get full-fat spiritual

Chapter 14883 wordsCompleted

In this chapter the narrator, identified as Sarah, recounts that she has been practicing spirituality every day, chiefly through meditation in natural settings and occasional esoteric spiritual therapy, using it both to process climate‑crisis grief and to find joy. She argues that the chief purpose of spirituality in hard times is to act as a “moral reconnector,” linking individuals to a larger force—God, Oneness, or Life—and prompting service. Sarah critiques contemporary Western spiritual practices as “lite” or “connection‑lite,” describing them as stripped‑down versions that omit the demanding elements of sacrifice, service, and moral courage. She labels this phenomenon “spiritual bypassing” and illustrates it with vivid, concrete cases: a yoga teacher who preaches body‑honour while wearing micro‑plastic leggings; a meditation retreat leader who distributes single‑use coconut‑water cartons; a Christian who does not support universal health care; a sound‑bath class where participants later ignore bail‑fund appeals; and the broader tendency to treat spirituality as a consumable that cushions personal feelings at the expense of collective need and planetary health. Acknowledging the genuine yearning behind such bypassing, Sarah confesses her own participation in yoga, meditation, and quoting Rumi from a privileged suburb, recognizing these practices as essential salves for anxiety, fear, guilt, and despair. She challenges the reader to move beyond softness toward outward action—asking whether they will, like a monk descending a mountain, use their inner calm to serve others and the planet. Finally, she invokes the Vedic cycle of creation, maintenance, and destruction, describing the current era as a destructive phase that requires us to leave our comfortable “acedia,” step to the edge, and embody the hard‑bit teachings of Buddha, Jesus, Mohammed, Gaia, or the Universe. She ends with pointed questions about how we will be of service and what we are willing to sacrifice to live those teachings and save both ourselves and the world.