travel far now
  • About Me
    • Newsletter
    • Image Gallery
    • Contact Me | C.V.
  • Writing
    • Journalism & Essays
    • Poetry
    • Public Poetics
    • Blogs & Social Media
    • Residencies & Awards
    • Field Notes
    • Writing Philosophy
  • Editing
    • Books
    • Editorial Services
    • Editing Philosophy
  • Consulting
    • USA
    • East Africa
    • Consulting Services
  • Teaching & Learning
    • Workshops & Offerings >
      • Creative Writing: Zanzibar
    • Inquiry & Scholarship >
      • Kanga Research
    • Break Arts
    • Teaching Philosophy

travel far now

a sporadic archive of rants & revelations from life on the road

substack essays

On learning, spirit and becoming a conscious being

4/22/2026

0 Comments

 
Picture
CONSCIOUSNESS CONFERENCES convene scientists to compete over dueling theories of source and refuse to use the word soul meanwhile to describe their search or purpose! I’m reading Michael Pollan’s latest, “A World Appears,” with a bit of impatience; I didn’t sign up for a boxing match when I borrowed this book from the library! So much “science” sneaks into existence as an excuse for men to argue.

To defend the deeper mysteries, let’s hold out for the unknowns. If the mind is a theater and consciousness is what appears on stage, it still begs the question of audience—who’s watching and chatting through the dream time of intermissions. Merton talks a lot about dreams and prayers overlapping in terms of intent and outcome. Dreaming and praying both demand a reaching toward and beyond the self for some kind of magic.

In elementary school, the only cards I collected were not saint cards but Garbage Pail Kids cards and Michael Jackson Cards, you could buy a five-pack with gum at the local 7-11 and sometimes I bought them with babysitting money but I also stole some on a few occasions and I don’t regret those transgressions as it gave me a true boost in dark times! Yes, the kids have inner worlds and we’re tending to them daily even as we must answer to the demands of public adults.

On a snowy Saturday in January in 1989, I became a bat mitzvah, a daughter of the commandments. I memorized my torah portion—exodus and moon time—learned to sing the sacred songs. But what do I remember most about that day? The way my rabbi stood there between my parents, placed his hands on my shoulders, looked me square in the eye, and told me I had to forgive the two people who had ushered me into this world. This holy man with a thick brown mustache knew of our familial strife and tried to stage a gentle intervention near the ark! 

In the middle of my ceremony, the rabbi leaned in to whisper this commandment into my ear. I winced and gave him the side eye. I was bleeding for the first time in my life that morning and I had no patience for men and their commandments, even if he was someone I thought I respected until that point. Rabbi, please, I implored with my eyes. Leave me the fuck alone and get me out of this itchy wool dress.

I continued to jump rope all through middle school, in-out-side-by-side-on-in-out. I continued to devour books like the Boxcar Children Series, giving me some kind of blueprint for radical independence—a world without adults of any kind to mind our minds, hearts or souls. We could do it! We could survive without interventions like school or synagogue. I realize now this was the rogue vision of a young poet and not a common refrain that ran through the brains of most young ones.

There’s a reason why priests and poets primarily concern themselves with consciousness and not scientists or psychiatrists. We speak to majestic magnolia trees; the deer come running toward us for communion when we’re in the woods; we let the mind flow like a river toward a single source—an ocean orientation—the illuminated path of utter awe.

School starts the minute we wake up and begins again with dream time.
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Creative Commons License
    Essays by Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

    Field Notes

    May 2026
    April 2026
    March 2026
    February 2026
    October 2017
    July 2017
    December 2016
    March 2015
    July 2014
    June 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013

    Shelves

    All
    Addis Ababa
    Aging
    Ambitions
    Anthropology
    Art
    Awareness
    Beauty
    Belief
    Belonging
    Blessings
    Book
    Book Review
    Bwejuu
    Change
    Chaos
    Childhood
    Christian Wiman
    Cities
    Coexistence
    College
    Consciousness
    Creativity
    Deadlines
    Death
    Decisions
    Dreams
    Dying
    Dystopia
    Dystopian Novel
    Elders
    Encounter
    Estate Sales
    Exile
    Experience
    Faith
    Familiar
    Father
    Forgetting
    Friendship
    Friendships
    Future
    God
    Healing
    High School
    Holy
    Home
    Hypnosis
    Imagination
    India
    Islands
    Jewish Literature
    Jewish Thought
    Journalism
    Language
    Learning
    Letters
    Liminality
    Literary
    Literature
    Longing
    Love
    Malaria
    Martin Buber
    Medicine
    Meditation
    Memories
    Memory
    Metaphor
    Monasteries
    Monks
    Mother
    Mothers
    Mwera
    Mysticism
    Myth
    Pain
    Paradise
    Paradox
    Parents
    Past
    Patience
    Place
    Poetry
    Presence
    Prison Island
    Proximity
    Questions
    Reader
    Reading
    Rebecca Solnit
    Reciprocity
    Relationships
    Religion
    Retreat
    Saints
    Saudade
    Sauti Za Busara
    Secrets
    Self
    Senses
    Silence
    Simone Weil
    Smoking
    Spirituality
    Strange
    Strangers
    Surrealism
    Swahili
    Takaungu
    Teaching
    Theater
    Time
    Transit Slips
    Translation
    Travel
    Truth
    Trying
    Waiting
    Weddings
    Witness
    Women
    Word Play
    Words
    Workshop
    Worship
    Writer
    Writers
    Writing
    Zanzibar

    Bio:

    Amanda Leigh Lichtenstein is a writer, poet, editor and vintage collector based in Skokie, Illinois. 

Proudly powered by Weebly