Expert: Spirituality the answer to emotional eating

Recently, after undergoing extensive medical testing, my doctor diagnosed me with celiac disease and autoimmune malabsorption.

This means my body rejects gluten and cannot naturally absorb essential vitamins such as B12.

It also means I am not supposed to eat traditional glazed doughnuts, pan pizza or crescent rolls ever again.

This makes me sad. It also makes me think. Before I stopped eating gluten four months ago, I vomited back much of what I ate. My muscles were weak. My head throbbed. Frightened, I went to doctors seeking answers. I prayed for healing.

Today, at the start of 2015, I better understand the problem and what I need to do to improve my health. In many ways, I already feel better. Unlike many of the diseases doctors tested me for, celiac is non-progressive when treated.

So why am I moping around mourning Belgian waffles?

Last weekend, Tricia Nelson, director of Roy Nelson Healing and an emotional eating expert, spoke at the Mindshare Summit in Tampa.

According to Nelson, people often use food to fill a spiritual hole.

I interviewed her about why people form attachments to food and how faith can make diet changes easier.

What do you view as the connection between healthy eating and spirituality?

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Expert: Spirituality the answer to emotional eating

Lifelong Learning explores another facet of spirituality

With an ongoing theme of spirituality, the Explore Lifelong Learning Group explored a third form of connected body and spirit.

Herald photo by Jodi Schellenberg

Bishop Michael Hawkins speaks to the Explore Lifelong Learning group on Tuesday about Christian Anthropology.

Bishop Michael Hawkins, the 12th bishop of the Diocese of Saskatchewan, spoke to the group about Christian Anthropology during their gathering at the John M. Cuelenaere Library during the Tuesday lunch hour.

I was invited and honoured to be invited because these are people who are keen on learning, Hawkins said. It is a little intimidating -- I saw they had some excellent presentations so far on Indigenous spirituality and meditation and the next one is on Buddhism, so it is an honour to be invited and to think with people. I hope I dont lecture, but we think and talk together.

He was asked to speak about spirituality from a Christian point of view, so he chose to approach from Christian anthropology.

That is, is there a distinct Christian understanding of who we are as human beings and talk about that in relation to our spirituality? he explained. It is just who do we understand we all are fundamentally as human beings -- where we come from, who we are now and what our destiny is.

Since Christian spirituality is an enormous topic, he decided to just take one edge of it.

What I hope to do is look at the relationship between Christian theology -- what we think about God, Jesus and ourselves and what that says about theology and also, finally, we are going to look at what is called the theology of desire as a kind of meeting point, he said. We all have desires and to think about what they mean in terms of our spirituality, the fulfilment or non-fulfilment of those desires.

Some of the topics he used to demonstrate Christian spirituality were the Sermon on the Mount, which discusses spirituality versus morality, the three Christian teachings around the trinity, incarnation and atonement, which looks at answers to who are God, Jesus and people, and the story of Gilgamesh, a pre-Christian work about human destiny and human desire and whether or not desire is fulfiled or will be unfulfiled forever.

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Lifelong Learning explores another facet of spirituality

Alamon: A new spirituality

WHAT is spirituality? What does it mean to people and how is it correctly practiced?

These questions occurred to me as I followed the coverage of Pope Francis five-day visit to the country in the past week. Seeing the throngs of people everywhere that Pope Francis went, and witnessing that historic mass in Tacloban even by television, has made me reconsider the dismissive even suspicious attitude I used to harbor about matters of faith.

Even the most jaded among us cannot deny the healing power of faith in the midst of so much despair that still lingers in the province of Leyte and Samar and the rest of the nation for that matter.

That the mass was celebrated amid the pouring rain and strong winds of a category 2 typhoon bringing back harrowing memories of Yolanda made it difficult to watch. But Pope Francis insistence to be there and soldiering on with the mass among our Waray brothers and sisters still reeling from the disasters effects were inspiring.

Equally admirable and uplifting were the voices of the choir and the multitude who battled it out with the howling wind with their songs. To see the conductor whip out his baton with so much passion and purpose and the choir responding with their song was a scene to behold. It was a touching testament to Filipino unity and resilience after the painful challenge of Yolanda and its after effects.

That Pope Francis is a good shepherd to his flock has been proven once again in this visit to the largest Catholic nation in Asia. But if we are to cull the most important truth that is revealed by the events of the past five days, it is that we are a nation that is broken and in dire need of healing.

These can be seen in the manner that we, as a people, have converged around Pope Francis message of mercy and compassion. The theme resonated within the hearts of many of us because we are thirsty for mercy and compassion given the callousness and insensitivity of our own leaders after the disasters that was Sendong and Yolanda. The Popes passionate consistency in appealing for social justice and standing with the poor also captured the imagination of many who yearn for transformative change in this sad republic.

It is as if we, the Filipino people, found a champion in the person of Pope Francis for our struggles as a people. The contrast could not have been clearer in the manner that we have adored the Popes every gesture, every smile, and how we hung on to his every word versus how we scoffed at our elites attempt to hog the limelight and insert their agenda into the events. When the Pope uttered those strong words against corruption right inside the lair of our self-interested national elite, one can almost hear the celebratory applauses of the multitude from the slums of Tondo to the NPA camps in Mindanao. It was a symbolic victory, won for us by the Pope, proving that the world knows of our elites rotten ways.

All these I believe make up the lessons on spirituality that the Pope wittingly or unwittingly left us with in his recent visit. Spirituality is not just about listening to the murmur of our inner souls as we deal with our existential struggles as individuals. More importantly, it is about sharing these struggles with others who also go through the same predicament.

This Christian regard for others, the thing that makes us Catholic or universal and the same, is the wellspring of authentic mercy and compassion, which we should share with each other. It is in our collective situation of despair that a new spirituality should emerge, one that sees us moving forward, hand in hand, in the struggle for social justice and the upliftment of the poor.

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Alamon: A new spirituality

You are God. What & Where is God? ‘God’ and Spirituality | Nicky Sutton – Video


You are God. What Where is God? #39;God #39; and Spirituality | Nicky Sutton
Religion aside, you may have questions about #39;God #39;. You might be surprised that you and everything you see around you is God. We are part of one infinite being, each of us endowed with ...

By: Spiritual-Awakening.net

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You are God. What & Where is God? 'God' and Spirituality | Nicky Sutton - Video

Childrens aboriginal teacher advocates for spirituality and personal development in new book, "Gift from the Heart"

BROOME, Aus.

(PRWEB) January 17, 2015 -- Children are our future. They represent hope, love, innovation and happiness.

With more than 30 years of teaching experience, Christine Sell believes there is a fundamental gap in our educational foundation. She stresses that children must be taught about spirituality and personal development at a young age.

Much is written for adults in the area of spirituality, self-love & personal development but childrens literature is surprisingly lacking, Sell said. I want to educate children through story form from a young age, teaching them the skills and strategies that will enable them to grow into the leaders of the future.

Sells new childrens book, Gift from the Heart follows an angel who travels to Earth to be born into a loving family. The book uses angels exploring topics such as spirituality, self-esteem and personal development.

Gift from the Heart provides life lessons that support children as they move from childhood, to their teenage years through to adulthood.

For more information, please visit http://bookstore.balboapress.com/Products/SKU-000612536/Gift-From-The-Heart.aspx

Gift from the Heart By Christine Sell Price: $13.99 ISBN: 978-1-4525-2166-4 Available at: Amazon, Balboa and Barnes and Noble online bookstores

About the Author Christine grew up in a loving family with six siblings. She learnt about the love and protection of angels during her formative years at school. Christine currently teaches young Aboriginal children in the Kimberley Region of Western Australia. Gift from the Heart is her first childrens book.

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Childrens aboriginal teacher advocates for spirituality and personal development in new book, "Gift from the Heart"

Site Last Updated 3:11 pm, Thursday

KOTA KINABALU: The IM4U Mount Kinabalu Climb for Charity and Spirituality 2015 was launched yesterday to give opportunity to Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) students and staff, who are orphans, to experience mountain climbing for the first time.

President of Management and Non-academic Professionals Officers Association of UMS (PPUMS), Zawawi Tiyunin said the mountain climb was more of a spiritual journey for the participants.

Programmes such as this not only help students in mental and physical health but also to increase their spiritual strength, he said at the opening ceremony of the programme held at UMS here, yesterday.

The programme which was organised for the first time was participated by around 105 people, with 18 PPUMS members and UMS staff.

Held from January 14 until January 16, the programme was co-organised by PPUMS, Umno Youth and sponsored by Kelab Eksplorasi 7 Benua Malaysia (KE7B) IM4U, DRB-HICOM and Pearl Haya.

Also present was the political secretary to Sabah Chief Minister cum Umno Youth Malaysia Exco, Armizan Mohd Ali.

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Site Last Updated 3:11 pm, Thursday

Italy's new churches stir debate

Story highlights Despite expensive price tags and celebrity architects, Italy's new churches have their critics Some say the buildings are too materialistic and lack a connection with the past Others have praised the architects for building a new vision of the future

These seemingly innocuous questions have snowballed into a bitter polemic on the Catholic altar, where a battle of aesthetic titans has ensued: religious scholars versus the so-called "starchitects" who have earned multimillion-dollar contracts to build megachurches for the new millennium.

To arbitrate, Italian photographer Andrea Di Martino looked to find meaning in these newly built houses of God.

"I wanted to photograph new-but-already-established churches from this millennium ... but I had to explain to a lot of people that I wasn't documenting the demise of the Catholic Church or even the loss of churchgoers but how these churches have now become part of the establishment," he said.

From Turin to Rome, Di Martino zigzagged through cities where celebrity architects hoped their designs would add to Italy's great architectural landscape.

Photographing the works of architectural giants such as Paolo Portoghesi, Mario Botta, Richard Meier, Renzo Piano and others, Di Martino explored whether there is a historical continuum with the traditions of Brunelleschi, Bernini, Da Vinci and other artistic geniuses whose religious reverence helped build some of the world's greatest monuments.

Andrea Di Martino

Di Martino used a formal approach, photographing these churches from an egalitarian perspective. His camera takes a centralized position to allow the architectural concepts to get fair play.

Photography, he hoped, could translate the aesthetic decisions behind some very controversial and expensive designs that, to some people, are unrecognizable as churches.

In Turin, which hosts the Holy Shroud, Di Martino photographed Botta's Church of Santo Volto. Standing in what was a depressed steelwork factory, the church has received endless accolades by design experts around the world. But it has also been criticized by Vatican members and religious scholars who say they are extremely materialistic, devoid of spiritual references and divorced from the Catholic dogma.

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Italy's new churches stir debate