I am because of you


Dear Dad,


It’s been 12 years since you started traveling the worlds beyond,

What have you seen? Where have you gone?


9/14/82 “This my first entry to record a father’s impression of his adored son. You have filled (really!!) my life with moments of unequalled pleasure and wonderment. Imagine! A little soul developing before my eyes. A miracle, truly.”


I'm still a little soul developing before your eyes,

Only now with a slight change in size


11/4/82 “…you cry most mournfully when not properly attended to before sleep time. It will not be the last time within your childhood that you will become the treasured instrument for the subtle education of your parents in the ever needful field of patience.”


What a beautiful way of sharing your life,

a praise within advice, and recognizing the growth in strife


8/2/83 “But one thing that moves me more than anything else is the love you show to mother and me. A smile, a hug, kisses and kisses, a soft brown-eyed look to melt the heart. This is my treasure. This makes me rich beyond compare.”


Although years have past since our last meeting,

Your words feel like a recent greeting,

A reminder that our time together is anything but fleeting


And this shell to the material world is thin

And when it cracks I will walk in

To see your face wearing my favorite dad grin…


Much love,

Your son

Soul Mates

I listened to a conversation the other day about marriage. A few youth were discussing the fact that they were looking forward to it but were not quite ready. Some had a specific date or year in mind when the marriage day would occur. I remember having the exact same thoughts…

…which sparked the following series of thoughts now…

What is a healthy marriage? Society would define marriage as the outcome of two people falling in love and the necessary step to be taken in order to legalize that love. Some would say that marriage is for people that want to have children. What does it mean to raise a child? Again, the definition perhaps would be that children are the result of sexual intimacy and we raise them so they will understand the difference between right and wrong. These two questions, for me, are the keys to opening the door to marriage.

Now one could be satisfied with these semi-general definitions that are heard in our society… or one could be absolutely terrified. I feel like the majority of us fall into this second category. Fear of commitment, fear of failure, fear of the unknown. And with the above definition, marriage kind of looks like a seemingly innocent accident, which at the end of the day forces you to take a terrifying, leap of faith. But I don’t agree with the above definition.

First off, I refuse to believe something so incredible as the union of two souls; the everlasting bond sealed by the acknowledgment of a divine institution could be viewed as an accident. We are all guided and can constantly ask for guidance along the way. I’ve heard many examples of couples getting married and later realizing how they were so lovingly directed towards each other. One couple told me that they were in a bookstore, looking around, and then “accidentally” a book fell off the shelf. When they picked it up, they noticed it was about marriage. Some take years before they decide to get married, and some take days. Some have dreams, some don’t. There really is no pattern, no formula, no guarantee, and perhaps this is the scariest part for many people because they see marriage as mentioned before, a terrifying leap of faith. But what if it’s not. The answer, on the surface level, seemingly simple, is probably one of the most beautiful and necessary endeavors humans will ever undertake.

Getting to know one another.

Lately, I’ve been serving in a small community, and this question has been running through my mind. How do we get to know one another? Since service is the most complete form of adoration to God, our most meaningful interactions occur when we serve together, when we make efforts for the betterment of the world rather than when we’re focused on making ourselves happy. This statement goes right to the heart of the question and presents a solution that dissolves the earlier mentioned “fear of the unknown.” Through service we get to know each other’s characters, and more importantly we understand what it is to sacrifice our own needs for a greater purpose, we learn how to support each other’s efforts, we grow closer by forgetting ourselves because love can only grow by giving, and service to others is the true expression of love and sacrifice. This is the purest form of getting to know one another.

When we see the other person for the qualities that they have developed because of their love for God we can overcome any challenge that the marriage might go through. Once this kind of love is born you cannot get angry or upset with them because being near them is like being near God, the source of love. Abdu’l-Baha, a great spiritual teacher writes about this vision,

“Each sees in the other the Beauty of God reflected in the soul, and finding this point of similarity, they are attracted to one another in love... This love will bring the realization of true accord, the foundation of real unity.”

This subject deserves much more thought and assumes the great responsibility of getting to know oneself has already been explored.

The last question is much more difficult to comment on because I lack the experience of raising or having a child. Baha’u’llah, a Divine Educator, states,

“Marry, O people, that from you may appear he who will remember Me amongst My servants; this is one of My commandments unto you; obey it as an assistance to yourselves.”

I just cannot fathom the bounty that God has given us here. “…from you may appear he who will remember Me…” If we believe that everyone has a soul then we can define parenthood as the art of guiding the infinite. A newly born soul is clean of the dross we accumulate from this world such as vain-imaginations, ego, materialism, racism and prejudice, etc. A parent’s job is to accompany this soul, help them navigate through the world so when they are faced with a challenge they will look towards their inherent nobility for the answers and find their heart overflowing with love for others. This most essential role of the parent is being tested all the time. Everyday, through our interactions with family, friends, neighbors, strangers, we are developing our ability to comprehend, listen, give advice, help out, accompany, etc. We could see the early stages of our life as the training ground for the purpose of marriage; guiding souls to recognize their Creator.

GYE to JFK


Thoughts while traveling to NY...

$1.45 for a banana!!

Wireless Internet everywhere, even while sitting 20,000 feet above the earth.

Immense manmade structures, the works of a few genius architects.

Sun piercing through a multilayered cloud formation a few hours before it setting.

Waiting for luggage in a room full a different cultures and races all anticipating the warm welcome from friends and family just outside the door.

Friendly chatter with two traveling Ukrainians about exploration, food, and a small media project in Ecuador!

Listening to the train grind on cold steel tracks mixed with random and sometimes intimate conversations from it's passengers.

Getting picked up by a best friend, and by picked up, I mean hugged :)

One Great Spiritual Law of Life

One great spiritual law of life

A lot of us are looking for balance or something to fulfill our lives, to complete our days, to rest and wake up feeling whole. Whole. I think that’s how we all want to feel, whole. The dictionary defines coherence as united as or forming a whole. Coherency oscillates between the spiritual and material and could be the key to balance.

My friend sent me a quote by Shoghi Effendi, the Guardian of the Bahá’í Faith, where he says,

“The more we search for ourselves, the less likely we are to find ourselves; and the more we search for God, and to serve our fellow-men, the more profoundly will we become acquainted with ourselves, and the more inwardly assured. This is one of the great spiritual laws of life.”

Stop searching for self-fulfillment. Search for God. Serve others.

Studying God’s word, brought to us through His prophets, helps us know Him. Serving humanity is also a requirement in order to become closer to Him, and as we get closer we begin to have a better understanding of whom we are and what our position is on this earth. Those efforts in worshiping and knowing God will attract balance to us. We don’t find balance, balance finds us.

It has become easier and easier to separate our lives from God and so it’s only natural that we look at our beliefs as a side dish to our work, to our family, to our recreational activities, instead of looking at them all as one. Until we infuse justice and nobility in all aspects of our life we will continue to feel unsure about our actions. The common belief in society is that when we feel unsure we distract ourselves with activities that direct our energies towards self-gratification. Referring to the quote above, this is exactly the formula for encouraging uncertainty.

These are concepts in society that we have to deconstruct if we want to build up a new standard. A standard which will guide us towards to our true potential, where we communicate with God through prayer and meditation, read His Writings, develop our spiritual qualities and capacities to serve others, and work together without being exclusive. Coherence, balance, harmony. Is it possible to bring about change without this spiritual law?