Spiritual Activism and the Climate Crisis

In a world grappling with the climate crisis, the need for action has never been more urgent. The challenge we face is immense, but so is the power of collective consciousness and spiritual activism. Beyond the protests, policy changes, and technological advancements, lies a potent force that can transform the very essence of our response to the climate crisis.

What is Spiritual activism?

Spiritual activism is not confined to any religion or belief system. It is the fusion of spirituality and social consciousness, weaving together the threads of empathy, compassion, and awakened consciousness into the fabric of our environmental struggle. It goes beyond a mere intellectual understanding of the crisis; it stirs the soul, ignites the flame of hope, and fuels the commitment to create a sustainable future for everyone.

At the heart of spiritual activism is the realization that we are all interconnected, interdependent beings, intricately woven into the web of life. Every living organism is part of this grand tapestry, and each one of us carries the responsibility to protect and nurture it. Recognizing this profound interconnectedness encourages us to view the climate crisis as not just an environmental problem but a spiritual one—a call to transform our consciousness and way of life.

“Planetary survival is now predicated upon the alignment of our notions of both human and ecological rights with our highest principles. As such, ways of knowing that are embedded in religion, philosophy, spiritual ethics, moral traditions, and a culture that values the community and the commons—as an essential resource for the transformation necessary for environmental regeneration and renewal—are indispensable.”
~ Rita D. Sherma

By integrating our spiritual principles into our environmental actions, we can find profound meaning and purpose in the pursuit of sustainability. It’s about living in harmony with nature, honoring its beauty and wisdom, and acknowledging the inherent value of all living beings. This reverence for life drives us to be more mindful of our consumption patterns, to reduce waste, and to support renewable energy sources that honor the Earth’s abundance without exploitation.

Care for Everyone

The vision of oneness naturally leads to compassionate action and service of humanity because we see the pain and joy of others as our own. Just as we are instinctively inclined to
care for our own body when it is injured, so one who is awake cannot resist caring for others
Yogacharya Ellen Grace O’Brian

Spiritual activism invites us to practice radical empathy and compassion. It urges us to understand the plight of those disproportionately affected by the climate crisis, often the most vulnerable communities who contribute the least to environmental degradation. By standing in solidarity with them, we can create a global movement that transcends borders and cultures, addressing the crisis as a shared human challenge rather than a divisive one.

While we advocate for policy changes and technological advancements, we must also engage in deep self-reflection and inner transformation. The climate crisis is not merely an external issue—it mirrors the internal imbalances within our hearts and minds. Spiritual activism calls us to confront our fears, greed, and apathy, so that we can align our actions with our higher values and principles.

When we embark on a spiritual journey for the climate, we build resilience, hope, and the courage to face challenges with unwavering determination. In this collective awakening, we discover that our greatest strength lies not in our individual efforts but in the unity of purpose—a united force for good.

Let us bring our energies together and grow strong

So let us rise as spiritual activists, awakening to our potential to shape a brighter future for generations to come. Let us light the way with our compassion, ignite the flame of hope in the hearts of many, and weave a tapestry of unity that transcends boundaries and beliefs. The climate crisis may be daunting, but the human spirit, ignited by love and mindfulness, is infinitely resilient. Together, we can usher in a new era of sustainable living, transforming our world, one conscious step at a time.

Freedom in Letting Go

Very early in life we learn the concepts of me and mine. As children, we start to develop this sense of self by coming into awareness of our body as separate from other bodies, that we have control over our limbs, and that there is power in our voices to make things happen. Our cries bring mommy and what we do with our hands has consequences.

Soon after, we understand that we are individuals with agency, and at the same time we learn that others do as well. They can enter into our personal space and sometimes change conditions. For a child, this is a rude awakening. This is the moment we learn to assert ourselves with the war cry, “Mine, Mine!!!”  Though it has been many years since I was a toddler, I can still relate to the sharp feeling of upset, indignation, and often anger that comes with unwanted change. Can’t you?

On the yoga path, attachment or possessiveness is named as a primary obstacle to living in freedom. If our happiness relies on circumstances, possessions, relationships, our jobs, our bodies, our partner’s bodies, or our capabilities to remain unchanged, we will be consistently disappointed. Change is at the heart of life, and to acknowledge that frees us from unreasonable expectations.

Non Attachment, while hard to perfect, offers abundant opportunities to practice. It would be unusual and probably untruthful to say that any day was free of unanticipated change. How we respond to change reveals how attached we are. Change is not always a bad thing though. We often choose change in favor of a better life. And at those times we can recognize the inherent freedom we have to shape our future.

When we discover we are attached, we can turn and step into our freedom. Some helpful questions we can ask are:

  • what does this change represent for me?
  • does this change change me?
  • what becomes possible now that this change has occurred?

This second question, “does this change change me?”, is an important one. As yogi’s we learn that only Ultimate Reality or Absolute Truth is unchanging. And as individualized expressions of The Changeless, we share that enduring quality. Through the processes of individualization, and embodiment, everyone and indeed everything is subject to the laws of physics (as we currently understand them) and the laws of karma (cause and effect). Both are in constant, dynamic flux, reacting to and informing circumstances in every moment. Both are giving and receiving input which affect outcomes. To pin our hopes and happiness on any of this remaining unchanged is a recipe for suffering. Yet, understanding this allows us to move skillfully within the framework to ensure that our actions (thought, word, and deed) don’t lead us to mistake the impermanent for the lasting, and then lose our joy when change inevitably arises in our lives.

What can we do to safeguard ourselves from unwanted change? Well, we could “want” less. Change happens. We can release the outcome of circumstances to the “force for good that is operating the universe,” as Roy Eugene Davis so wisely said. This is not simply a release of attachment, but an act of faith which  strengthens our resolve, and sharpens our spiritual vision to see the way ahead as it is unfolding in divine right order, unmanipulated by our desires or aversions.

These words from Lahiri Mahasaya are a guiding light for me on my path, “Always remember that you belong to no one, and no one belongs to you. Reflect that some day you will suddenly have to leave everything in this world — so make the acquaintanceship of God now.”

Whether we call that One Reality God, Truth, Divine Mother…  we can want less and trust more in the unfolding, inherent prospering nature of the universe. We can step into the freedom of now – where all needs are met and nothing belongs to any one but to everyone.

Breath in Peace

Affirmation – Sept 6, 2022
Today I become a witness to my emotions and notice moments when I lose my peace. Rather than react I choose to take a conscious breath and infuse the moment with peace. I offer that peace with any required response.

Use Affirmation for Transformation
Consider taking a moment after your meditation session to affirm an intention for the day or week. Call forth circumstances that support prosperity or fulfillment of your goals or simply acknowledge a spiritual quality that you wish to bring more fully into expression.

With faith, go forward into your life anticipating signs of change.


Daily meditation practice provides a glimpse behind ordinary thought processes, where restless or dull mental states can be dominant. If we sit long enough to allow the mind to become still, we witness the transient nature of thoughts and emotions and experience the luminous state beyond thought activity. This experience, when repeated regularly, transforms us.

It is entirely possible to change our minds intellectually and our brains physiologically through meditation. Studies have proven that, due to the inherent malleability of the brain repeated experiences of meditation (profound internal focus) can result in rewiring the brain’s neurons. The brain can be reconditioned to change unwanted behaviors, increase empathy, reduce reactivity, improve memory, and much more.

Meditation offers advantages for our emotional life as well. With improved brain function and resting of the sympathetic nervous system we are better able to respond to life situations with poise, clarity, and compassion. The act of meditation itself trains us to be nonreactive (to thoughts) and exposes us to the inborn, anxiety-free state that is ever within us. One breath can reconnect us with our peace and each out breath can be an offering of peace to the world.

International Day of Yoga 2022

Greetings of peace and joy on this International Day of Yoga. Today marks the global celebration of the ancient Indian system for wellness in mind, body and spirit that is Yoga. https://www.un.org/en/observances/yoga-day

Many are familiar with the yoga postures that are practiced today by hundreds of millions of people in yoga studios around our planet. Yet, yoga has been practiced in the daily lives of people on the subcontinent of South Asia for thousands of years. In America, 1 out of every 10 people include yoga in their health regimen. Yet, Asana (yoga postures) is but one part of a vast and ancient wellness system of Yoga gifted to the world by the Indian people.

I like to think of yoga (at least how I experience it) as a four part life-support system. A life-support system typically is required for sustaining life in an environment that is potentially toxic to a human organism. A human life can be toxic when lived unconsciously and under constant stress. Unfortunately, this toxicity is common in our current world society. This is why yoga has become so popular. It is proven to reduce stress, purify the body/mind complex, and restore optimal mental, physical, emotional, and neurological health. Everyone can benefit from this. Testimony of those who have experienced yoga’s benefits are a primary reason for the exponential growth in yoga practitioners in 2022.

A brief overview of the life-support system of yoga.
1. The asanas bring us into alignment with our body vehicle. Improvement of strength, balance and flexibility are but a few of the benefits.
2. Another important component of the yoga system is meditation. Regular meditation purifies and clarifies the mental field resulting in transformation of habitual, conditioned reactions into soul-inspired responses.
3. A third component of yoga is purposeful living and, as a core foundation, sets us up for success and fulfillment in all areas of life.

This divine trifecta of practice supports us in being authentically available to the fullest experience of this precious human life.

4. When integrated into our daily day life, the transformative benefits of yoga allow us to witness directly the truth of ourselves as radiant, limitless, spiritual beings, sourced from the Infinite One. This awareness is the fourth part of this life-support system and is essential for realizing the liberating results of a yogic lifestyle. Though yoga is also considered a spiritual science, it is not a religion and can be practiced by people from all backgrounds and faith traditions.

Yoga offers a timeless and endless source of ancient wisdom that has the potential to transform our world for the better, one yogi at a time. If you are interested in learning more there are yoga teachers everywhere and most probably within just a few miles from you now. But be sure to vet your teacher so you’ll learn yoga from someone who is knowledgeable, well-trained, and experienced.

May yoga continue to improve lives all over the world and foster peace in the hearts and minds of everyone.

Affirm Your Soul

An excerpt from The Jewel of Abundance by Yogacharya Ellen Grace O’Brian. (Affirm Your Soul in Chapter 16: Mine Your Inner Resources). For more insight and instruction on the use of affirmation, and so much more, order Yogacharya’s book here.


The use of affirmation has been a powerful asset in my spiritual toolkit for many years. It has supported my comprehension of and faith in the yoga teachings as I witness the demonstration of spiritual principles in my life.

In the hope that you find them useful, I share the following affirmations inspired by study of Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras. I encourage you to create your own as you study the yoga teachings and the book of your life.

Affirmations
Inspired by Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras
Chapter 1 Sutra 6

Sutra 1.6 The five kinds of transformation that modify mind and awareness are 1) the processes that occur when valid knowledge is acquired; 2) illusion; 3) delusions; 4) sleep; 5) memory.   ~ Roy Eugene Davis – The Science of Self-realization ~

  • I examine what I perceive through the senses and contemplate the validity and ultimate reality of what I observe. 
  • Upon discovery of misinterpretation, I contemplate deeply to discover the cause and correct my understanding. 
  • I do not indulge fancy or fantasy. I use my creative imagination constructively for contemplation of higher realities.
  • I avoid moods that promote passivity of mind and engage in sleep appropriately for the restoration of body and mind.
  • I remain consciously aware. I allow memories and latent impressions to inform my life in positive ways. Ever vigilant, I limit their ability to modify my perceptions in unhelpful ways that distort reality. 
Peace,
Rev. Priya


For further study of the modifications of mind, see Roy Eugene Davis’ Translation and Commentary in The Science of Self-Realization.

Everywhere I Go, There I Am

Gross restricting influences can be resisted and eliminated by self-analysis, practice of samadhi, and awakened knowledge.
~ Yoga Sutras 2.9

A few months ago, my wife Francisca and I traveled across America by car, from California to our new home on the East Coast. Though there was much to inspire us as winter turned to spring across our beautiful country, we were often left weary and irritable by the experiences of driving many hours, checking in and out of hotels with our dog and cat, and the additional cleaning required for protecting ourselves from infection during the COVID pandemic. Conditions were ripe for unskillful responses to such circumstances.

Under this stress, we could have skipped meditation sessions in favor of sleep, snapped at each other instead of listening with compassion, or failed to see the many blessings throughout the journey. We could have allowed habitual patterns to express unchecked. Instead, the boon of our long-time spiritual practice was ever influential.

As we took the time to marvel at the rising and setting of the sun across the varied landscapes, the feeling of gratitude came easily for us. Our prescription for happiness was simple. We made rest a priority and began each day refreshed. At each hotel we set up our tiny travel altar, complete with images of our spiritual mentors and battery powered candles. We meditated every day. The peace of meditation remained with us, permeated our experiences, and helped us to stay connected to our innate joy.

There is a remembrance mantra I love, “wherever you go, there you are” coined by the meditation teacher and author Jon Kabat- Zinn. For me, it is a reminder that I cannot and should not try to escape my mental conditioning. I can be present to it and to all that is before me in any given moment. I can seek to understand, transform, and transcend mind states that hinder my spiritual progress.

The spiritual teachings of Kriya Yoga affirm that along with conditioned patterns to be weakened and transcended, all of my positive mental impressions are carried within me as well. I can allow those positive impressions to be a supportive influence.

I recall my teacher’s words as I prepared for the cross-country journey. She said, among other things, “…see God all along the way.” I appreciate the power of words and affirmations and as we traveled across the country I began to morph the wherever you go, there you are mantra into this gratitude prayer: Wherever I go, there You are, God… Standing in this present moment, acknowledging the good all around, trusting in Your grace, I am strengthened, I am empowered, I know I am more than the sum of my thoughts or emotions. I am an infinitely resourceful reflection of the One Life expressing in unity and multiplicity. I am a soul-powered human having a divine experience. Everywhere I go, there – I Am. This prayer supported me through all of the challenging moments and carried me home.

Rev. Priya

“What is the mysterious force that compels us to act against our own will? It is only the force of habit patterns—the influence of mental impressions based on past experience. Clear those impressions from the mental field by superconscious meditation; then right action arises spontaneously.”
~Yogacharya Ellen Grace O’Brian~

Thoughts Are Seeds

Every moment of the spiritual life is a gift, from times of high resolve, to missteps in forgetfulness. Each instant is an important opportunity to choose wisely and follow the trajectory of the divine life. The thoughts we choose to entertain shape our view of ourselves and our world. We can know this to be true at once if we simply examine how we feel when we indulge in negativity, versus being in the presence of a positive person or reading an uplifting story. We become more hopeful when reminded of the best in us, and our faith is strengthened when we can take in potentially upsetting events with thoughts of healing and peace instead of despair.  

Yoga teaches us that direct experience of the truth of our being is achieved when the mind is still. And when the mind is agitated, we identify with the contents of the mind, forgetting our limitless, eternal nature. In this turbulent state of mind, clear discrimination, right action, and peace are elusive. The self-care regimen of daily, superconscious meditation purifies the mind, and our dedication to self-study leads to spiritual flourishing. Remaining steadfast in our daily sadhana keeps our higher mind engaged and wise choices become a more likely outcome. 

It is a trying and transformative time in our world, presenting rich opportunities for minding our minds – being choosey about what we allow to be planted in our consciousness. A beneficial practice is to tend and nourish positive seeds of thought that flower into bloom as peace in our minds, peace in our hearts, and truth affirming actions that spread blessing beyond ourselves. We can trust this peace to be carried on the winds of grace to touch people, places, and circumstances – wherever needed. Let us cultivate thoughts of highest healing for all people, all nations, for our planet, and all creatures. In my experience, sharing thoughts of peace returns peace to me in abundance. What a superb win-win scenario that is!

Peace,
Rev. Priya

LEARN. DISCERN. ACT.

When some part of our body is injured and we feel pain, we instinctively move to protect and heal it. As we awaken to our oneness with all of creation, this natural response grows beyond the boundary of self. It becomes compassionate action.
~ Yogacharya Ellen Grace O’Brian

As we witness the world awakening to the reality of systemic racism and the legacy of white supremacy, we may find ourselves at a loss for how to hold heart awareness of the deep pain and suffering that has been endured by Black people over the centuries. Our own hearts have been broken open and will not be repaired until something is done to end the scourge of racism. For some, protesting in a crowd during a pandemic may not be the way to take action. Maybe having difficult conversations with friends and family is. We may not know what is ours to do. We may be in the process of discernment. You are not alone. Many are truly listening for an inner call that will show them what their particular way of action is.

The time is ripe and the need for our unique way of participating in the further awakening of the world is urgent. We must listen deeply for our own inner guidance and when we hear it, respond. When we feel it, rise. When we are ready, act.

This is not a political issue, it is an ethical issue. As a spiritual community we are called to bring our soul-powers, our spiritual resources and vision to this movement. In the coming weeks and months we will be exploring ways to engage together in the anti-racism struggle. Please, feel free to raise your hand to be a part of these conversations. In the meantime, educate yourself, learn about the history of racism in America. Inquire, ask questions of others and most importantly, of yourself. We can find strength in knowledge.

Let us make a space for everyone to speak with their authentic voice, to act in their own unique way, and to ask difficult questions in the interest of true understanding. There is room for everyone and plenty of work to do. We are all needed. This is a great awakening, don’t go back to sleep.

Rise and shine! This is our time.

In Solidarity,
Rev. Priya