Forgive me at the outset. I like puns. Years ago, my best friend’s mother would say they were the lowest form of humor. We disagreed. A good pun, if it holds, does more than play with words. It carries two meanings at once and lets them
Forgive me at the outset. I like puns. Years ago, my best friend’s mother would say they were the lowest form of humor. We disagreed. A good pun, if it holds, does more than play with words. It carries two meanings at once and lets them
Humility in later life is often misunderstood as a lowering of oneself. In practice, it is closer to making room—an openness that allows something beyond our own certainty to enter. It does not draw attention to itself. But without it, a life can begin to narrow. Traditions
What success can hide—and what keeps a life open There is a particular risk that comes with success. Not failure. Not struggle. Success. When things go well long enough, something begins to change. People listen more closely. They defer. They assume you know what you’re doing—not
Doubt in later life is not always a crisis of faith. Last Sunday’s reflection considered a stretch of life where certainty no longer works the way it once did—not as a failure, but as something most of us encounter along the way. Building on that, this week,
Theodore Roosevelt was anything but cautious. He moved quickly, took on fights others avoided, and usually came out ahead. When challenged, he pushed back harder. He had already been president. Still, it wasn’t enough. After his tenure in the White House, he sought a new challenge. Roosevelt found it
A clear look at what The Last Repair Shop is really about—and why its story of repair, care, and continuation stays with so many viewers.
What we pass on in later life is not always noticed. A way of listening. A habit of care. The way someone shows up. Later in life, that may matter more than we think. This week’s Spiritual Signals looks at what different traditions have to say about
The Last Repair Shop Meaning There are some things we fix because they are broken. There are others we restore because they matter. That difference sits at the heart of The Last Repair Shop, the Oscar-winning short film set inside a Los Angeles workshop where a small
Renewal in later life is often spoken of as a beginning again. A fresh start. A return. But for many who have lived through loss or change, renewal does not arrive that way. It doesn’t restore what was. It doesn’t return things to their former place. And
“You can’t go back and change the beginning, but you can start where you are and change the ending.” — C.S. Lewis Spring returns with a kind of reliability we rarely question. The days lengthen. The light changes. The air is different. The seasons still turn. For