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Look at everything always as though you were seeing it
either for the first or last time:
thus is your time on earth filled with glory.

-Betty Smith (A Tree Grows in Brooklyn)

April 21, 2016                                  www.themiraclechase.com
 

What do you get when you combine the Eternal Now (January's newsletter) with an appreciation of life (February's newsletter) and the importance of being still (March newsletter)? The answer can be found this month as Katie writes about cultivating Wonder and the opportunity of seeing miracles everywhere. This spring, we hope you find the time to take notice and enjoy the miracles that surround each of us.

           Here's to chasing - and finding - miracles with all of you.

Joan, Katie and Meb       

          I recently saw the movie, Miracles from Heaven (highly recommend). It's the story of a young girl who experiences an inexplicable cure from a debilitating and life threatening illness after falling 30 feet out of a tree. God certainly does work in mysterious ways. In any case, at the end of the movie, the girl's mom (played by a fantastic Jennifer Garner) quotes Albert Einstein, "There are only two ways to live your life, one is as though nothing is a miracle, the other is as though everything is a miracle." Hard to know which side of the equation Einstein was on, since he did not believe in a personal God, or perhaps any God at all. Regardless, it's always been one of my favorite quotes because the idea that everything is a miracle got me past my miracle policing stage. As soon as miracles are censored, this one is and that one isn't, then we're no longer in charge of our own signs and wonders. If I've learned anything about miracles, it's that they are most definitely in the eyes of the beholder.

          A couple of years ago, I wrote our newsletter about 'wondering', a nice action-verb involving some combination of imagination and curiosity. Einstein's "everything is a miracle" makes me think more in terms of wonderment. Finding oneself in a state of wonder, suspended in time and in the midst of something that forces you to stop and pay attention; kind of like making the shift from a human doing to a human being: a wonder being. Being open and available enough to notice that miracles abound. 

          When was the last time you stood outside on a pitch dark night, looked up and marveled at the explosion of stars, felt insignificant and awestruck at the the same time? As spring emerges, there is ample opportunity to get lost in color and sound and warmth, the twinkling and sprinkling of miracles are everywhere. But it's the miracles that are subtler, that emanate from a deep place of goodness found in each of us, that if we are not accustomed to noticing that which is in front of our noses, these will surely be missed. Someone who doesn't have the time but takes the time, giving or receiving the benefit of the doubt, a smile between strangers on the subway; we human beings can be wonder beings for each other. 

          Einstein also said the most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. "He...who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe is as good as dead: his eyes are closed." Sounds like he was a miracle man to me. (Katie)

 

Please share your miracles & thoughts with us    http://www.themiraclechase.com/miracleclub_blog.hml

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www.themiraclechase.com
Ask your local librarian and bookstore to carry The Miracle Chase.

Visit the Miracle Club Online
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Upcoming Events

Listen to the first of our
radio series with Kristin Ace
kristinace.com
Where Human-ness
meets Spirituality

and the follow-up session describing the numerous ripples
that occur when miracles meet generosity of spirit

Thank you to
Georgetown University

Women and Wine
Putting the Spirit Back in
Spirituality
inspired us,
as did our webinar
5 Essential Elements of
Spiritual Connection and
Collaboration
.

 
We are scheduling 2016 now...
let us know if you have any suggestions for venues where
we can continue the miracle discussion.


Facetime and Skype are
wonderful venues for sharing
conversation and connecting
over miracles. Thank you to the
book clubs around the country
who have invited us into their
homes and their lives. It has
transformed and rewarded all
of us. Please let us know if you
would like us to virtually visit
your book group or club!


Thank you to the Portland Book Review
http://www.portlandbookreview.com/
the-miracle-chase-three-women-three-
miracles-and-a-ten-year-journey-of-
discovery-and-friendship/

and the PrayersWork blog
http://prayerswork.com/2012/01/
16/a-miracle-chase-dream/

for featuring The Miracle Chase
with such inspirational reviews.

Earlier editions of this enewsletter are
available at www.themiraclechase.com 

If you are not already a subscriber
to The Miracle Chase enewsletter
please join our mailing list at
http://www.themiraclechase.com/
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Joan, Katie and Meb
co-authors of The Miracle Chase
It's About Friendship
Words and phrases like connectedness, open and trusting, effort, energy and generosity of spirit had gone up on our flipchart at one of our early meetings. The Miracle Chase