Holy Nature Paula Better

Let’s be blunt: much of modern religious practice is sterile. It happens indoors, under electric lights, on man-made chairs, reciting ancient words in buildings that separate us from the sky.

Holy Nature Paula Better is a direct challenge to this. It suggests that the rise in eco-anxiety, depression, and spiritual emptiness is directly linked to our nature-deficit disorder (a term coined by Richard Louv, which Paula adherents have rebranded as "grace-deficit disorder"). holy nature paula better

Consider:

Paula’s "better" way flips this. She would say: If you want to find God, do not search the heavens with a telescope. Do not search the scriptures with a highlighter. Walk outside barefoot. Feel the soil. That loam is the hem of God’s garment. Let’s be blunt: much of modern religious practice

Go to a natural space without your phone. Sit for 20 minutes. Do not pray words. Simply listen. Paula teaches that holy nature speaks without verbs. What do you hear? Wind. Birds. Your own heartbeat. Write down one word that arises. Paula’s "better" way flips this

Next time it rains, stand in it for sixty seconds (safely). Feel each drop. Paula calls this "the immersion of the ordinary." Let the water remind you: you are not a brain in a jar. You are a creature of dust and moisture.