How to Stay Healthy and Live Longer with Spiritual Practices Webinar
Spiritual practices range from an internal focus on the spirit within that is also underlying the universe, to relational spiritual practices such as kindness, helping others, forgiveness, and other aspects of positive psychology. A focus will be on the benefits to the agent of kindness, and the flourishing of self that flows from contributing to the lives of others. This presentation will unfold at the interface of spiritual thought, wisdom literature, and the sciences.
How to Stay Healthy and Live Longer with Spiritual Practices
Please join us on Wednesday, May 18th, for this exceptional discussion on how spiritual practices affect your longevity and quality of life. You will also receive the recording after.
How to Stay Healthy and Live Longer with Spiritual Practices
In this webinar, you will discover:
1. Can we really live healthier, happier, and longer lives through the simple act of kind giving?
2. How can we understand this perennial “Golden Rule” ethos as scientifically valid?
3. Does this hold true for people of all ages, genders, and traditions? And of even the most adverse circumstances?
4. How can we raise kind children and create families of love – and what is love?
Special Gift:
Dr. Post has kindly offered 4 copies of his brand new book Dignity for Deeply Forgetful People: How Caregivers Can Meet the Challenges of Alzheimer’s Disease to be raffled among all the participants. We will do the raffle during the presentation and will announce the winners at the end of the webinar. Join us!
About the Speaker:
Stephen G. Post is Professor of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine & Founding Director of the Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care and Bioethics (2008-present). Previously he was Professor of Bioethics in the Department of Bioethics of the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine (1988-2008). He also taught at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine.
Post is an Elected Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine (2013- present), and of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia for “distinguished contributions to medicine” (2004- present). He is an elected Fellow of the Hastings Center “for distinguished contribution to ethics and the life sciences” (1994 – present) and of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Georgetown University (1990-1995).
He has received the United States Congress Certificate of Special Recognition “In Recognition of Outstanding Achievement” (2012); and the Pioneer Medal for Outstanding Leadership in Health Care (shared with Dr. Edmund D. Pellegrino, MD) from HealthCare Chaplaincy New York (2012).