First Friday - The Existential Health Lab
Detaylar
We talk a lot about physical health. Mental health has finally entered the conversation. But writer and thinker Jim Palmer has been developing a framework that adds two more dimensions most of us are quietly neglecting: social health — our sense of belonging and community — and existential health — our capacity to make meaning, face uncertainty, orient ourselves in the world, and stay connected to what actually matters. For most of human history, religion handled the existential dimension. It provided ritual, community, moral structure, a calendar of meaning. Then it faded — at least for many of us — and we replaced it with… not much. Productivity. Scrolling. The occasional podcast. Philosopher Alain de Botton has argued that secular society “secularized badly” — that we threw out the doctrine and accidentally took the wisdom with it. This evening is a small experiment in getting some of it back. We’ll set up a series of stations — some reflective, some creative, some embodied — where you can try out what Palmer calls “human technologies”: practices borrowed and adapted from contemplative traditions, designed to do the things we’re not getting elsewhere. We’ll start together, explore on our own terms, and close with a group conversation about what came up. Come prepared to do things, not just talk about them. Pre-reads (please engage with at least one before you arrive):
https://www.ted.com/talks/alain_de_botton_atheism_2_0
