Thank you once again for a valuable podcast. I particularly enjoyed the story about the barren woman and the Holy Man because it addressed the quality of the holy man's spirituality as much as that of the barren woman.
Please keep producing these podcasts. I always look forward to hearing them.
Thank you for taking the time to both listen to the podcasts, as well as respond. It is always nice when someone makes the extra effort to let me know what she or he is thinking/feeling with respect to the podcasts.
I was born in Denver, Colorado, but I grew up in various locations in Maine. I went to high school in Mattawamkeag, Maine where there were eleven kids in my graduating class and 44 students in the high school as a whole. Somehow, I ended up going to Harvard University. I believe a mistake was made and the Harvard Medical school wanted me for experiments they were conducting, but, mysteriously, my name showed up on the desk of someone in admissions for the Collge instead. I majored in Social Relations, which is an interdisciplinary area of study combining psychology, sociology, and anthropology. I did graduate work in educational theory at the University of Toronto. Eventually, they let me leave with a doctorate. I became interested in mysticism around 1970. After spending a little time with a Gurdjieff group, I stepped onto the Sufi Path, and, in the process became a Muslim.
2 comments:
Thank you once again for a valuable podcast. I particularly enjoyed the story about the barren woman and the Holy Man because it addressed the quality of the holy man's spirituality as much as that of the barren woman.
Please keep producing these podcasts. I always look forward to hearing them.
R.A.
Dear Ryszard,
Thank you for taking the time to both listen to the podcasts, as well as respond. It is always nice when someone makes the extra effort to let me know what she or he is thinking/feeling with respect to the podcasts.
Anab
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