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Living Myth

Episode 353 - Roots of Inner Peace

Living Myth

Michael Meade

Philosophy, Society & Culture, Education

4.81.2K Ratings

🗓️ 13 October 2023

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This replay of a timely a relevant episode considers the difficulties of finding peace in a troubled world. The increasing amount of tension and conflict in the outside world generates a corresponding intensification of conflicts within each soul. Because the individual soul is not separate from the conditions of the world, simply turning away from outside conflicts does not necessarily lead to states of inner peace.

 

The word peace comes from two deep roots. On one hand, peace can mean "to settle, to find stillness;" on the other hand, it can mean "to reconcile, to make agreements." Each root meaning involves a deeper understanding of life and each can lead to finding a greater sense of inner peace.

 

Being at peace can feel like sitting by a still pond, untroubled by anxiety or the stress of daily life. Yet, being at peace with oneself can also mean finding a vital stream of creative expression that connects the deeper self within us with a genuine calling and way of serving the world. Either way, if we can't find inner agreements that help resolve our own conflicts, we won't be able to help solve the great conflicts that now divide the world.

 

Thank you for listening to and supporting Living Myth. You can hear Michael Meade live by joining his new online series "Heart Within the Heart" that begins on Thursday, October 19. Register and learn more at mosaicvoices.org/events.  

 

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If you enjoy this podcast, we appreciate you leaving a review wherever you listen and sharing it with your friends. On behalf of Michael Meade and the whole Mosaic staff, we wish you well during this challenging and uncertain times and thank you for your support of our work.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Living Myth Podcast with Michael Mead, where this shifting, changing world is looked at from a mythic perspective.

0:19.1

On this replay of an episode that is both timely and relevant, Mead considers the difficulties of finding

0:25.3

peace in a troubled world.

0:28.4

The increasing amount of tension and conflict on the outside world generates a corresponding intensification of conflicts within each soul.

0:37.0

Because the individual soul is not separate from the conditions of the world, simply turning away from outside conflicts does not necessarily

0:46.2

lead to states of inner peace. The word peace comes from two deep roots. On one hand, peace can mean to settle, to find stillness.

0:57.0

On the other hand, it can mean to reconcile, to make agreements.

1:03.4

Each root meaning involves a deeper understanding of life

1:07.1

and each can lead to finding a greater sense of inner peace. An old idea states that peace is an agreement found at the edge of conflict.

1:35.0

It's a somewhat different idea than the notion that peace is an absence of conflict.

1:43.3

Like many other words, the roots of peace run deep,

1:48.9

and the sense of peace as an agreement is one of the deeper roots of the word.

1:55.0

The etymology of peace leads back to old French roots meaning reconciliation and the old Latin words pacham and pacts carry meanings

2:09.6

of agreement compact and treaty.

2:14.6

Those routes are connected to the word

2:17.1

packed, an agreement that binds two unlike things together. The other and now more common sense of peace appears

2:29.0

in phrases like peace of mind which trace back to another deep root

2:36.0

that gives us the meanings of silence and quiet,

2:41.3

stillness and tranquility.

2:45.0

So on one hand, peace can mean to reconcile or make agreements,

2:51.0

and on the other hand, it can mean to settle into stillness and find tranquility.

3:00.0

Each of those roots seems to open up a way of understanding or a road to finding peace.

...

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