revolution in the sphere of human consciousness, nothing will change for the better...and the catastrophe toward which this world is headed weather it be it ecological, social, demographic, or a general breakdown of civilization, will be unavoidable”.

Parker, in much the same way as Tolle does...
asks us to look at our life’s purpose.
Ha.... unfortunately it’s not something we only do once!

At every age and stage of our lives - our purposes are evolving...

Leaders like Tolle and Parker teach and empower us to be better people and be a contributor in building a better world.

For about the past 10 or 15 years....
I have had a request for myself: that I include in my reading ...at least once a year —
enlightening - uplifting- and spiritual books.... “read from the great spiritual leaders”.

‘Before’ my own calling came - late in life - ( reading called me late in life)...
I was constantly exploring transformation....with self and through organization.
The only books I read for pleasure during my young adult life were about awakening, consciousness, quality of life, meditation, well being, child development, nutrition, human growth, health, happiness, love, and full self expression.
Once I discovered the world of fiction, historical fiction,
and ‘stories’...( delicious storytelling),
I got away from reading books from our spiritual leaders and/ or nutritional leaders....
so as I mentioned about 10 or 15 years ago ...
I requested of myself that I not drop the ball completely...
So... at least once a year I make sure to read ‘something’ that taps into questions about my life’s purpose ...and how I might be a better human being.

Parker Palmer was new to me until months ago...a perfect-yearly- spiritual-choice.
He’s the real deal.
This was my second time reading one of his books.
Parker’s life journey and life’s work inspires.
This book is packed with truth.....
a gentle - non- preachy guidance through darkness into the lightness of finding one’s own calling.
Ha... and again... fortunately or unfortunately, it’s not something we can only ask of ourselves only one time in life.
It’s part of our life work.
Books like Parker’s... support us.

Once more - I have *Laysee *to thank for introducing Parker to me.
Thank You, Laysee!

Blessings to ongoing journeys: self & globally together.

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Laysee
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July 29, 2019
Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation is an insightful discourse on discovering one’s true self and vocation.

Many of us would be familiar with the experience of striving to live up to the expectations of others. We may even have made career choices or decisions that are far removed from who we really are. Parker J. Palmer invites us to reclaim the gift of our true selves. What I truly appreciated is Parker’s honest sharing of the detours he had taken before he found his true calling. It was good to learn that doors that are closed provide guidance too. Parker shared how opportunities that were denied him opened doors to others that enabled him to use his natural gifts and tap his potential. According to Parker, ”True vocation joins self and service.” He quoted Frederick Buechner, another of my best loved authors, who said that true vocation is “where your deep gladness meets the world’s deep needs.” How wonderful! There is certainly truth in this.

In one of six chapters, ‘All the Way Down,’ Parker wrote movingly about his clinical depression and what helpful responses looked like to a depressed person. It was eye opening to learn how the support some well-meaning friends extended to him (e.g., simplistic religious or scientific 'fix it' explanations) sadly drove him deeper into depression. He shed light on the kind of respectful support that brought healing. This chapter alone made this book extremely powerful and worthwhile.

My favorite chapter is the last titled, ‘There Is A Season.’ Parker used seasons as a metaphor for the movement of life. The cycle of our life mirrors the four seasons of the year and Parker wrote about the unique beauty in each season in language that was exquisite and elegant. He said, "The notion that our lives are like the eternal cycle of the seasons does not deny the struggle or the joy, the loss or the gain, the darkness or the light, but encourages us to embrace it all - and to find in all of it opportunities for growth.”

Parker has a gift of distilling the insights he gained from difficult circumstances and challenges he encountered. In introspect, he was able to recall them to himself and to us with a good dose of humor. There was a hilarious account of his first Outward Bound experience and a moment of epiphany that crystallized for him a life motto, which I too can use: "If you can't get out of it, get into it."

Again, as in the first Parker book I read, On the Brink of Everything, I refrain from quoting too much from this book in hope that others will read it for themselves. At only 115 pages, Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation is a tightly written book full of wisdom and gentle reflection on the importance of being true to who we are and living the best life we can. Highly recommended.

Special thanks to my friend, Yim Harn, for loaning me her copy of this book and, most of all, for introducing me to Parker Palmer, who has become an esteemed mentor.
five-star-books

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Thomas Holbrook
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January 31, 2012
A friend whose Spiritual walk has given me a deeper understanding of courage and integrity suggested I may like this little book. I quickly became aware that the only thing diminutive about this tome was its size. When I began reading it, given the few pages it contained and the dimensions of those pages, I thought I would be finished reading it in a few hours. I spent 30 minutes reading the first five pages, I would read a paragraph and stare into the Middle Distance for five minutes considering what I had read and tracking its course through my body. Dr. Palmer writes so well that his words have the kind of power that can be physically felt.
Parker Palmer is an author whose writing has received multiple awards, recognitions and other well deserved kudos. What he writes speaks to the core of human existence with a hope founded in truth and reality. A Quaker by religious tradition, he invites the reader into the quiet knowing that is the heart of that faith system. This book is not about religious instruction; however, it is about life instruction, as cliché as that sounds. He confronts long held notions of success and “calling” by asking simple questions. Those simple questions were the cause of the frequent moments of “listening” I had while reading this book.
One of the privileges available to many of us is a plethora of choices of vocation (life’s work) we feel we have. The idea that “anyone can be anything they want to be if they strive for it hard enough” has caused more pain, depression and dissatisfaction than can be best related in this short narrative. Inherent in such statements is, if you do “succeed” in becoming that which you had dreamt of becoming but find dissatisfaction instead of fulfillment, then guilt is induced. However, if the dream is left unfulfilled, then it is because one did not work hard enough for it.
Dr. Palmer suggests learning to “listen to one’s life” in deciding the direction of one’s life rather than to the “shoulds,” “oughts” and “supposed to’s” often learned by the time we are in high school. This is done by being conscious of the successes (what brings one joy and fulfillment) as well as those moments when close in our faces. His opening statement is the heart of the remainder of the book, “the life I am living is not the same as the life that wants to live in me” (p. 2). The following chapters speak to the possibility of discovering the Life one’s life is trying to live. This process is neither a “to do list” nor does it offer steps for one to follow to come upon The Answer for which one has been searching; it is too intuitive and personal for such sterile maneuvers. This is a matter of listening, being honest and courageous enough to follow ones discovered path.
The chapters are gathered from previous writings Dr. Palmer penned for various publications and lectures but edited for a coherent, well-developed discourse on an important concept. There is no judgment or coercion in the course of the book which speaks to the author’s talent. I found it to be deeply spiritual but not religious; the author speaks of his Quaker faith but does so to “flesh out” the point he was making. In lesser hands his self-revelations could become a source of conceit; here they serve to give depth to the truths he is holding forth.
Reading this book requires: an open heart, a willingness to learn, a desire to listen and a fresh highlighter.

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Kasey Jueds
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December 24, 2009
When you're totally confused about a major life issue, it's so much nicer to think about what you're going through as a "process of discernment" rather than just a mess. I really appreciate Parker Palmer's gentle, thoughtful way of exploring how to make choices by being our best, truest selves, instead of thinking about what we should do or what we think other people want us to do. He also explores depression as a way of discovering that true self; not that he recommends becoming depressed, but he sees the possibility that depression can be a journey toward a sort of wholeness, and points out that it always has something to teach us.
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Eliza
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February 4, 2019
A meaningful little book talking about the importance of letting your life speak. Even though I read this for class, I'm glad it was required because I felt like Palmer was talking to me - he's incredibly open and honest about his own struggles. Lovely read!
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Tom LA
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February 14, 2022
Recommended by my priest, Fr. David. Many good insights about the concept of true self and vocation. The author talks honestly about himself in a quasi autobiography.

It seems like there is a trend to title a book using the second person, when the author really writes about himself or herself. I understand that your own experience is the only one you have, but if you want to write a book about vocation, why not go out and interview people about their experiences, too?

“My struggle with my life choices and with my depression, and the way I finally found a satisfying narrative to integrate my life” would have been a more honest and accurate, although not very marketable, title for this book.

I found some of the content wise and useful, but I didn’t find anything original, and I highlighted a few portions as too vague and abstract to be helpful.

I’m reading Dante with great depth in these months, and although any author pales when compared to Dante, I have to say that Palmer’s book strikes me as saying with the strength of a little candle the same things that 700 years ago Dante said with the power of 1,000 volcanos erupting at the same time. And, before him, the sacred scriptures.

Prayer, reflecting on humility and on the gospel, the writings of the fathers of the church (and the saints!) remain the best ways to understand your true self.

…. and reading Dante, of course!

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Iris
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January 19, 2012
I was reluctant to read this in a time when so few jobs are available; wouldn't it be worse to know my "calling" when there's little or no opportunity to practice it? In fact, there is no better book to help me confront and enlighten such pessimism. No matter if I never find a dream job, I still have a vocation. Palmer writes about big ideas in a small, quiet, reflective tone; I can't wait to read more of his work.

Though his book was given to me at an Episcopal group for underemployed recession-era 20-somethings, I recommend this highly to people of all ages, career statuses - and beliefs. Don't let the publisher-imposed genre, "SPIRITUALITY," sway you, as there is nothing faith-focused in subject or preachy in tone. Palmer, an education advisor and Quaker, shares contemplative, humble ideas about how to change our attitudes towards jobs and work and make sure that our lives, working and at play, suit our personalities and values.

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June 15, 2010
I tried to like this book because Palmer had some really good messages to get across, but unfortunately I found his writing way too self-indulgent and dramatic. The book is barely over 100 pages but it took me forever to read because I kept getting so frustrated and annoyed with the author's voice. I also disagreed with the main premise of the book that we all have a destiny....I think we make our own.

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Parker Palmer                                         Written by Brad Nelson 

Let Your Life Speak Chapter 1-Listening to Life

 

Quotes to think about

“They remind me of moments when it is clear-if I have eyes to see-that the life I am living is not the same as the life that wants to live in me” [p. 2].

“I had simply found a “noble” way to live a life that was not my own, a life spent imitating heroes instead of listening to my heart” [p. 3].

“Before you tell your life what you intend to do with it, listen for what it intends to do with you. Before you tell your life what truths and values you have decided to live up to, let your life tell you what truths to embody, what values you represent” [p. 3].

 

“There may be moments in life when we are so unformed that we need to use values like an exoskeleton to keep us from collapsing” [p. 4].

 

“Vocation, the way I was seeking it, becomes an act of will, a grim determination that one’s life will go this way or that whether it wants to or not” [p. 4].

 

“Vocation does not come from willfulness…That insight is hidden in the word vocation itself, which is rooted in the Latin for “voice.” Vocation does not mean a goal that I pursue. It means a calling that I hear” [p.4].

 

“We have a strange conceit in our culture that simply because we have said something, we understand what it means!” [p. 6]

 

“Verbalizing is not the only way our lives speak, of course. They speak through our actions and reactions, our intuitions and instincts, our feelings and bodily states of being, perhaps more profoundly than through our words” [p. 6].

 

“My life is not only about my strengths and virtues; it is also about my liabilities and my limits, my trespasses and my shadow” [p. 6].

 

Questions for Reflection

 

During which moments/activities do you feel most alive? 

 

What are your feelings about someone doing the right thing for the wrong reason?

 

In what ways do you hear from God?

 

What kinds of things most drain you? Stress you?

 

What activities give you the space to reflect on what is going on inside you? How often do you do them?

 

Consider the aphorism “Your greatest strength can also be your greatest weakness.” What is the connection between your strengths and your limits?

 

Suggested Activity

 

Pray through St. Ignatius’ Prayer of Examen. 

See www.marshill.org/groups/hc/ Select the link titled Prayer of Examen in the Practices section.

 

 

Parker Palmer Let Your Life Speak Chapter 2-Now I Become Myself

 

Quotes to think about

 

“What a long time it can take to become the person one has always been. How often in the process we mask ourselves in faces that are not our own” [p. 9].

 

“We ourselves, driven by fear, too often betray true self to gain the approval of others” [p. 12].

 

“But inspected through the lens of paradox, my desire to become an aviator and an advertiser contain clues to the core of true self…clues, by definition, are coded and must be deciphered” [p. 13].

 

“If you seek vocation without understanding the material you are working with, what you build with your life will be ungainly and may well put lives in peril, your own and some of those around you” [p. 16].

 

“In the tradition of pilgrimage…hardships are seen not as accidental but as integral to the journey itself” [p. 18].

 

“I saw that as an organizer I had never stopped being a teacher-I was simply teaching in a classroom without walls. Make me a cleric or a CEO, a poet or a politico, and teaching is what I will do” [p. 21].

 

“People like me are raised to live autonomously, not interdependently. I had been trained to compete and win, and I had developed a taste for the prizes” [p. 22].

 

“Because I could not acknowledge my fear, I had to disguise it as the white horse of judgment and self-righteousness” [p. 28].

 

“Self care is never a selfish act-it is simply good stewardship of the only gift I have, the gift I was put on the earth to offer to others” [p. 30].

 

“They decide no longer to act on the outside in a way that contradicts some truth about themselves that they hold deeply on the inside” [p. 32].

 

“Some journeys are direct, and some are circuitous; some are heroic, and some are fearful and muddled. But every journey, honestly undertaken, stands a chance of taking us toward the place where our deep gladness meets the world’s deep need” [p. 36].

 

Questions for reflection

 

What role does gaining the approval of others play in how you live your life?

 

As Palmer recalls his childhood, he is able to uncover clues to his true self. Parents, siblings, and even spouses are great sources of information to find out what you were like when you were younger.

What were your childhood fascinations? Were you an artist? Were you building forts in the woods? What sorts of things held your attention?  

 

Are there connections between the things that fascinated you then and the life that you want to live now?

 

Half-truths go hand in hand with fear. In our fear, it is much easier to look at another person, institution, or situation and point out shortcomings than it is to look at our own. Fear may motivate us to do the right thing for the wrong reasons.

What are some of the fears that “trigger” you to lash out at others?

 

Palmer says that “self care is good stewardship of the only gift I have, the gift that I was placed on earth to offer others.” He goes on to say that a lack of self care hurts not only the individual but others as well.

What does “self care” look like for you? What restores you?

 

What are the things in your life that make your soul tired? 

 

Who are the Martin Luther King Jr.’s, the Rosa Parks’, and Gandhis: of your life? Who are the people that you admire so much that you seek to model aspects of your life after them? Why these people?

 

Learning who you are doesn’t simply mean learning your strengths but also your limitations. “Who are you?” is a very broad and difficult question to answer. I may not be able to tell you “who I am,” but I’ve got a list of stories to tell you who I am not! 

Finish the sentence “I could never_____ it’s just not me.” 

 

Suggested Activity

 

Palmer says that “clues are coded and must be deciphered.” Turn a blank sheet of paper on its side and draw a straight line from the left side to the right side. The line will serve as a chronological timeline of your life from birth until now. Place significant experiences and events that have shaped who you are today on the timeline. Examples: family of origin, deaths, births, school and work experiences, relationships, spiritual journey, great moments of joy, or great moments of sadness.

 

Take time to share with one another about what is on your timeline and why it is significant.

 

 

Parker Palmer Let Your Life Speak Chapter 3-When Way Closes

 

Quotes to think about

 

“There is as much guidance in what does not and cannot happen in my life as there is in what can and does-maybe more” [p. 39].

 

“If you are like me and don’t readily admit your limits, embarrassment may be the only way to get your attention” [p. 42].

 

“As Americans…we resist the very idea of limits, regarding limits of all sorts as temporary and regrettable impositions on our lives…We refuse to take no for an answer” [p. 42].

 

“When I consistently refuse to take no for an answer, I miss the vital clues to my identity that arise when way closes-and I am more likely both to exceed my limits and to do harm to others in the process” [p. 43].

 

“There are some roles and relationships in which we thrive and others in which we wither and die” [p. 44].

 

“It took me a long time to understand that although everyone needs to be loved, I cannot be the source of that gift to everyone who asks me for it” [p. 48].

 

“When I give something I do not possess, I give a false and dangerous gift, a gift that looks like love but is, in reality, loveless-a gift given more from my need to prove myself than from the other’s need to be cared for” [p. 48].

 

“Our strongest gifts are usually those we are barely aware of possessing. They are a part of our God given nature, with us from the moment we drew first breath, and we are no more conscious of having them than we are of breathing”

[p. 52].

 

“Limitations and liabilities are the flip side of our gifts…a particular weakness is the inevitable trade-off for a particular strength. We will become better teachers not by trying to fill the potholes in our souls but by knowing them so well that we can avoid falling into them” [p. 52].

 

“If we are to live our lives fully and well, we must learn to embrace the opposites, to live in a creative tension between our limits and our potentials. We must honor our limitations in ways that do not distort our nature, and we must trust and use our gifts in ways that fulfill the potentials God gave us” [p. 55].

 

Questions for reflection

 

Can you identify a moment in your life when God used a “closed door” instead of an “open door” to guide your life in the direction it needed to go? Discuss your experience.

 

Palmer says that embarrassment is sometimes the only way we become aware of our limitations. Identify and discuss an embarrassing moment that helped you become aware of your limitations.

 

How does humor get used to avoid dealing with our shortcomings?

 

In American culture, weaknesses and limitations are often viewed as things that need to be turned into strengths. Palmer seems to argue that in trying to turn our weaknesses into strengths we become something that we are not and end up living outside of ourselves. How does the idea that weaknesses should be identified and honored rather than turned into strengths strike you?

 

If our strongest gifts are usually the ones that we are most unaware of, what types of things do people tell you are your strengths that you feel unaware of?

 

Suggested Activity

 

Identify and write down two recent moments in your life. 1. A moment when things went so well that you felt confident that you were born to do whatever you were doing at the time. 2. A moment when something went so poorly that you never wanted to repeat the experience again.

 

Break into groups of two or three people and share these moments. In the groups, begin by helping one another see the strengths that made the great moment possible. After doing that, reflect with one another about the moment that went poorly. Instead of offering critiques, think about the strengths discussed in the first moment. Knowing that our strengths and weaknesses are often opposites, help each other identify if there is a connection between the strength of the first moment and the weakness of the second moment. How are they two sides of the same coin?

 

When everyone has finished gather back together as one group and discuss what you discovered.

 

 

Parker Palmer Let Your Life Speak Chapter 4: All the Way Down

 

*Before your discussion of chapter 4, it is very important to lay a framework for your discussion. Anytime people are discussing their brokenness, it must be done in a place of safety and confidentiality. Ask the group to be attentive to not try to “fix” one another as you interact. If you sense this beginning to happen, remind everyone that you are not trying to fix one another but to help one another hear. Also, be sure to communicate how important it is that what is discussed remains confidential. 

 

Quotes to think about

 

“I had no choice but to write about my own deepest wound…I rarely spoke to him about my own darkness; even in his gracious presence, I felt too ashamed” [p.

57].

 

“Second, depression demands that we reject simplistic answers, both “religious” and “scientific,” and learn to embrace mystery, something our culture resists” [p. 60].

 

“I do not like to speak ungratefully of my visitors. They all meant well, and they were among the few who did not avoid me altogether” [p. 61].

 

“Depression is the ultimate state of disconnection, not just between people but between one’s mind and one’s feelings. To be reminded of that disconnection only deepened my despair” [p. 62].

 

“I heard nothing beyond their opening words, because I knew they were peddling a falsehood: no one can fully experience another person’s mystery” [p. 62].

 

“One of the hardest things we must do sometimes is to be present to another person’s pain without trying to “fix” it, to simply stand respectfully at the edge of that person’s mystery and misery” [p. 63].

 

“Functional atheism-saying pious words about God’s presence in our lives but believing, on the contrary, that nothing good is going to happen unless we make it happen” [p. 64].

 

“First, I had been trained as an intellectual not only to think-an activity I greatly value-but also to live largely in my head…” [p. 67].

 

“I had to be forced underground before I could understand that the way to God is not up but down” [p. 69].

 

“One of the most painful discoveries I made in the midst of the dark woods of depression was that a part of me wanted to stay depressed. As long as I clung to this living death, life became easier; little was expected of me, certainly not serving others” [p. 71].

 

Questions for reflection

 

Identifying our wounds is a critical part of the inward journey. Think back to the timeline you drew in the Chapter 2 activity. What are the wounds you have suffered?

 

In what ways does shame cause you to hide who you are from others?

 

Discuss the following statement: Sometimes not having answers to some of life’s questions can be comforting. Do you agree? Why or why not?

 

Do you feel it is important to “show up” when others experience hardship or tragedy? Why or why not?

 

Discuss Palmer’s suggestion that no one can fully experience another person’s mystery and misery. 

 

How is the phrase “I know exactly how you feel” a positive statement between two people? How is it a negative statement?

 

How do you see “functional atheism” in the world around you? In your life?

 

What does “the way to God is down” mean to you?

 

Palmer says “part of me wanted to stay depressed.” Why do you think we hold onto our pain despite the fact that we want it to stop?

 

Suggested Activity

 

Have someone read Job 2:9-13. 

What can we learn about how Job’s friends respond in these few verses?

 

Read Job 4:8 and then Job 13:5. 

What is Eliphaz suggesting about Job in 4:8? What can be learned from Job’s response in 13:5?

 

 

Parker Palmer Let Your Life Speak Chapter 5-Leading from Within

 

Quotes to think about

 

“I lead by word and deed simply because I am here doing what I do. If you are also here, doing what you do, then you also exercise leadership of some sort” [p.

74].

 

“Why must we go in and down? Because as we do so, we will meet the darkness that we carry within ourselves-the ultimate shadows that we project onto other people. If we do not understand that the enemy is within, we will find a thousand ways of making someone “out there” into the enemy, becoming leaders who oppress rather than liberate others” [p. 80].

 

“But why would anybody want to take a journey of that sort, with its multiple difficulties and dangers? Everything in us cries out against it-which is why we externalize everything. It is so much easier to deal with the external world, to spend our lives manipulating materials and institutions and other people instead of dealing with our own souls” [p. 82].

 

“Why would anyone want to embark on the daunting inner journey about which Annie Dillard writes? Because there is no way out of one’s inner life, so one had better get into it. On the inward and downward spiritual journey, the only way out is in and through” [p. 85].

 

“But extroversion sometimes develops as a way to cope with self-doubt: we plunge into external activity to prove that we are worthy-or simply to evade the question” [p. 86].

 

“the knowledge that identity does not depend on the role w e play or the power it gives us over others. It depends only on the simple fact that we are children of God, valued in and for ourselves” [p. 87].

 

“A few people found ways to be present to me without violating my soul’s integrity. Because they were not driven by their own fears, the fears that lead us either to “fix” or abandon each other…” [p. 93].

 

Questions for reflection

 

Palmer suggests that anyone who is alive is a leader. He broadens the typical definition of leadership to include things like family dynamics and relationships. Discuss your thoughts on this. 

 

What monsters do you need to “ride all the way down?” What might that look like?

 

What activities have you been part of in order to prove your worth or value?

 

Palmer finishes the chapter by saying that it is possible for communities to be with one another in a way that is safe and honoring. What do you think makes communities feel unsafe?

 

We are meant to support and journey with one another. What alternatives are there for journeying together beyond “fixing or abandoning?”

 

Suggested Activity

 

Read Matthew 15:2,10, and 11.

 

Have someone wrap an empty box as you would a birthday or Christmas gift. Decorate the exterior with ribbons, bows, and other gift decorations. Set the gift in the middle of the room and ask people to make observations about the wrapping: What can we tell about the person who wrapped the box based on the wrapping? After several minutes of observation, have someone open the gift to reveal the empty box. Jesus observes that the Pharisees are so concerned with the exterior that they neglect what is inside. How is this true in our lives?

 

 

Parker Palmer Let Your Life Speak Chapter 6-There Is a Season

 

Quotes to think about

 

“Animated by the imagination, one of the most vital powers we possess, our metaphors often become reality, transmuting themselves from language into the living of our lives” [p. 96].

 

“We do not believe that we “grow” our lives-we believe that we “make” them” [p.

97].

 

“We are here not only to transform the world but also to be transformed” [p. 97].

 

“In my own experience of autumn, I am rarely aware that seeds are being planted” [p. 98].

 

“In retrospect, I can see in my own life what I could not see at the time-how the job I lost helped me find work I needed to do, how the “road closed” sign turned me toward terrain I needed to travel, how losses that felt irredeemable forced me to discern meanings I needed to know” [p. 99].

 

“There is in all visible things…a hidden wholeness” [p. 99].

 

“Until we enter boldly into the fears we most want to avoid, those fears will dominate our lives” [p. 103].

 

“If you receive a gift, you keep it alive not by clinging to it but by passing it along…If we want to save our lives, we cannot cling to them but must spend them with abandon” [p. 105].

 

“Authentic abundance does not lie in secured stockpiles of food or cash or influence or affection but in belonging to a community where we can give those goods to others who need them-and receive them from others when we are in need” [p. 108].

 

“Community doesn’t just create abundance-community is abundance. If we could learn that equation from the world of nature, the human world might be transformed” [p. 108].

 

Questions for reflection

 

What season do you feel that you are currently in? Why?

 

In your mind, what is the weirdest most obscure animal in all of God’s good creation? Why do you suppose God is so detailed and extravagant with his creation?

 

What things contribute to the loss of imagination?

 

In what ways do you “make your life” rather than listen for what God desires to make of your life?

 

God asks that his people join him in redeeming and restoring the world. How are you joining God to redeem and restore the world? Remember that God is about details and extravagance. We can sometimes feel that the way we join God is small and insignificant compared to the way others do. But it isn’t. God created you to be a gift to Him and to the world and you have something to offer. What is it? 

 

How is this process transforming you?

 

The way of Jesus, which is the way of the cross, compels us to use our freedom and abundance for the benefit of others. What does it look like for you to live for the benefit of others?

 

What does it look like for your community?

 

Suggested Activity

 

After discussing what it might look like for your community to live for the benefit of others, finish by holding hands in a circle and reciting the Lord’s Prayer.

[Matthew 6:9-13].

 

 





Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life: Levoy, Gregg Michael

Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life: Levoy, Gregg Michael: 9780517705698: Amazon.com: Books

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Gregg Michael Levoy
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Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life Hardcover 
– September 16, 1997
by Gregg Michael Levoy (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars 293 ratings


"Stunning! Wonderful! Levoy writes like a poet. His material is both spiritual and practical. I don't know another book that deals with callings in quite the same way."
--Larry Dossey, M.D., author of Healing Words and Prayer Is Good Medicine

How do we know if we're following our true callings? How do we sharpen our senses to cut through the distractions of everyday reality and hear the calls that are beckoning us?

Callings is a passionate look at the search for authenticity. In a style that is poetic, exuberant, and keenly insightful, Gregg Levoy breathes contemporary life into the ancient topic of callings. He presents an illuminating and ultimately practical inquiry into how we listen and respond to our calls, whether at work or at home, in our relationships or in service.

Callings is the first book to examine the many kinds of calls we receive, and the great variety of channels through which they come to us. A calling may be to do something (change careers, go back to school, leave or start a relationship, move to the country, have a child) or to be something (more creative, less judgmental, more loving). You may be called toward or away from something, called to change or renew your commitment to something, or called to return to a place or pursuit in an entirely new way. You may be called toward whatever you have dared and double-dared yourself to do for as long as you can remember.

Gregg Levoy draws on the hard-won wisdom and powerful stories of people who have followed their own calls, to show us the many ways to translate a calling into action. While honoring a calling's essential mystery, the book also guides readers to ask and answer the fundamental questions that arise from any calling: How do we recognize it? How do we distinguish the true calls from the siren song? How do we handle our resistance to a call? What happens when we say no? What happens when we say yes?

Whether your interest in callings is personal or professional, and whether the calls you hear are great trumpetings or the more common daily summonses to pay attention to your intuition, you will find this beautiful book an inspiration. It is a compassionate guide to discovering your own callings and negotiating the tight passages to personal power and authenticity.


339 pages
4.5 out of 5 stars 1,424

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
The lure of true calling is as powerful as it is exacting and Gregg Levoy's Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life plays upon this common yearning. Indeed, many recognize that there floats somewhere out there "... a call to each of us to materialize ourselves." And everyone can make his or her life "come true," attests Levoy, whose work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Washington Post, and Psychology Today, if one can learn to read the signs that point one toward one's calling.

But how do we attune--clear a path through ingrained skepticism, negative conditioning, and fear so that we can hear the call? This is the question fundamental to spiritual questing. Receptivity is the first step in the art of sign reading, discerning the calls that point life choices toward meaningful action. Levoy's tools include dream interpretation, relating physical symptoms to their metaphysical correspondences (i.e. the recurring pain in the neck), and recognizing serendipitous events. Learn to discern, Levoy instructs, distinguishing, for example, between true inner guidance and the babble in our heads. And don't expect a big "call," flashing chariots and burning bushes. Rather, Levoy will help the reader cultivate a sensitivity to the still, small voice within.

Since it's inspiration through old truths and classic adages, the success of the message depends, naturally, on a kind of practical clarity. At times frustrating, Callings entices the reader toward self-transformation with New Age rhetoric and examples not always applicable to our more ordinary plights. Quoting the impassioned Annie Dillard may be swell ("The thing is to stalk your calling in a certain skilled and supple way, to locate the most tender and live spot and plug into the pulse"), but--in the long run--metaphor is metaphor and how-to, though less stately and exalted, is the practical precursor to action. Readers familiar with the literature of self-actualization will want to skim the lengthy introduction with its fervent and redundant references to our spiritual spin doctors--Sufi poets Kabir and Rumi; Joseph Campbell; Kierkegaard. But like many deft cartographers of the subterranean terrain, Levoy's mixed bag of metaphor, anecdote, and myth ultimately inspires and encourages the hungry soul to define itself in relation to the divine. For those who can afford to ask these "quality-of- life" questions, Callings offers heartfelt crazy wisdom. Above all else, it's sound nutrient in our spiritually hollow time.


From Library Journal
If life is truly a process and not a destination, the possibility of actually trying a few of the alternate routes that occasionally beckon becomes real. In this inspiring book, Levoy, formerly a columnist for the Cincinnati Inquirer, shares the personal journeys of an assortment of people who were willing to take risks to find their authentic selves, unsure whether they would achieve self-actualization or enrichment. The author followed his own calling and is now a freelance writer and lecturer and teaches journalism. Elevated far above the category of self-help by Levoy's masterly writing, this book reads more like a philosophical guide for those who dare to examine their dreams and take action to explore them. He includes an extensive bibliography and instructions on contacting the people who shared their personal stories for a "continued" dialog. Recommended, especially for those readers who've experienced enough of life to wonder if it was meant to include authenticity and joy.?Catherine T. Charvat, John Marshall Lib., Alexandria, Va.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the Inside Flap
ng! Wonderful! Levoy writes like a poet. His material is both spiritual and practical. I don't know another book that deals with callings in quite the same way." <br>--Larry Dossey, M.D., author of Healing Words and Prayer Is Good Medicine<br><br>How do we know if we're following our true callings? How do we sharpen our senses to cut through the distractions of everyday reality and hear the calls that are beckoning us? <br><br>Callings is a passionate look at the search for authenticity. In a style that is poetic, exuberant, and keenly insightful, Gregg Levoy breathes contemporary life into the ancient topic of callings. He presents an illuminating and ultimately practical inquiry into how we listen and respond to our calls, whether at work or at home, in our relationships or in service.<br><br>Callings is the first book to examine the many kinds of calls we receive, and the great variety of channels through which they come to us


From the Back Cover
"Gregg Levoy offers a discerning eye for peering into one's life to translate the recurring symptoms of refusing the inner voices, to gather the courage to answer what calls. He does this with good writing, humor, and a strong clarion voice."
--Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Ph.D., author of Women Who Run with the Wolves, The Gift of Story, and The Faithful Gardener

"Callings can help you discover your true vocation--and help you hear the still small voice that calls you by name."
--Sam Keen, Ph.D., author of Fire in the Belly and Hymns to an Unknown God

"Gregg Levoy has written about the nature of guidance with a ringing clarity. Callings is a spiritual seduction that gives form to a universal mystery. I'd recommend it to anyone who is seeking to hold the divine hand through a transition in their lives."
--Caroline Myss, Ph.D., author of Anatomy of the Spirit

About the Author
GREGG LEVOY, author of This Business of Writing, is a full-time freelance writer whose essays and articles have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Washington Post, Omni, Psychology Today, and others, and is the recipient of a first-place writing award from the Associated Press. Formerly a columnist for the Cincinnati Enquirer and adjunct professor of journalism at the University of New Mexico, he actively lectures and teaches workshops about callings.
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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Harmony; 1st edition (September 16, 1997)
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 339 pages
Gregg Michael Levoy



Gregg Levoy is the author of 'Vital Signs: The Nature and Nurture of Passion' (Penguin), and 'Callings: Finding and Following An Authentic Life' (Random House)----rated among the "Top 20 Career Publications" by the Workforce Information Group and a text in various graduate programs in Management and Organizational Leadership.

He is a former “behavioral specialist” at USA Today, and a regular blogger for Psychology Today.

He is a lecturer and seminar-leader in the business, educational, governmental, faith-based and human-potential arenas, and has keynoted and presented workshops at the Smithsonian Institution, Environmental Protection Agency, National League of Cities, National Conference on Positive Aging, Microsoft, British Petroleum, American Express, Ascension Health, Americorps, Michigan National Bank, the Universities of California/Colorado/Washington/Arizona/Nevada/Wisconsin/Texas and others, the American Counseling Association, National Career Development Association, International Association of Career Management Professionals, National Association of Colleges & Employers, Esalen Institute, Omega Institute, and others, and has been a frequent guest of the media, including ABC-TV, CNN, NPR and PBS.

A former adjunct professor of journalism at the University of New Mexico, former columnist and reporter for USA Today and the Cincinnati Enquirer, and author of 'This Business of Writing' (Writer’s Digest Books), he has written for the New York Times Magazine, Washington Post, Omni, Psychology Today, Christian Science Monitor, Reader’s Digest, and many others, as well as for corporate, promotional and television projects. His website is www.gregglevoy.com.

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Top reviews from the United States


rsally

5.0 out of 5 stars Must readReviewed in the United States on March 29, 2022
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This book is great. It has helped me as a career counselor.

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M. McCarthy

5.0 out of 5 stars One of My Top 5 Favorite BooksReviewed in the United States on July 23, 2006
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I first read Gregg Levoy's book several years ago. It was by far the best book on the subject of callings I had ever come across. Being in the field of organizational development has led me to many books on the topic, but none that compares to this. 

What I love about this book is that it talks not just of 

  • the importance of finding your calling(s), but goes on in depth to
  •  address the question of "once you find it what happens next?", as well as 
  • "if I follow it and it throws my whole life up in the air, then what?" 

This book is a rare gem because Levoy draws together many minds on the subject of callings. He is a consummate storyteller, which I love, because it's a book of people's actual journeys rather than purely the author's philosophy. 

I've re-read this book twice and have bought nearly 500 copies which I give to clients and executive teams, many at major corporations in the US, Canada and Europe. 

Every time I give it to someone they tell me they've gone on to buy more copies for others. If you read this book and it doesn't speak to you, it might mean you're not ready to pursue a calling that's niggling at you. If so, pick it up again later and you might find it the perfect book. Every time I've read it, something new jumps out at me realting to the place I'm in at the time. I also went on to sign up for Gregg Levoy's Callings Workshop, which was spectacular. It led me to bring the author to both Chicago and the U.K. to speak to my clients. You can find out when his workshops are happening by going to [...]

15 people found this helpful

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Tanis Coralee Leonhardi

5.0 out of 5 stars What is your heartcall?Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2020
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Maybe you just love rocks (like me!) 
or maybe your heart calls out to something that in today’s world just doesn’t seem feasible. 
I liked this book as it provides some clarity on if you are just doing what others want you to do or if you are following your true callings. A good read if your feel you are at a crossroads and need some clarity on how to proceed and what to pursue that stays true to you. After all maybe those rocks calling prevent the next mass extinction (that falls in the wheelehouse of geology) or you tell the story of how the mountain next to the home you were raised in was formed and the minerals and Earth processes that made it what we see and experience today.

5 people found this helpful

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Shiva

3.0 out of 5 stars Poetic prose ad nauseum. Just about every paragraph quotes someone else. Repetitive - too many flowery analogies.Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2016
Verified Purchase
  • Yes, the author definitely writes like a poet and that's part of what attracted me to this book - that and the sneak peek of what's inside. 
  • But like a movie trailer - the best parts for me are what was free to read. I wanted to hear more about how to hone my intuition - how to sensitise myself to my own inner voice. 
  • What I got was lot's of pretty words but no clear direction. It seemed to me that the writer cared more about flowery prose then content - there was way too much embellishment. 
  • After a while I was bored and distracted by it. Also, this guy loves to quote people - at least one per page it seems - often one per paragraph. That drove me nuts. He also beats a point to death with a host of verbose analogies - way more than necessary. 
  • Glad others liked the book but I couldn't finish it. I gave it three stars for the parts that did help me but it was only a small portion of the book. Honestly I really wanted to give it two stars but so many people seemed to have liked this book it didn't seem fair.

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Lydia Pettis

4.0 out of 5 stars Pages out of orderReviewed in the United States on January 7, 2012
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This is a deep and rich exploration of all stages of being called to live a more authentic life. 
Being called is not an easy path; rather it is one that may involve resistance, impatience, and more time than you ever imagined. If you are in the midst of the waiting, or are wondering if the payoff will be worth the investment, this book will normalize your experience and help you to relax into the process. Callings are as much about simply being as doing. Overall I found this to be an inspiring and satisfying book, one that helped me to take some of the pressure off myself by putting my own experience into perspective.

On every page there are 1 - 3 quotes from others. This is both a blessing and an occasional annoyance. Finally, buyer beware, the last 30 pages of this book are out of order (I returned the first one, the second one was the same).

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Dogearred Bookmarker

5.0 out of 5 stars There was even a good and honest chapter about refusing a callingReviewed in the United States on October 5, 2015
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Let me begin by saying that I think this is the first book I've read that has more dogearred pages than pages without turned down corners. The book is well organized, very well written, loaded with soul and spirit-opening material, juicy quotes, enlightening stories that don't always end the way you expect and tempered with warnings about the hard work and failures that answering a call entails. There was even a good and honest chapter about refusing a calling.

 I was struck by a list of contact information for many of the people whose stories appear in the book. There is an extensive bibliography. I wish there had been an index though that would have been a tough task in a book of this nature. I know what I am giving my friends at the Adoration Chapel this Christmas and other friends who share a spiritual nature.

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byondmyrs

5.0 out of 5 stars Levoy is a brilliant writer with a worthy cause -- our fulfillment!Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2019
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I was assigned this book by one of my favorite professors in graduate school for counseling psychology, and as an incredibly nit-picky reader I was astounded by the quality of Levoy's writing. Through his rich case examples and deeply heartfelt storytelling, he takes us on several people's journeys with the ultimate purpose of supporting the exploration of our own paths. Rather than trying to sell us on a particular method or espouse a singular approach, Levoy deftly hints at the treasures we can unfold in cultivating awareness of our most transcendent capabilities and wishes.

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Leenie

5.0 out of 5 stars StunningReviewed in the United States on March 13, 2017
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This book is stunning. I loved the mix of mythology, symbolism, and real-life stories which are used to explain each point. The author really offers a unique and rare perspective on the subject of callings. There is so much in this book it's almost a little overwhelming - I was completely hooked once I got started reading it, yet I would need to set it down frequently in order to ponder and digest the content. This is a book for people at a crossroads, and for people who feel like they have been sleep-walking through life and would like to awaken. I particularly liked the section addressing the shadow side of callings - the sense of ambivalence or even self-sabotage and how to be aware of it.

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Jeff
9 reviews

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May 24, 2008
I first read this book back in the late '90s and have proceeded to read it at least once a year annually since then. I am now on my fourth copy, having read two copies to tatters and loaned out a third to a good friend (who is undoubtedly affected enough by the material for me to not warrant asking for its return).

In paradoxically light yet profound way, 

"Callings" trolls the collective human consciousness for familiar and foreign concepts interwoven in history through such vehicles as fable, parable, mythology, spirituality, philosophy, and more that are meant to address such issues as:
* The existence of transformative "callings" in life
* How to distinguish the "true call from the siren song"
* Learning to appreciate and act upon the smallest signs and calls for change
* Do we have any obligations with regard to callings? If so, what would/could be the consequences?


Moreover, the author is blessed with an intoxicatingly addictive writing style that pulls from international historical, spiritual, and contemporary sources to paint the prose with a rainbow of multi-sensory literary hues. 

The information herein appeals to humanity on a larger, higher level for it is a common navigational thread throughout all of recorded existence and one that transcends denominations, political parties and even commercialized pop thought.

It provides an avenue to understanding and embracing the ubiquitous human question we all (typically silently) ask. Very insightful and masterly written, "Callings" is a call to action for the armchair life enthusiast in all of us and proffers a host of relevant and accessible thought trains that will simultaneously entertain, stimulate, and bless the reader's mind with enrichment.

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Brenda Brown
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December 13, 2012
I wasn't "looking" for this book but saw it on a table many years ago at a large bookstore in Atlanta. This is simply one of the most influential and lovely non-fiction books I have read in my 46 years; I have recommended it to many others who have told me how special it was to them. Thank you Gregg Levoy.

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Dave
3 reviews

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March 26, 2008
This book has a special place in my heart and it's impacted my life in a signficant way. It all started when I met the author "by chance" in Asheville, NC last year.

At the time I was searching in my life and had travelled for a vacation to Asheville (my first time in Asheville actually). One evening I was in downtown and saw a group of people playing drums outside in the open air. One of the men playing seemed to stick out to me - somehow you could tell he had great passion for what he was doing. I noticed it immediately and for that reason he made an impression on me. Later that night I was in a coffee shop and looked up to see him sitting outside alone. I don't often get this feeling but something inside me compelled me to go talk to the guy. 

I introduced myself and told him a bit about my life, how I was searching, wondering about careers, passion in life, and that I had noticed when he played he did so with passion. We talked for a while and he mentioned that he was an author and had just written a book about people that have passion in their life, and people that don't. I was fascinated and before the weekend was over I had bought the book and started reading it.

The book is very thought-provoking, very deep. Often I will read just a few pages and feel I need to stop and really think about the meaning for my life.

I don't agree with all of the authors viewpoints, and at times the thoughts seem somewhat scattered and random. But in general it is a fantastic book, loaded with a lot of meaning and things to provoke thought. I would highly recommend it to anyone searching for clarity in their career or life. It provides an excellent resource for extracting the basic "themes" of one's life, and helps get to the crux of your values and beliefs.

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Annette
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ReadMay 15, 2013
Use this book often with clients. Return to its poetry and clarity myself from time to time when moving into a new project.

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Lee
49 reviews2 followers

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January 5, 2020
Some really beautiful stories and musings in this book, as well as some deeply personal reflections. A bit overlong, and the writing style is distracting at times.

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Caitlin H
103 reviews16 followers

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December 9, 2017
I put this on my to-read even though, when it came time to read it, i was uncertain about it. I didn't know if it would be filled with out-of-date claims, or drivel that was never in date, so to speak. I thought maybe it would be too optimistic, too late '90s, too baby boomer for me to take seriously.

Thankfully, none of this turned out to be the case. Instead, the book is, on the whole, thoughtful, rich, & deep.

For example, Gregg Levoy doesn't advocate for throwing your job away, which usually seems to be the sentiment of most people who parrot "follow your bliss". This, aside from some Tweets recently, is the first time that i feel like i've seen this practicality. Some of us need a day job, if only for a while, but we're still practically made to feel like shit about it. Even though society might collapse if everyone who had a bliss or a dream went & followed it, we're still hearing that's what we should be doing, & that we're wasting something if we're not. And you could argue that Levoy is kind of on this side, & you wouldn't be entirely wrong. But i feel that Levoy is more concerned with what we ignore in our lives, what we sacrifice on the altar of practicality even when we could have a more fulfilling life.

Levoy goes through it all in this book, & he tells stories of others as well as himself to illuminate his points. You get to see his own foibles, which makes me feel more willing to hear what he has to say. He's no guru. He also struggles. He's not holier than thou, he's in life with everyone else. But he pays attention to things, & listens to people. He relates many stories throughout the course of Callings, & oftentimes, they begin with people holding themselves back somehow. They're people who have something that they want to do, but they push it off & away, saying they couldn't possibly do it. It's like pushing away food when you're incredibly hungry, while insisting you're not. Only once these people admit that they are hungry do their lives open up.

And i'm sure that there's still a healthy dose of '90s optimism. The book was published in 1997, after all. But Levoy doesn't make it sound like everything will easily fall into your lap once you say "yes" to a calling. Contrary to other modern "law of attraction" type things, Levoy lets you know that it will most likely be hard, that you'll have to work for it, that it won't be smooth. He actually counters a lot that gets parroted these days: if your path is smooth & straight, he says, that doesn't mean it's the right one. And vice versa, with a rough path, it doesn't mean it's the wrong one.

There were parts where the writing grew rough, like when the author meets a trans woman. Aside from his "holy shit" response, he misgenders her, using "he" as the pronoun. This was, thankfully, very brief. Although Levoy sounds sympathetic to the woman trying to live her life, it's still not taken care of so well. If you are queer, especially if you're trans, this could be incredibly jarring & mar the whole experience of the book for you.

Overall, this book was deeply impactful for me. I want to own a copy, I want other people to read it. It makes you want to reevaluate your life & priorities. It makes you thoughtful.
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Rebecca
35 reviews31 followers

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November 24, 2014
This is an excellent book on identifying and acting (or not) on personal callings. I had begun this book several times since I got it back in the late 90s but never finished it - obviously because I wasn't ready for it. But this time I relished it from cover to cover and gained much from it's words. Levoy helps the reader identify what a calling looks like and feels like and then provides the pros and cons of both accepting and denying a calling. This is not a book of magical thinking. It is a book of straight talk about what one gains and what one must lose in the acceptance of a calling and how that acceptance is an ongoing process that must be repeated as needed - one "yes" isn't enough. We must continue to say "yes" and continue to act and move forward in the direction of the calling even if it is only in the smallest of steps. I found it very enlightening and affirming in my own recognition and acceptance of my own calling. Highly recommended to the spiritual seeker.
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John G.
222 reviews12 followers

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January 2, 2016
This is one of the best books about calling and vocational discernment out there, the author writes with clarity, experience and sensitivity. He's not preachy or condescending in any way, this book heavily relies on the subjective, sorry no easy, set pat answers here for you or me. There's a lot of wisdom in this book, he's walked the walk and you can sense he's truly motivated to share with answers, he in fact, shines from one who has found his own calling. Highly recommend, it will bear repeated readings, but in the best of ways!
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2022/08/29

** "Leadings" For Nontheistic Friends? - Friends Journal 2011 By Steven Smith (Steve)

"Leadings" For Nontheistic Friends? - Friends Journal

“Leadings” For Nontheistic Friends?

By Steven Smith, [ = Steve Smith]

January 1, 2011


When I speak of being led or feeling called to act in some way, do my words commit me to a traditional theistic worldview? 

In using these phrases, have I implied the existence of a supernatural, all-powerful being, creator of the universe, who watches over my life and guides my steps? Conversely, if I doubt this traditional theistic worldview, must I give up the language of leadings and callings and substitute explicitly humanistic or scientific terms?

To each of these questions, I answer no. While these terms are rooted in the rich history of traditional Western monotheism, their linguistic evolution has attenuated their links to any specific theological framework, 
allowing a variety of spiritual but nontheistic interpretations. 
What remains essential is that 
when one responds to a leading or calling, 
one yields to deeper guidance and wisdom 
than can be found in the deliberations and calculations of one’s small self.

I do not personally endorse nontheism or theism, 
but rather suggest that the language of leadings and callings 
can be used with integrity by both theistic and nontheistic Friends 
to name genuine features of their experience. 

By theism, I mean belief in the existence of God or gods—and especially, belief in one God who created and intervenes in the universe. Nontheists deny just what theism asserts. Some nontheists are scientific materialists, holding that nothing exists except physical energy and matter, subject to scientific knowledge. The word atheism is often used to name this position, which is opposed not only to belief in God, but also typically to any form of religious belief.

Nontheism, however, also includes views that are not hostile to religion or spirituality. 
For example, prominent strains of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism are nontheistic. Certain traditional orthodox systems of Hinduism (the Carvakas and Sankhya schools) are expressly materialistic and atheistic. 

While Buddhist and Taoist folk religions tend to be polytheistic, most scholars of comparative religion agree that 
the historical core of both these great world religions is nontheistic—ultimate spiritual reality does not have the character of a personal god.

Western cultures also recognize nontheistic spirituality. One example is pantheism. Those who find spiritual sustenance and renewal in nature may reject belief in a supernatural, divine creator. 
And in contemporary popular culture, when protagonists in the Star Wars film series proclaim that "the Force is with you," they are not naming a personal, creator deity, but rather an impersonal, benign power in the universe. As these examples illustrate, one can be genuinely religious and/or spiritual without being theistic. To recognize this fact is to open oneself to a variety of nontheistic interpretations of "leadings" and "callings."

Several years ago, after publishing a manuscript that had occupied my energies for several years, I was ready to take a break from writing and turn my attention to other matters. Despite my intentions, I found myself overcome by persistent preoccupation with a new writing project. 

Even as I turned to the activities I had planned, something originating outside of my conscious agenda insinuated itself into the interstices of my life. At odd moments of the day and night, a persistent feeling overcame me that something needed to be said—and that I was the one to say it. As I lay awake at night, or sat during my morning meditation period, or drove my car alone, insights spontaneously sprang up—a distinction I wanted to make, a deft turn of phrase, an unexpected link with another resource. I kept a pen and pad of paper handy to record these visitations. I sensed that what I was putting into words might eventually be helpful to others. Eventually I yielded and committed myself to the new project.

Was I under the sway of a compulsive obsession? I have known genuine obsessions, with their undercurrent of fear. This was different. Unlike obsessive compulsive behavior, which is driven by anxiety and yields only momentary relief, I felt excited, liberated, and joyful when I responded to these impulses. Though my efforts were mentally strenuous, they had a quality of spontaneous play as uplifting energy broke into my life.

Had I been born into another time and place, had I been raised within another set of cultural and religious beliefs, I might have given another name to the source of my inspiration. I might have said that I had been visited by an angel, or by a deceased elder from another realm, or by occult signals from the stars. I might have attributed my "obsession" to a personal muse or daimon. I might have regarded it as simply an eruption from the depths of my own unconscious. But I was raised among Friends—and thus I turned to the language and explanation that came most naturally to me: I told myself that I was experiencing a leading.

We may confuse the raw quality of immediate experience with the explanation that we are taught to give of that experience. The words that I used to describe my experience were secondary; the primary fact was the experience itself. I felt as though I were literally being drawn to my work. I felt a positive valence, a pull, accompanied by an unnamed fascination. Something gently required my attention. I might still refuse to respond; I might turn away and ignore the "message." Sometimes I did just that—and felt a certain sad pointlessness creep into my life. But when I opened to the leading—when I was faithful—I felt a path opening before me. Stepping onto that path, striding forward, I felt lighter, happier, more myself—despite objections from my "rational" mind.

There is no sharp line or absolute distinction between the immediate quality of lived experience and the explanation or interpretation one may give of that experience. What we sense is structured by what we believe; the sensual is already formed by concepts that we have learned and take for granted. Still, when we Friends speak of leadings and callings, I imagine that the underlying experiential realities to which we point are far more universal than the names that we give them. To insist upon our own terminology to explain these experiential realities and reject alternative belief systems as false or even "heretical," is to assume a dogmatic orthodoxy. It is to place blinders on ourselves and promote intolerance and exclusion, inviting division and conflict. In his superb book, Callings: Finding and Following an Authentic Life (1997), Gregg Levoy puts the point forthrightly:


Calls, of course, beg the question "Who, or what, is calling?" But in attempting to answer this question even an exhaustive list of every name for Soul or Destiny or God would be beside the point. It simply doesn’t matter whether we call it God, the Patterning Intelligence, the Design Mind, the Unconscious, the Soul, the Force of Completion, the Center Court, or simply "life’s longing for itself," as Kahlil Gibran envisioned. It is clear, however that "living means being addressed," as the theologian Martin Buber once said, and whatever or whoever is addressing us is a power like wind or fusion or faith: We can’t see the force, but we can see what it does.

In affirming such an open and inclusive stance, have we drifted so far from the origins of Quakerism that we can no longer claim to be Friends?

Certainly early Friends assumed a theistic, biblically based understanding of leadings and callings. The language of George Fox in his Journal is unabashedly literal and explicit: "The Lord did gently lead me along . . ." "It was upon me from the Lord to go and speak . . . " "The Lord commanded me to go abroad into the world . . ." Similar descriptions are readily found in the writings of other Friends, from the beginning of Quakerism to the present day.

It is also true, however, that what counted most for early Friends were not the words one used to describe one’s spiritual experiences, but those experiences themselves. Fox’s vocal ministry was often directed against the "professors," those who—perhaps emboldened by theological training at Oxford or Cambridge— talked learnedly about religious matters but did not manifest in their own lives the transforming presence of Spirit. Frequently citing 2 Corinthians 3:6, "The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life," Fox, in his Journal, railed against those who "fed upon words, and fed one another with words, but trampled upon the life, and . . . the blood of the Son of God . . . and they lived in their airy notions talking of him."

In contrast, Fox insisted that faith entails feeling and living from the real Presence. He asked Friends to "Live in the Life of God, and feel it" (Epistle #95, in The Power of the Lord Is Over All, ed. T. Canby Jones). Early Quaker leader Isaac Penington urged a similar spiritual practice: "Sink into the feeling and dwell in the feeling, and wait for the savour of the principle of life" (excerpt in Knowing the Mystery of Life Within, R. Melvin Keiser & Rosemary Moore). Caroline Stephens used the language of feeling to describe her "never- to-be-forgotten" first encounter with Quaker worship; she found herself in "a small company of silent worshipers who were content to sit down together without words, that each one might feel after and draw near to the Divine Presence" (Quaker Strongholds—Quaker Faith and Practice, Britain Yearly Meeting).

If what is essential about religious faith is located in the words one uses to express that faith, then the words must be very carefully parsed. Deviation from "true doctrine" must be rejected— it is an enticement to spiritual death. In contrast, when what is essential to religious faith is located not in the language used to describe one’s "condition" (a term much favored by early Friends), but in that condition itself, then one is freed to use a rich variety of words and metaphors to point out and evoke that condition. The language used by early Friends to describe the workings of the Spirit was extraordinarily varied and metaphorical: Light, Seed, Truth, Christ, Life, Fountain, the pure babe in the virgin mind, the Topstone, the Flame, the Lamb—and many other marvelous images. Whereas orthodoxy favors carefully defined terms with sharply delineated boundaries of meaning, charismatic and mystical faiths foster fountains of poetic images that do not define, but rather evoke, spiritual experience.

The elasticity of religious boundaries among early Friends is at times startling. Howard Brinton, in Friends for 300 Years, writes that when Quaker Josiah Coale was traveling in the New World with George Fox, he wrote, "We found these Indians more sober and Christian-like toward us than the Christians so-called." Another Friend, Elizabeth Newport, found the Seneca Indians on the Cataraugus reservation (in present-day New York State) to be divided into two groups that she named "Pagans" and "Christians." Strikingly, she wrote, "The Pagans believed in Quaker worship and the guidance of the Spirit while the Christians seek information from the missionaries."

While one may legitimately speak of "leadings" and "callings" in some nontheistic systems of belief, other nontheistic uses of these terms lack an essential connection to spiritual reality. A genuinely spiritual leading cannot be merely a "good idea" that I have cooked up, nor can it be an imperative derived from a political ideology or philosophical scheme. Most importantly, if I am following a genuine leading, I am not leading myself, nor am I being led by another human authority figure. Even when I am helped to become aware of a true leading by another person with a deeply discerning spirit, I am called to be faithful not to that person, but to something larger.

The English philosopher of religion John Hick declared that "The function of religion . . is to transform human existence from self-centeredness to reality-enteredness" 
(Introduction to Chatterjee, Gandhi’s Religious Thought). 

True leadings and callings come from reality, not self. 
While great cultural and religious traditions construe reality in widely varying ways, none limits spiritual guidance to purely human sources. 
To be faithful is to respond to that which is larger, higher, and deeper than the purely human; it is to awaken and respond to the mystery that not only encompasses what we are, but much, much more.