top of page
Mirabai Starr, Ordinary Mysticism: Your Life as Sacred Ground
Mirabai Starr, Ordinary Mysticism: Your Life as Sacred Ground

Tue, Sep 17

|

Collected Works Bookstore & Coffeehouse

Mirabai Starr, Ordinary Mysticism: Your Life as Sacred Ground

Lyrical and tender, filled with profound wisdom and mind-opening insights, "Ordinary Mysticism" is about finding wonder in regular life. William Broyles, former editor-in-chief of Newsweek, screenwriter and author, will introduce Ms. Starr and be in conversation with her.

Date, Time & Location

Sep 17, 2024, 6:00 PM MDT

Collected Works Bookstore & Coffeehouse, 202 Galisteo St, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA

About the Event

This will be an in-store event and live streamed to Zoom, please register for Zoom here.

Pre-order Ordinary Mysticism (hardcover, $26.99) from CW here or call the store to order (505) 988-4226.

Welcome to the temple of your regular life.

So begins beloved spiritual guide Mirabai Starr’s stunning exploration of finding the extraordinary in the everyday. In Ordinary Mysticism, she helps readers discover their own inner mystic and let go of the limiting belief that spiritual life exists only in traditional places of worship. Mysticism, she explains, is a direct experience of the sacred—no church or clergy required. Our everyday life can be an encounter with the sacred if we pay attention. Starr explores the magic of mundane life, from weeding in our humble gardens to a slow evening walk with a friend to a full kitchen table surrounded by family. Embracing mysticism in our everyday is a way of being more alive in the world, an awakening to the interconnectedness between all things.

You can visit an ashram in the Himalayas or kneel in a church pew to connect to the spirit or examine life’s big questions—but these aren’t the only opportunities to discover the sacred. Life, Starr reminds us, is holy ground. Lyrical and tender, filled with profound wisdom and mind-opening insights, Ordinary Mysticism is about finding wonder in regular life, grounded in lessons from spiritual teachers across the centuries—from Julian of Norwich to Ram Dass. Starr combines their ancient wisdom with the story of her own personal and spiritual journey—from surviving the heartbreak of her fourteen-year-old daughter’s death to growing up amid the 1960s counterculture that introduced her to mysticism to her self-made spiritual practice of today. Alongside storytelling and age-old teachings, Starr offers practices and writing prompts for help our souls seek holy ground.

When you decide to walk the path of the mystic, the mundane shows up as miraculous, the boring becomes fascinating, and your own shortcomings turn out to be your greatest gifts. May we all find meaning and wonder in our most ordinary moments.

About the Author

MIRABAI STARR is an award-winning author, internationally acclaimed speaker, and a leading teacher of interspiritual dialogue. In 2020, she was honored on Watkins’ list of the 100 Most Spiritually Influential Living People. Drawing from 20 years of teaching Philosophy and World Religions at the University of New Mexico-Taos, Mirabai now travels the world sharing her wisdom on contemplative living, writing as a spiritual practice, and the transformational power of grief and loss. She has authored over a dozen books including Wild Mercy, Caravan of No Despair, and God of Love: A Guide to the Heart of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Mirabai has received critical acclaim for her revolutionary contemporary translations of the mystics John of the Cross, Teresa of Ávila, and Julian of Norwich. Mirabai offers the fruit of decades of study, teaching, and contemplative practice in a fresh, grounded, and lyrical voice to a growing circle of folks inspired by the life-giving essence of feminine wisdom. Mirabai continues to teach seminars, workshops, and retreats, both in person and through her online community Wild Heart. She lives with her extended family in the mountains of northern New Mexico.

@mirabaistarr / X: @MirabaiStarr Website: https://mirabaistarr.com

About William Broyles

William Broyles is the founding editor of Texas Monthly and was editor-in-chief of Newsweek in the 1980s. He wrote the book Brothers In Arms about his return to Viet Nam after the war, he created the television series China Beach, and he wrote the screenplays for, among others, Cast Away, Polar Express, Unfaithful, Jarhead and Apollo 13--for which he received an Academy Award nomination.  He was born in Baytown, Texas, graduated from Rice and Oxford Universities, served as an infantry lieutenant in the Marine Corps in Viet Nam, and was active in the Civil Rights and Anti-war movements. He has taught English at the University of Texas (Austin) and Philosophy at the U.S. Naval Academy.  He is lately a spiritual and psychedelic explorer and is working on a memoir.

Share This Event

bottom of page