Living Compass

Living Compass Visit us at www.livingcompass.org Living Compass provides group coaching sessions.

In these coaching sessions, the life coaches and experienced therapists of the Samaritan Family Wellness Foundation help participants understand where they are, what they wish to improve upon, and provide the steps and lessons necessary for participants to make positive changes.

Here are the show notes for our new podcast episode. Listen in any podcast app or at www.livingcompass.org/podcastIs You...
05/29/2026

Here are the show notes for our new podcast episode. Listen in any podcast app or at www.livingcompass.org/podcast

Is Your Recreation Truly Re-Creative?

As summer begins, we invite listeners to reflect on a simple but important question: Is your recreation actually restoring you — or are you just zoning out?

In this episode, Scott distinguishes between mindlessly scrolling or numbing out (easy to do, but not truly restorative) and activities that create genuine flow — that quality of being so present and engaged that you lose track of time. For Scott, those activities are playing mandolin at bluegrass jams and riding his bike. Both draw him fully into the moment and replenish him body, mind, and spirit.

This idea of true rest has deep roots. Sabbath — woven into the founding traditions of Judaism and Christianity — is ancient wisdom about the necessity of restoration. When we neglect it, the signs show up across all dimensions of our wellbeing: emotional flatness, spiritual dryness, physical depletion, relational withdrawal.

A simple practice to try this week:

Choose one dimension of your wellbeing — physical, emotional, spiritual, or relational — and do one thing that is genuinely replenishing for that area. You already know what it is. The challenge is simply remembering and then choosing it. Bonus points if one activity nourishes more than one dimension at once.

05/25/2026
This Precious SummerIn honor of this being our last column of the season — we will be taking the summer off to rest and ...
05/22/2026

This Precious Summer

In honor of this being our last column of the season — we will be taking the summer off to rest and renew — we would like to share one of our favorite poems with you. We hope this will inspire you as it has us.

If you prefer to listen to this poem read by the author herself, you can do so here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_bxj_1UR58

"The Summer Day" by Mary Oliver

Who made the world?
Who made the swan, and the black bear?
Who made the grasshopper?
This grasshopper, I mean — the one who has flung herself out of the grass,
the one who is eating sugar out of my hand,
who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down
— who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.
Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face.
Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away.

I don't know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention,
how to fall down into the grass,
how to kneel down in the grass,
how to be idle and blessed,
how to stroll through the fields,
which is what I have been doing all day.

Tell me, what else should I have done?
Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon?
Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?

We find the specificity of Mary Oliver's attention to this grasshopper inspiring. It seems to us an invitation to ask, “what will we pay attention to this summer?”

Specifically, how will we pay attention to the moments when we are working in the garden, the sunsets we will see, the smell of flowers we will breathe in, the taste of fresh produce from our farmers markets, the beauty of starlit skies, a possible round of golf on a warm sunny day, the moments when we get to chase fireflies with children or play with them in the swimming pool, watching children running freely through the sprinkler, a marshmallow toasted over a campfire, or the walks we will enjoy on a summer evening?

The ample pleasures of summer invite us to pay attention, to fall down into the grass, to be idle and blessed, and to stroll through the fields.

If the question Mary Oliver ends her poem with seems too immense, perhaps we can whittle it down to this:

What is it you plan to do with this wild and precious summer?

Best to you during the magical time of summer. May you enjoy its splendors. And we will see you again right after Labor Day.

Warmly, Holly and Scott Stoner

This column is an offering of the non-profit Wellness Compass Initiative, www.wellnesscompass.org. Wellness Compass is a community wellness initiative that partners with Living Compass and serves schools, nonprofits, counseling centers, and other community organizations.’

It is written by Holly Hughes Stoner and Scott Stoner, two licensed marriage and family therapists and wellness coaches, who are partners in life and work. A companion podcast to this column is available at
www.wellnesscompass.org/podcast or in any podcast app.

This new seven-minute podcast episode from Living Compass explores the wisdom of "beginner's mind" and how it can help u...
05/18/2026

This new seven-minute podcast episode from Living Compass explores the wisdom of "beginner's mind" and how it can help us and others, especially when we are unsure of the way forward in any given situation.

Listen at www.livingcompass.org/podcast or with the podcast app on your phone--just search for Living Compass Spirituality and Wellness.

In this new 7-minute Living Compass podcast episode, Scott reflects on one of spring's most quietly profound lessons: th...
05/12/2026

In this new 7-minute Living Compass podcast episode, Scott reflects on one of spring's most quietly profound lessons: that trees bud in their own time, on their own internal rhythm — and that the same is true for each of us.

This observation opens into a deeper invitation: to release the pressure we place on ourselves — and on others — to bud on our timeline. Whether we're longing for clarity, resolution, healing, or change in our own lives or in someone we love, the wisdom of the trees reminds us that we cannot force the budding. We can only trust that the same creative force that draws the bud out of the branch in its own time is at work in us too.

Listen with any podcast app or at www.livingcompass.org/podcast

Take Me Out to the Slow Game“Baseball is too slow for me—I prefer sports like basketball with its constant action and sc...
05/08/2026

Take Me Out to the Slow Game

“Baseball is too slow for me—I prefer sports like basketball with its constant action and scoring” is a comment we overheard at our grandson’s Little League game this week. Because it wasn’t said directly to us, we didn’t have the opportunity to respond with all the ways we love the slow pace of baseball. We’d like to share those with you now, and because this is a wellness column, we can’t resist the opportunity to reflect on what the slowness of baseball has to teach us.

First on the list would have probably been that we love the game just because it is slow. Even with the advent of the pitch clock and a few other changes to speed up the game for our impatient culture, the game still has a refreshing pace that allows you to savor each pitch, each at bat, and each play in the field. The pace allows you to pause long enough to wonder, “Should they bring the infield in?” or “Is this a good time to hit and run?” or “Should the outfield be playing this batter to pull?” or “The pitcher has thrown three consecutive four-seam fastballs—so is it time to throw a circle change?”

The opinion that baseball is too slow has been voiced more frequently over the last few decades. Perhaps a different way to frame that perception is that life by contrast has increasingly sped up and maybe even become too fast.

Baseball is a celebration of slowness. It resonates with the slow food movement and the increased interest in slow travel. Within medicine there is even a new movement called slow medicine, which is pushing back on the limitations of the five to seven minute office visits.

Speaking of medicine, Scott tried something very counter-cultural (and counter-intuitive for him) this week. He had a doctor’s appointment and his doctor was running late so he had a half hour to himself in the waiting room. Because he was thinking about this concept of patience and slowing down, he resisted getting his phone out and checking the news or his email or …. last night’s box scores. He sat for a full thirty minutes without reaching for his phone. He took some deep breaths and practiced some mindfulness meditation. When he returned home he was embarrassed to report that this was not easy for him to do. Like the woman we overheard at our grandson’s baseball game, he, too, sometimes craves action and stimulation.

Life has its own series of waiting rooms. Waiting for clarity on a difficult issue. Waiting for a loved one to find their way. Waiting for healing. Waiting for peace. We long for progress and some kind of action that will bring quick resolution. When we can’t just scroll ahead we are invited to enter into the wisdom of slowness and the practice of patience.

Three thousand years ago the author of the book of Ecclesiastes gave us this hopeful wisdom, “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.”

May we find the grace to trust the season we are in and to patiently embrace the waiting and unfolding, even when we wish things would move a little faster.

And may we watch a few games of baseball to remind us of the benefits of slowing down.

This column is an offering of the non-profit Wellness Compass Initiative, www.wellnesscompass.org. Wellness Compass is a community wellness initiative that partners with Living Compass and serves schools, nonprofits, counseling centers, and other community organizations.

It is written by Holly Hughes Stoner and Scott Stoner, two licensed marriage and family therapists and wellness coaches, who are partners in life and work. A companion podcast to this column is available at www.wellnesscompass.org/podcast or in any podcast app.

Living Compass has a mobile app—find it in your phone’s app store or online at: https://app.livingcompass.org See less

Sharing Awe: What 19,000 Likes Can Teach Us About Supporting One Another's Mental HealthSomething unexpected happened af...
04/24/2026

Sharing Awe: What 19,000 Likes Can Teach Us About Supporting One Another's Mental Health
Something unexpected happened after we published our last Wellness Compass column about the Artemis II mission. Nearly 7,000 people shared it, and almost 19,000 offered a "like." We weren't expecting that. We've been sitting with it ever since, asking: what does that response tell us?

We think it's data. Specifically, it's data about how hungry we are — as individuals, as a culture — for good news. For wonder. For awe. For something that lifts our eyes above the noise.

And it turns out our hunches are well supported by recent research on awe.
Dr. Dacher Keltner, professor of psychology at UC Berkeley and founding director of the Greater Good Science Center, has spent decades studying the emotion of awe. He explores these findings in his 2023 book, Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life. He defines awe simply as "the feeling of being in the presence of something vast that transcends your current understanding of the world." His research shows that awe isn't just a pleasant feeling — it's a powerful force for mental and physical health.

Artemis II gave millions of people an experience of awe and wonder. Four astronauts flew farther from Earth than any humans had before. They looked back at our planet — this fragile, luminous sphere — and reported a sense of unity, of smallness, of profound beauty. And through the miracle of live coverage, they took us all along for the journey.

Keltner also writes that "tears arise when we perceive vast things that unite us into community.” That was certainly our experience. The shares and likes of our column weren't just people saying they enjoyed an article. They were people passing along a feeling—offering their friends and family a gift, a witness to awe. Experiences of awe and wonder long to be shared and when we do we strengthen our connections with others.

This matters for mental health in a very practical way. Most of us can't fly to the moon. But Keltner's research makes clear that awe is not reserved for astronauts or mountaintops. It is present in daily life, in the sighting of the first spring robin, a kind gesture, a powerful line in a book, a moment of prayer or stillness. It lives in music, in nature, in witnessing acts of moral courage.

Keltner identifies eight distinct wonders of life that can open us to awe:

Moral Beauty: Witnessing others' kindness, acts of courage, overcoming obstacles, and rare talents inspires awe.

Collective Effervescence: Moving in unison stirs the human waves of awe felt within ritual, sport, dance, religion, and public life.

Nature: Immersion in nature and its divinely "wild awe" become spiritual and heals bodies and minds.

Music: Musical awe embraces us as participants and promotes its shared experience and a sense of community.

Visual Design: Visual design and "sacred geometries" help us understand the wonders of life.

Spirituality and Religion: Our spiritual life and religious beliefs—"the fundamental it"—grow out of mystical awe.

Life and Death: Awe helps us understand the cycle of life and death, from childbirth to bearing witness to, yet not knowing what is dying.

Epiphany: Awe allows us to recognize we are part of systems larger than the self: interrelated elements working to achieve a purpose.

The list is both surprising and reassuring — most of these are available to us every single day. Even a few deliberate minutes outdoors, or pausing to notice something beautiful, can be enough to shift our nervous system.

The response to the Artemis column reminded us that people are not, at their core, drawn only to outrage and despair. We are also drawn — powerfully drawn — toward wonder, toward beauty, toward one another. That impulse, the science now confirms, is one of the most life-giving forces we have. Let's keep seeking it and sharing it.

This column is an offering of the non-profit Wellness Compass Initiative, www.wellnesscompass.org. Wellness Compass is a community wellness initiative that partners with Living Compass and serves schools, nonprofits, counseling centers, and other community organizations.

It is written by Holly Hughes Stoner and Scott Stoner, two licensed marriage and family therapists and wellness coaches, who are partners in life and work. A companion podcast to this column is available at www.wellnesscompass.org/podcast or in any podcast app.

Living Compass has a mobile app—find it in your phone’s app store or online at: https://app.livingcompass.org

This new Living Compass podcast episode invites us to not just tolerate, but to befriend uncertainty.Listen online at ww...
04/21/2026

This new Living Compass podcast episode invites us to not just tolerate, but to befriend uncertainty.

Listen online at www.livingcompass.org/podcast or in any podcast app (Apple, Google, Spotify, etc).

What helps you create space to "give your questions time to breathe until the answers fine you?"

The Quaker wisdom, "Way Will Open," is probably the phrase I use most in my coaching practice. It is also the title of t...
04/13/2026

The Quaker wisdom, "Way Will Open," is probably the phrase I use most in my coaching practice. It is also the title of the newest Living Compass Podcast episode. You can listen to this 7-minute reflection at www.livingcompass.org/podcast or in any podcast app.

Here is a summary of this episode: "In this Easter season episode, Scott explores the ancient Quaker wisdom phrase 'Way Will Open' and its profound connection to the resurrection story. With honesty and hope, he reflects on why we sometimes close ourselves off to new life — and why trusting that way will open is both a radical act and a deeply grounded spiritual practice."

What Artemis II Can Teach Us About Mental HealthOn our Wellness Compass podcast this week we talked about how we, as a c...
04/10/2026

What Artemis II Can Teach Us About Mental Health

On our Wellness Compass podcast this week we talked about how we, as a couple of mental health providers, took away some important lessons from following the outer space journey of Artemis II.

Here, in no particular order, are our takeaways:

There is Power in Expanding Our Perspective. Suppose someone says, "I'm a control freak. I micromanage everything." A helpful reframe you could offer them is: “Sounds like you have high standards and a deep investment in things going well. That care and attention to detail can be a real asset as long as you can find a way to channel it in ways that don't exhaust you or those around you.” The reframe expands the perspective and opens up new ways to see the issue.

Viewing Earth from space is the ultimate reframe—and (please excuse the pun!) a very high level experience of expanding one’s perspective. The expanded perspective from space removes human-made earthly divisions and helps to remind us that we really are all ultimately one, and in this together.

If You Want to Go Far, Go Together. There is a proverb that says, “If you want to go fast, go alone; if you want to go far, go together.” The four astronauts are a diverse group with unique skill sets. The success of the mission is based on their interconnection and interdependence. Add to this the much larger team of scientists who built the craft and oversee all the other logistics, and you see that we all definitely do better, and go farther, when we work together, in space and here on Earth.

There is a Time for Autopilot and a Time for Taking the Controls. Many things we do in our day-to-day lives are routines that maybe are not fully on autopilot, but we don’t need to give them a lot of new thought each day. However, there are times, either because of disruption in our lives or because we want to move into a new “orbit,” that we need to turn off the autopilot and truly take control, so that we can fly with greater awareness and intention. This is exactly what the astronauts did on their mission. NASA had each crew member take a turn flying the craft so that they would know what to do in case the autopilot function failed and they needed to take control themselves.

Growth Requires Moving Out of Comfort Zones. Could there be a more powerful example of moving out of one’s comfort zone than choosing to fly to outer space? All change and growth, by definition, requires a decision to move out of our comfort zones. As long as we make this move with awareness, intention, and a supportive team of people around us, we maximize our chances of gaining a whole new perspective in our lives. This can open us to experiences and vistas we never thought possible from within our previous comfort zones.

We applaud the courage and success of the Artemis II voyage and all the people who have made it possible. And as we write this the night before they are due to return to Earth, we thank them for the inspiration and wisdom they have offered us and we wish them a safe and successful landing.

This column is an offering of the non-profit Wellness Compass Initiative, www.wellnesscompass.org. Wellness Compass is a community wellness initiative that partners with Living Compass and serves schools, nonprofits, counseling centers, and other community organizations.

It is written by Holly Hughes Stoner and Scott Stoner, two licensed marriage and family therapists and wellness coaches, who are partners in life and work. A companion podcast to this column is available at www.wellnesscompass.org/podcast or in any podcast app.

Living Compass has a mobile app—find it in your phone’s app store or online at: https://app.livingcompass.org

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