“That’s how we are as a people. It’s the authentic, the unique, the different that makes us feel enriched when we encounter it.” Rabbi and philosopher Jonathan Sacks on difference as expansive and unifying, rather than a force for division. Find more at onbeing.org/becoming-wise.
What did you love? What would you like to hear?
Releasing Anger as an Act of Self-Compassion | Sharon Salzberg and Robert Thurman
Healing Through Story | Desmond Tutu
The Daily Opportunity in Randomness | Leonard Mlodinow
The Inner Life of Social Change | Ruby Sales
Empathy Rooted in Action | Terry Tempest Williams
Who We’re Called to Become | James Martin
Happiness Is Practice, Not Pleasure | Matthieu Ricard
A Planetary Sense of Love | Natalie Batalha
Our Lives Can Be Signposts for What's Possible | Vincent Harding
Art and Justice Work Together | Rami Nashashibi
Nurturing Our Children’s Souls | Sandy Eisenberg Sasso
The Everyday Gift of Writing | Naomi Shihab Nye
Friendship and the Democratic Process | Kwame Anthony Appiah | Becoming Wise
Life Beyond the Mind | Eckhart Tolle
We Believe Each Other into Being | Jennifer Michael Hecht
The Pilgrimage of “Who Am I?” | Paulo Coelho
Season Two Trailer
Einstein Speaks to Us About Race | S. James Gates
Trauma and Resilience Land in Our Bodies | Bessel van der Kolk
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
On Being with Krista Tippett
Poetry Unbound