No Pressure, No Diamonds Quotes
No Pressure, No Diamonds: Mining for Gifts in Illness and Loss
by
Teri A. Dillion176 ratings, 4.62 average rating, 45 reviews
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No Pressure, No Diamonds Quotes
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“Absent all speculation, the contemplation on everything known and unknown, there’s always an invitation to listen. We could even cease the meaning-making and surrender to the mystery. Be willing to feel the grief, not just for our own losses but for the big losses throughout time. We could exhale heartbreak for the death of mothers and children, grandparents and lovers, tribes and democracies. The crack of falling redwoods and splitting glaciers, the disappearance of the monarchs and the mourning of the giant tortoise. The landslides, the floods, the fires. We could feel the destruction of mountains, comets, galaxies. All the losses without redemption. All that has been broken. And in that silence between breaths we could pause. We could acknowledge… absence. In the liminal space we could feel the emptiness. Behold the big, spacious silence behind all noise. And there, right there, at the edges or perhaps smack in the middle of our awareness we might feel a fullness. The nearness of something sacred, the quiet presence which can’t be captured in words—only felt. That which is deeply personal and undeniably universal, that which is me and yet everything not-me, that nearness some people call Source, God, the Great Mother, the Great Perfection, that which can’t be named. And as we inhale, we can breathe in all of it, the richness of seas, the quiet dignity of deserts, the opalescent sheen of babies just born. The melody of a downpour and the clarion birdsong as the earth begins to dry. The warm symphonies of stars and the roar of everyone laughing at once. All the beauty beyond description. The truth that everything terrible exists alongside everything miraculous, that loss gives way for finding, and through it all, only love keeps us fighting for what’s right.”
― No Pressure, No Diamonds: Mining for Gifts in Illness and Loss
― No Pressure, No Diamonds: Mining for Gifts in Illness and Loss
“And in some moments I even remembered the most transformative prayers are not so much those where we’re asking for divine intervention so that circumstances line up in the way we most prefer, but those designed as sacred affirmations to ourselves: that we may find a kind of unwavering workability through trusting life on life’s terms, knowing full well that peace can only be found following acceptance of what already is.”
― No Pressure, No Diamonds: Mining for Gifts in Illness and Loss
― No Pressure, No Diamonds: Mining for Gifts in Illness and Loss
