Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    • Home
    • Sedona
      • Arts and Entertainment
      • Bear Howard Chronicles
      • Business Profiles
      • City of Sedona
      • Elections
      • Goodies & Freebies
      • Mind & Body
      • Sedona News
    • Opinion
    • Real Estate
    • About
    • The Sedonan
    • Advertise
    • Sedona’s Best
    Sedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde ValleySedona.Biz – The Voice of Sedona and The Verde Valley
    Home»Amaya Gayle Gregory»Would You Actually Choose That?
    Amaya Gayle Gregory

    Would You Actually Choose That?

    August 10, 20241 Comment
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit WhatsApp
    20240810 amaya
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit WhatsApp

    By Amaya Gayle Gregory

    Amaya Gayle GregoryEvery of us has a religion, or two 😉, it’s just that we call them by different names. The things we sanctify, the places we shine our focus upon, are our religions. It could be a God with power over heaven and earth, a way of being, or what we believe to be the right way to show up. It could also be an idea of autonomy, of individual responsibility, of winning at the game of capitalism. The west is keen on that one, at least the idea of it. In fact, it’s the most popular religion by a long shot. Sometimes we even mix and match. Humans are nothing, if not creative.

    By this definition, Atheism is a religion too, as are all the other isms. If you bow down at its altar, giving it power over your life, it’s a religion. That’s not exactly what most want to hear. We’ve separated out the word and given it a distinct place in the world of words, but it’s still just a word.

    Interestingly, we don’t pick our religion. It picks us and not always genetically, although the family we are born into holds the potential of immense influence.

    Black sheep of the family stray off the path they were born into. It is not easy to go against the flow. It’s like a salmon swimming upstream. If the big fish could effortlessly swim with the flow and get where it simply knows it needs to go, it would.

    For the black sheep life is a perfect storm, blowing us off course, onto entirely unknown territory. It seems like we’re choosing to step off the well-worm trail. It even feels like it, but when we look closely we can see that it is choiceless.

    In a world where being part of the flock is rewarded, the sheep that doesn’t fit in is thrown to the wolves.

    Would you actually choose that?

    Sedona Gift Shop

    Spirituality is a religion too, even though most adherents recoil at the idea. The world of spirituality is the place many black sheep go to make sense of the world, of the storm that blew us so far off course, that in many cases we lost our entire family.

    Sometimes we recreate the flock, joining in new community, adopting new norms. Sometimes, we don’t. Unable to find the threads of connection we become one of the lone sheep, a hermit ramming our heads against the rocks of memory — the shadows within — and our hearts against the pull to commune. We can’t help but feel the physical absence since we are hard wired for community.

    Whether we recreate the family we lost, or dive into an exploration of aloneness, we most always replace one belief system with another. It seems too dangerous to step off the cliff and fall into the mysterious depths beyond beliefs.

    We need a religion, a way to navigate the trails of life … or we think we do, which is nothing but a mini-me religion. Every belief we hold is its own altar, its own shield around the heart, its own veil concealing what life actually is.

    All religion stands between us and the realization of what we are. Every realization seen through the lens of self is but another religion. There are infinite ways to make sense of the world, to enjoy the world, to suffer its winding paths and drop-offs,. They are infinite trails to tread with new ones being created with each new breath. We can’t explore them all. We cannot vanquish all the wolves.

    There is no end to the creativity of humanity. We are creation itself. It is not right or wrong. It is a magnetic flow determining the placement of our focus in the moment, the religion we are following, that we are engaged with. Death is when most lose their religion, that moment when all hope of another breath departs.

    There is no need to wait. It is possible to step out of the pull, the magnetic draw, by noticing, observing, by watching the sheep — yourself included. Just notice.

    There is no appropriate bio for Amaya Gayle. She doesn’t exist other than as an expression of Consciousness Itself. Talking about her in biographical terms is a disservice to the truth and to anyone who might be led to believe in such nonsense. None of us exist, not in the way we think. Ideas spring into words. Words flow onto paper and yet no one writes them. They simply appear fully formed. Looking at her you would swear this is a lie. She’s there after all, but honestly, she’s not. Bios normally wax on about accomplishments and beliefs, happenings in time and space. She has never accomplished anything, has no beliefs and like you was never born and will never die. Engage with Amaya at your own risk.  That said with a giggle, check out Amaya’s new book – Actuality: infinity at play, available in paperback and e-book at Amazon. 

    Healing Paws

    This is an advertisement

    1 Comment

    1. TJ Hall on August 10, 2024 12:09 pm

      Think you.confuse faith with religion and vice versa. Faith is the belief in “a god” while religion is the belief in “a superhuman being or beings”. Atheism does not adhere to either of those concepts. It is neither a faith nor religion.
      The three main organized religions are based on fictional writings of man that boasts one ideology over all others. Which is why the three main organized religions of the world are also responsible for genocidal attacks upon peoples who either disagreed with their religious oppressors or refused to be indoctrinated by force into believing something they do not.
      While some (very very few) people of faith have actually been seemingly good humane people who don’t believe in do-overs every Sunday when it comes to sinning , their faith as a whole has had the opposite effect upon the world. Historically faith/religion are responsible for nearly every war known to man, every genocidal colonization of foreign lands so they could be exploited for their geological and agricultural wealth.
      Today MAGA faithful use broken forms of Christianity as a sorry excuse to oppress other Americans who do not share in their misguided hate filled pseudo Christian agenda. China uses faith to oppress their minority Hui and Uyghur poplulations, India oppresses it’s minority Muslim population, Israel oppresses the Palestinians, Serbia committed genocide against Muslim Bosniaks in the 90’s and so on.
      Being a good person who thinks and does good things does not require faith nor religious ideology. Nor does it require Mega Churches, Leer Jets, Rolex Watches, Jaguar cars or any other form of status used by the three main religions and their leader of the world.
      You did hit the nail on the head when you stated-“The world of spirituality is the place many black sheep go to make sense of the world, of the storm that blew us so far off course, that in many cases we lost our entire family” but what you neglected to state is that these so called “black sheep” were likely indoctrinated into a faith/religious cult at a very very young and impressionable age. An age where though they cannot understand a single word being of faith spoken to them, go along just to get along with their family and communities. Some people grow up and can see the world for what it truly is without having to use the rose tinted lens of any one particular faith or religion and then get labeled “black sheep” for it.
      Our children do not need the 10 broken Commandments shoved in their faces while being sent to learn life skills in order to be good people. What they need is good parenting and a good non religious education.

    If I Were Curtis Sliwa
    By Tommy Acosta

    One of my guilty little pleasures is imagining what I would do if I was in someone else’s shoes, especially politicians. In this essay I would love to jump into the shoes of Curtis Sliwa, a former New York City vigilante who founded the Guardian Angels and is now running as a Republican for mayor of his city.

    Read more→

    The Sedonan
    House of Seven Arches
    Need More Customers?
    Bear Howard Chronicles
    Humankind
    Tlaquepaque
    Verde Valley Wine Trail
    Recent Comments
    • Mark Harris on The Attics of Conscience — What Could Soon Happen in Sedona and Across America
    • Daniel J Sullivan MDJD on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • Jill Dougherty on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • Blue on Between Bombs and Olive Branches: The Art of the Deal
    • Blue on The Attics of Conscience — What Could Soon Happen in Sedona and Across America
    • Charles H Blum on License to Spy
    • TJ Hall on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • JB on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • Stephanie lenore Maciel on The Attics of Conscience — What Could Soon Happen in Sedona and Across America
    • Michael Schroeder on The Attics of Conscience — What Could Soon Happen in Sedona and Across America
    • Michael Schroeder on License to Spy
    • Brian mcgillin on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • TJ Hall on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • JB on If I Was Curtis Sliwa
    • Jill Dougherty on Cottonwood, Verde Valley Residents Join Largest Protest Yet to Reject Abuses of Power
    Archives
    The Sedonan
    © 2025 All rights reserved. Sedona.biz.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.