A word about Peace
- Kira Coopersmith
- Feb 12
- 2 min read
Within and around us
From the Daily Om newsletter on February 12, 2025:
As I read the below passage from our friends at Daily Om I can't help but reflect on how these ideas are at the heart of the inner work that is necessary to begin the process of organizing, downsizing, and letting go of attachments. I hope these words inspire you. I have highlighted the passages that I feel most resonate with our work. May peace be with you.

"Most people agree that a more peaceful world would be an ideal situation for all living creatures. However, we often seem stumped on how to bring this ideal situation into being. If we are to have true peace in this world, each one of us must find it in ourselves first. If we don’t like ourselves, for example, we probably won’t like those around us. If we are in a constant state of inner conflict, then we will probably manifest conflict in the world. If we have fighting within our families, there can be no peace in the world. We must shine the light of inquiry on our internal struggles because this is the only place we can really create change.
When we begin to look inside ourselves for the meaning of peace, we will start to understand why it has always been so difficult to come by. We also will gain more compassion toward the many people in the world who find themselves caught up in conflicts both personal and universal. We may have an experience of peace that we can call up in ourselves to remind us of what we want to create, but since we are human, we also will feel the pull in the opposite direction — the desire to defend ourselves, to keep what we feel belongs to us, and to protect our loved ones and our cherished ideals. This awareness is important because we cannot truly know peace until we understand the many tendencies and passions that threaten our ability to find it. Peace includes all of our primal energy, much of which has been expressed in ways that contradict peace.
Being at peace with ourselves is not about denying or rejecting any part of ourselves. On the contrary, in order to be at peace, we must be willing and able to hold ourselves, in all our complexity, in a full embrace that excludes nothing. This is perhaps the most difficult part for many of us because we want so much to disown the negative aspects of our humanity. Ironically, though, true peace begins with a willingness to take responsibility for our humanity so that we might ultimately transform it in the light of our love.
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