In Healing at the Edge, RamDev Dale Borglum compassionately explores topics on embodied mindfulness, tantra, conscious living, and devotion.
RamDev Dale Borglum has five decades of experience in guiding individuals on the spiritual path of opening their hearts and surrendering into wholeness.
Drawing from a diverse range of healing modalities, ancient traditions, contemporary insights, and personal experiences, this podcast offers practical tools, meditations, and mindfulness practices to help in navigating life’s challenges.
Join RamDev Dale Borglum on this journey as he inspires and empowers us to find healing and meaning at the edges of our human experience.
“Service takes on a different tone, a different feeling quality in our being. If instead of doing it out of guilt, or I need to stay busy, or I’m trying to help people, it’s an act of love. It’s your relationship with the beloved. That the homeless person, your partner, even your self, is a manifestation of that which is love. Then, service is transformed. It’s an act of joy, not a responsibility.”
– RamDev, Episode 114 – Service as a Path to Awakening
Dale Borglum (Ram Dev) founded and directed the Hanuman Foundation Dying Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico, the first residential facility in the United States to support conscious dying. He has been the Executive Director of the Living/Dying Project in Santa Fe and since 1986 in the San Francisco Bay Area. He is the coauthor with Ram Dass, Daniel Goleman and Dwarka Bonner of Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook, Bantam Books and has taught meditation since 1974. Dale lectures and gives workshops on the topics of meditation, healing, spiritual support for those with life threatening illness, and on caregiving as spiritual practice. He has a doctorate degree from Stanford University. Dale’s passion is the healing of our individual and collective fear of death so that we may be free. Learn more about Ram Dev’s work via the Living/Dying Project
Ramdev teaches us how to adjust our practice and be a warrior of compassion during times of intense political change.
This week on Healing at the Edge, RamDev explores:
“As long as we’re blaming the environment for how we’re feeling (I’m feeling really lousy because of the election, or there’s too much traffic, or the weather isn’t great), healing isn’t happening. Drive all blames into oneself means you reclaim the blame and take responsibility for how you’re feeling. The election is not making you feel a particular way, your set of conditioning in relationship to the election is creating certain emotions in you.” – RamDev
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