1. Generally Living more deeply. Learn to live each moment with greater intentionality.
2. Living more fully on the present moment. Live more groundling on the present moment.
3. Accept life as it is. Greater capacity and greater awareness of what is in front on us to respond in the present moment.
4. Living for the whole and not only for the self. Our focus of identity is expanded from the singular individual self. This may be from the individual self to one’s tribe, to a group, to all humanity to mother earth and mother nature, and ultimately to the universe as a whole.
5. Assisting others in their own wisdom passage.
6.Developing intuition, moving, and seeing from the head and intellectual mind to down into the heart and the body. We begin to be more fully tune into the intricacies and frequencies of the surrounding life. We begin to appreciate life unfolding beneath the surface of things. Rather for this to benefits of our spiritual development and growth, this capacity desires to serve a greater purpose.
7. Beyond the deeper seeing life mysteries in this realm, the wisdom transformation also open us to the workings of other realms and other dimensions. We gradually develop the capacity to see and appreciate. How and where other realms intersect our own. This is more likely to be a capacity that we are born with. The wisdom passage deliver us to is active form.
8. Living more fully in nature. Nature is alive and, in some way, conscious. Materiality, rather of being at the far end of being and separated of the spiritual, is alive with spirit. Growth in wisdom include the recovery of this indigenous understanding of our intimate place.
9. Importance of grief and grieving and death and dying for a meaningful life. Death and dying are part of life. In wisdom transformation we learn to die in many ways over the course of our lifetime. It is this dying that surrender is involved. All fears in life ultimately can be traced to underline fear to death. It is only when we are willing to face our own death that we will truly be able to live. Grief and grieving are essential parts of life and loving. In this transformation, meaningful life is open more fully when we are willing to face our grief.
10. Loving more deeply. All these other changes and life by itself are ultimately for the purpose of for loving more fully, loving more deeply, and loving more openly. We cannot control the circumstances that surround us; our work is to keep our heart open, no matter the circumstances, no matter the container we found ourselves in; our deepest human calling is to love openly and deeply wherever we find ourselves.
Notes from the program of William Redfield: From Self to Other, September 18, 2022