Elder, community leader and activist Trevor Moeke tells us that to discover one's own interconnectedness, we have only to ask the questions we might not ask until the end of life:
(1:55)
Writer and consultant Tom Hurley describes his own experiences of oneness, from childhood experiences of nature to the first photos of the planet earth.
(2:17)
Freddy Ehlers, general secretary of the Andean Nations, describes an experience of beauty in which all sense of duality collapsed. These experiences of oneness bring both peace and passion to life.
(2:01)
Sufi teacher Lynn Barron shares her life’s journey back "home" to an ongoing mystical experience of oneness, an "awareness that doesn't wander." Lynn insists that oneness must be lived in everyday life
(46:52)
In this complete interview, Tibetan Buddhist leader His Holiness the Seventeenth Gyalwang Karmapa reflects upon the meaning of oneness in this age.
(13:08)
Zen teacher and social activist angel Kyodo williams reminds us that societies can change on a massive scale. At one time, slavery was considered an economic necessity,
(54:54)
Tibetan Buddhist leader His Holiness the Seventeenth Gyalwang Karmapa describes how oneness is experienced, first as a breadth of vision cultivated through meditation and contemplation
(2:38)
In this talk, Father Keating discusses the dynamic nature of God and the paradox implicit in experiencing divine oneness.
(34:41)
Sufi teacher Lynn Barron wants to know: What does oneness really look like? Not as a theory, but as a lived reality in everyday life? See complete interview.
(1:43)
Sufi teacher and dreamworker Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee tells us about his own change of orientation from the individual mystical process of realizing oneness
(3:12)
Max "Duramunmun" Harrison, an elder of the Yuin Nation of Southeast Australia, explains why Aboriginal understandings of the land have no credibility in wider Australian society.
(2:46)