Folding Underwear As Spiritual Practice
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Resilience isn’t a personality trait. It’s a return path, and you can practice it in the middle of real life.
I’m Elena Box, shamanic practitioner and death doula, and I’m pulling the thread that runs through everything I teach about joy: preparing to meet death well. That may sound heavy, but it’s strangely freeing. When I stop treating resilience like “pushing through” and start treating it like coming back to center, I get more choice in the moments that used to hijack my body and my mind. I share the quotes and wisdom that guide me, from Carl Jung to Marcus Aurelius, and why studying the Bible for the first time has surprised me with themes I see across so many spiritual traditions: forgiveness, devotion, and surrender.
We also talk about the spiral nature of healing using the river metaphor: you never step into the same river twice, because you are not the same person when you return. I bring this down to ground level with a personal story of running into an estranged family member and what it looks like to pause, notice capacity, and stay present without needing the perfect response. This is mindfulness with teeth, nervous system awareness, and spiritual practice that actually works when the stakes are high.
Then I widen the lens to caregiving, supporting aging parents, and the practical heart of death doula work: dignity for the dying, reducing fear through understanding, and creating more space for closure, legacy, and peace. I close with three core truths and journaling prompts you can use all week to treat daily life as sacred practice.
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