Books

0578011905 frontcover

Celebrating creative inspiration: Getting Messy around the world

A fellow in Spain has started a blog about my book Getting Messy. Here’s the link: http://bm31-liburuak.blogspot.com/2010/07/getting-messy.html. He’s from the Basque region of Spain, so if you happen to read Basque, I’d love your help understanding what it says! It’s incredible to see Getting Messy inspiring conversations across borders. A New Amazon Review for Getting…

DALL·E 2024 12 02 13.21.47 A captivating and serene image of an abstract sculpture in a natural outdoor setting. The sculpture features fluid, intertwined forms that evoke creat

Rediscovering Martin Foss: Honoring a philosopher’s legacy

A man from Wisconsin recently reached out after reading my post about Martin Foss. This sculptor shared his deeply personal connection with Foss’s philosophy. He even corresponded with Foss in the 1960s before Foss passed away in 1968. Here’s an excerpt from his email: “I have been studying [Foss’s] works for over forty years and…

DALL·E 2024 12 02 13.35.44 An abstract and symbolic representation of love, featuring a glowing heart shaped motif made of intertwining vibrant colors like red, pink, and gold,
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Love, metaphor, and the unexpected journey into teaching

“It has been said that love does not want to destroy, but to preserve. Quietistic love has been praised, [yet]…mere passivity is surely no true love. The process of love is a creative drive, a force which, in spite of its tranquility of the present, lives a life of active realization.” This beautiful sentiment opens…

DALL·E 2024 12 02 13.45.53 A simple, colorful, and abstract representation of heart intelligence, featuring vibrant overlapping shapes and soft gradients symbolizing harmony, ba
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Embracing heart intelligence: Lessons from Evolution’s End by Joseph Chilton Pearce

In his book Evolution’s End, Joseph Chilton Pearce shares a profound insight into the nature of human intelligence. He recounts a story from 1932, when an American Indian medicine man told Carl Jung that white men were “insane” because they thought with their heads instead of their hearts. The medicine man described “whole people” as those…

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