• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
SUESpeaks

SUESpeaks

Searching for Unity in Everything

  • Home
  • Podcast
    • All Episodes
    • Guest Quotes
  • Projects & Ideas
    • Essay Contest
    • Evolutionary Ideas
    • Evolutionary Projects
    • Musings
  • A Delight A Day
  • Blog
  • Videos
    • SUE’s Soapbox Videos
    • SUE’s Video Programs
  • Events
  • Suzanne Taylor
    • Meet SUE
    • Mails From The Past
    • Crop Circles
    • About
    • ExTEDx
    • Appreciations
  • Contact

Suzanne Taylor

Sixty Seconds: One Moment Changes Everything

By Suzanne Taylor

This short piece, from Sixty Seconds: One Moment Changes Everything, by Parker J. Palmer, reminds me of Lex Hixon:

Fifteen years ago. I was hiking solo in the high desert at the foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains near Taos, New Mexico, when I was overwhelmed by a sudden realization that the universe is utterly indifferent to me, and at the same time, profoundly forgiving and compassionate toward me. I remember stopping and just standing in that knowledge for a long time. I had a simple and quiet sense of, Oh, I get it. I see who I am, where I am, and how I fit into things. I felt joy and lightness, as if my burdens had been taken from me. Talking about it almost distorts it. There are experiences that go far beyond words, and this was one of them.

I can’t say that this experience changed my life, but it gave me an important lens through which I’ve looked at my journey ever since. A few years ago I was reading a journal by Thomas Merton in which he reports his great revelation that “everything is emptiness and everything is compassion.” And I thought, That’s it! That’s the same experience I had!

Of course, this experience is paradoxical—how can indifference and compassion coexist? I’m reminded of a Hasidic tale where the rabbi says to his disciple, “Everyone needs a coat with two pockets. In one pocket, carry dust to indicate that you are nothing. In the other pocket, carry gold to indicate that you are precious.” We shrug off the burden of the self-obsessed ego by realizing that we are nothing, and we transcend self-denigration by realizing that there is something of ultimate value about each of us.  

When I feel connected to spirit, there’s a great sense of aliveness and energy. Though it’s peaceful, there’s nothing passive about it—it’s a call to deeper engagement with life. Genuine spiritual experience inevitably leads us back into the world, I think—back into works of love and mercy and justice—with new freedom, new clarity, and new power.

Share and/or leave a comment

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Andrew Bacevich, Requiem for the American Century

By Suzanne Taylor

This is a basic read from TomDispatch. All that imperialism we didn’t pay attention to until the second Bush brought it into public view is very clearly spelled out here and was helpful to me. There were no comments accepted and I wish there had been. What to do in what is an impossible impasse of endless war is what I’d speak to. I’d say we can’t end war from the consciousness that created it and a sweeping change of basic perception is the only solution. How to pull that massive change off? Bring everyone in the world up from poverty — a sort of UBI for every person in the world. That changes the playing field. Then, a campaign worldwide for kindness. It’s easy to do and keeping it in people’s awareness could be all it would take for the whole tenor of the world to change. Kindness is love in action and love as the playing field would be the realization of our true nature and our ultimate possibility.

“War, what is it good for? Absolutely nothin’!” So went the famed Vietnam War-era protest lyrics first sung by the Temptations.

Looked at a certain way, however, like so many Americans, war has been the backdrop of my life. After Pearl Harbor, my father, 35, promptly volunteered for what was then the Army Air Corps; my mother, a cartoonist, would, in her own way, mobilize herself, too; and I would be born in war-time 1944 (on the day, as it happens, of the failed officers’ plot against Adolf Hitler). My father had, by then, returned from duty as operations officer for the 1st Air Commando Group in Burma. (His own commander, Phil Cochran, would be made famous as Flip Corkin in Milton Caniff’s popular comic strip Terry and the Pirates.)

Read more:  Andrew Bacevich, Requiem for the American Century | TomDispatch

Share and/or leave a comment

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Science of Wellness

By Suzanne Taylor

“Our healthcare system is great at fighting disease retroactively, but it’s dismal at keeping people healthy proactively.” We are so backward still in the contracted, materialistic world we create. This is intelligence from beyond that, which is where we need to be coming from in the great shift of awareness we are on the cusp of making.

America was sick before COVID-19 struck. The pandemic has made our national sickness more acute and illustrated the critical importance of “wellness” in preventing disease and optimizing health. We know this because COVID disproportionately affected people with chronic illness and unhealthful lifestyles.

As a scientist who has worked at the leading edge of medicine, engineering and genetics for decades, I’m on a quest to give mind and body wellness the scientific rigor and urgency it deserves. No doctor, policy or breakthrough drug is as effective as “wellness” at minimizing disease and enhancing the length and quality of life.

Read more: Op-Ed: Getting past disease to the science of wellness | The New York Times

Share and/or leave a comment

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Tim Shriver – THE CALL TO UNITE | Podcast Episode 16

By Suzanne Taylor

We were fortunate to have Tim Shriver as our guest on our 16th episode to talk about THE CALL TO UNITE: Voices of Hope and Awakening, that he co-edited. It was put out as a book after a 24-hour online program, The Call to Unite, featuring more that 200 of the world’s most inspirational political, cultural, and spiritual leaders inspiring the audience to answer the call. This beautifully designed book has more than 100 first-person short stories, from celebrities and from people you never heard of, all of whom will inspire you with how “only in coming together can we be our happiest and our best.”

Tim is an evolved soul who works on projects that UNITE, which is the name of the enterprise he co-founded. I urge you to visit his very fine website to take his invitation to​ ​join the movement on his homepage. A HUGE YES from me. Go look!Projects that UNITE has a significant hand in:

  • COVID COLLABORATIVE is a National Assembly to tackle the COVID-19.
  • ACT NOW is an initiative to reimagine policing and public safety.
  • UNITED is a movement in schools to teach social and emotional learning (SEL) skills.
  • PEACE TALKS has everyday people crossing divides to work together in times of crisis.
  • THE UNITER WAY is a set of skills to transform us into a nation of Uniters.
  • THE AWAKENING AMERICAN REPORT tracks feeling lost and asks how to recover.

For icing on the consciousness cake re UNITE:

  • UNITE is a growing collaborative dedicated to addressing universal challenges that only can be solved together.
  • Unless we unite in shared purpose we’ll lose everything that’s best about our shared project: America.
  • UNITE is an initiative to promote national unity and solidarity across differences.
  • UNITE is on a mission to fulfill the promise of America through stories, solutions, and studies that bring us closer together.

I unabashedly request that you listen to the podcast for tuning into the keenest intelligence as well as the loveliest soul trying to bring about the sense of community that we so vitally need.

LISTEN TO THE PODCAST EPISODE

Share and/or leave a comment

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Survival of the Kindest

By Suzanne Taylor

Survival of the Kindest got me thinking even more enthusiastically than I already have been about the possibility of a kindness energetic saving us.  The enthusiasm for kindness is bubbling up everywhere, and I bet the whole world would come into a new worldview, where we care about each other as much as we care about ourselves, just by amping that up. Get ad agencies all over the world to make campaigns for it, with the idea that all it would take to get massive results is reminders and encouragement. My prediction is that the warm feelings that simple acts of kindness would evoke would be just the fuel for the paradigm change we so urgently need. Watch a short video I made for a little inspiration about practicing kindness.

More experts are arguing in favour of human compassion, writes Julian Abel.​ ​At the same time as Rutger Bregman published Humankind in 2020, Brian Hare and Vanessa Woods published Survival of the Friendliest. Their work as evolutionary anthropologists has shown how friendliness and cooperation have been a driving evolutionary force that meant Homo sapiens predominated over the other many species of hominid.

Read more: Survival of the Kindest | Resurgence.org

Share and/or leave a comment

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Justin Connor, Filmmaker of THE GOLDEN AGE | Podcast Episode 15

By Suzanne Taylor

I hope this entertains as well as illuminates. Although you can watch The Golden Age after you listen to my podcast with writer, director, composer, producer, and star, Justin Connor, you’d have your own experience of it to bear in mind when you hear us talk about it if you’d already seen it. This is a movie for our time, and the glowing reviews that are on Amazon Prime let you know why it should be seen.

Justin is a wonder with his prodigious artistic talents and his evolved state of consciousness. Art helps us make sense of the world, and, at this explosive time of rethinking, needing all the sense-making we can get, my conversation with Justin looks to artistry in the world to come.

With the entertainment industry under such threat now, where the ways of the past may never be in our future, I welcome any thoughts about where to from here to add what Justin and I have said.

LISTEN TO THE PODCAST EPISODE

Share and/or leave a comment

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • …
  • Page 16
  • Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Follow us

Share This

Join Our Mailing List

Latest From Substack


Crop Circles could shift our worldview and got me to be a filmmaker. What on Earth? got a good review in The New York Times.
Before I made What on Earth?, I was the Executive Producer of CROP CIRCLES: Quest for Truth. It streams free here.

SUESpeaks.org is the website for Mighty Companions.Inc., a non-profit which produces events and projects devoted to shifting mass consciousness to where we care about each other as much as we care about ourselves.

Mighty Companions is a non-profit corporation and all donations are tax-deductible

Copyright © 2025 — SUESpeaks • All rights reserved. • RSS: RSS Feed