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Antonio's Reflections

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Final Thesis for Spiritual Direction

News from Louie as he wraps up his studies. Saints Simon and Jude, pray for him -


-------- Forwarded Message --------

Subject: Final Thesis for Spiritual Direction

Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2021 21:12:48 -0700

From: Antonio Labayen <llabayen7352@gmail.com>


Praised be Jesus Christ! Thank you for your prayers as I write my thesis. The ideas are flowing well. I found out from the fine print that it is due at the end of October, and not this week, so I have some breathing space. The thesis is entitled, "Levels of Assistance in Spiritual Direction." It is all in Castilian Spanish, "Niveles de Asistencia en el Acompañamiento Espiritual." Once it is accepted by the Catholic University of Ávila for credit, I will translate it into English, copyright and publish both versions. It is a very limited topic within an already limited topic of spiritual direction, so I don't think it will …

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Solemnity Pictures from Spain

Louie has sent some beautiful pictures showcasing the Solemnity of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel. Enjoy!

https://photos.app.goo.gl/bxLQZXCq3QyJ1Vzk9


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Healthy and Pathological Psychological Aspects of Spiritual Life

.Forgiveness is making a gift: par-don (don=Latin for a gift). Interestingly, it applies in various languages. There is also the dark side of forgiveness written about by various scholars, characterized by manipulation, negation, avoidance, imposition, and continuing hurt.


As I was preparing for my definitive profession, I reflected on:

Mt 5: 23 Therefore, if you bring your gift to the altar, and there recall that your brother has anything against you, 24 leave your gift there at the altar, go first and be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift.

This was difficult for me due to the vast distance across the Pacific Ocean to the Philippines, and time is so limited during my visits. But I managed to meet with everyone I needed to in the course of several visits. Most of those meetings went well. There was one, in particular, that was on the…


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Community Greetings from Avila!

I finally arrived here last Friday for the concluding summer session of the certification program for Carmelite Spiritual Direction. It took me three years to enter the program last year and was denied boarding at the airport due to the very recent COVID closure of Spain for many nationalities. Last year was the first time they offered the academic part online, although it was a challenge in spite of their having other courses online.


There is a practicum part that has to be done onsite, and I am fortunate this year to be able to make it here. Tuition, room, and board are very reasonable, much cheaper than in the US. There is much work in a very packed schedule with only Sunday afternoons free. I ask for your prayers to help me through completion with many term papers in Spanish and God willing I will come back with three…



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Linda
Linda
11 de jul. de 2021

Spiritual Accompaniment


Praised be Jesus Christ! I am right now here in the Carmelite Mystic University, the ultra-modern building in the foreground with the medieval walled city of Ávila in the background. https://www.mistica.es/


The English term of spiritual direction is really misleading. In Castilian Spanish, it is called Acompañamiento Espiritual, meaning Spiritual Accompaniment. The spiritual director is really the Holy Spirit, and this is one of the key points emphasized over and over. There are very specific techniques using neuro-linguistics that we are taught in order to bring the person under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. One of the key techniques is empathy, examining Teresa and John, and the doctoral dissertation of Edith Stein on Empathy.


We do not infuse our own teachings to the person and leave it all to the Holy Spirit. In this case, most priests are not equipped in this method, but rather infuse their own teachings. We really need more laypeople in this field. One-third of the students are priests, only one Carmelite, and a Carmelite nun. One-third are Carmelite or other order seculars. Another third are civilians who are in various professions like tax law, social work, labor relations, psychiatry, etc.


The neuro-linguistics part was the most difficult part of the course, and even the native Castillian Spanish speakers had a very tough time with it, so they said, more especially for me. It certainly pushed me much further along. Our group that went through the practicum for Cognitive Coaching developed close, supportive relationships very quickly.


That course was the most intense I had ever taken in my life, including technology courses. The spirituality courses, while also intense, are not as exhausting. Right now, we have a priest of the Sacred Heart of Jesus with a Ph.D. in Psychology in our course on normal and clinical psychology. Again, the approach is the same, to enable the person to transcend him/herself with the guidance of the Holy Spirit.


This place is run by Carmelite priests who are devoted to scholarship in mysticism. They are so humble. We live together in a community. It is like the modern version of the design of Athens in ancient Greece, where scholars and students were gathered to advance the field of philosophy. There are some employees hired for various functions.

The administrators are all OCD and they all even help serve meals and clean the tables, especially with COVID sanitation. There are glass booths on the tables so that we can sit together and yet be isolated from each other's breaths. I've attached our very structured and tight schedule. There's no time for anything else, even finding time for laundry is challenging.


Last Sunday, we got the afternoon off, but this Sunday is class all day. Thank God for the official siesta to refresh the mind and prepare for another intense class. My sleep disorder had been worse so I struggle with attention during class. I was able to purchase a melatonin formula that has herbs to prolong sleep and that has helped a bit.


At the conclusion of yesterday's course on Edith Stein spirituality, I made a comment that is somewhat an over-simplification of our process and drew a little smile from the professor, who is the director of the university. If a train is not obedient to the rails, it can go nowhere. But if a train abandons itself to being directed by the rails, it can carry so many passengers to any destination they choose. It is the passenger's responsibility to purchase the correct ticket for the destination they wish to travel to.

Other news: my composition awarded here in Ávila 7 years ago will be sung at the Carmelite Youth Congress in the summer of next year.

Unidos en la oración, Luís Antonio Labayen, ocds

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