Poet, dharma teacher, and companion to the dying and the bereaved,
Stephen Levine embodied his own exhortation to “keep your heart
open in hell.” Born in 1937 to a secular Jewish family, Stephen
spent his adult life exploring, practicing, and sharing the
traditions of the East, weaving a tapestry of seemingly disparate
but ultimately harmonious elements of bhakti yoga (the Hindu path
of devotion) and Vipassana (Buddhist mindfulness practice). He died
in 2016 in the home he shared with his beloved wife and co-teacher,
Ondrea, in the mountains of northern New Mexico.
A longtime friend of iconic spiritual teacher Ram Dass, and of the
pioneer of the conscious dying movement Elizabeth Kubler-Ross,
Stephen shifted the cultural conversation around death. By
embracing both dying and grieving as opportunities for awakening,
Stephen and Ondrea helped countless beings approach their own
deaths as the ultimate spiritual experience and their bereaved
loved ones to be blessed with transformation. Among Stephen’s many
books, Who Dies?, Unattended Sorrow, and One Year to Live endure as
classics and continue to serve as vital guides to those seeking
support for navigating the mystery of the human condition.
In their work with both the dying and the living, Stephen and
Ondrea reclaimed the concept of “mercy” as an essential element in
self-forgiveness, enabling people on a conscious path to leave this
world unburdened by guilt, and to dispel the legacy of shame in the
hearts of those left behind. These teachings, though simple, were
revolutionary. Stephen’s book Becoming Kwan Yin draws on the
Chinese Buddhist bodhisattva of compassion as an exemplar for this
liberating practice.
For several decades, Stephen and Ondrea lived in relative isolation
in the high desert of rural New Mexico (where Ondrea continues to
live), raising children and animals, in close connection with the
land. Their solitary life in the wilderness made their outpouring
of loving attention to the dying and the bereaved possible. One of
Stephen’s lesser-known passions was his deep connection with
animals, both domestic and wild. A consummate storyteller, Stephen
conveyed his relationships with dogs and horses, his encounters
with snakes and skunks, and his visitations by mockingbirds and
hummingbirds with the artfulness of a bard and the insight of a
Buddha.
Dr. Joanne Cacciatore, author of Animal Sutras’ foreword, is the
founder of the MISS Foundation and is currently a professor at
Arizona State University. Her area of expertise is traumatic death,
specifically child death, and she is an acclaimed public speaker on
this topic. Dr. Cacciatore also specializes in counseling people
affected by traumatic death and is a Diplomate in the American
Psychotherapy Association. Her therapeutic interventions are
presence-and-mindfulness-based, including narrative, dialectical,
and logo therapies, in addition to trauma-focused therapies. Dr.
Cacciatore is the author of the books Bearing the Unbearable: Love,
Loss and the Heartbreaking Path of Grief, and her memoir of losing
her daughter, Dear Cheyenne: A Journey into Grief, which is
considered the leading book for bereaved parents, which is now in
its sixth edition.
Mirabai Starr writes creative non-fiction and contemporary
translations of sacred literature. She taught Philosophy and World
Religions at the University of New Mexico-Taos for 20 years and now
teaches and speaks internationally on contemplative practice and
inter-spiritual dialog. A certified bereavement counselor, Mirabai
helps mourners harness the transformational power of loss. She has
received critical acclaim for her revolutionary new translations of
the mystics, John of the Cross, Teresa of Avila and Julian of
Norwich. She is the award-winning author of God of Love: A Guide to
the Heart of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, Caravan of No
Despair: A Memoir of Loss and Transformation, and Mother of God
Similar to Fire, a collaboration with iconographer, William Hart
McNichols. Her latest book, Wild Mercy: Living the Fierce & Tender
Wisdom of the Women Mystics, was published in Spring 2019. She
lives with her extended family in the mountains of northern New
Mexico.
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