Category: religion and mythology

  • An invitation

    An invitation

    Hey y’all

    The future is here. As teachers, we feel it every day. I don’t need to tell you how surreal it is. The world our students are growing up in is shifting fast. Artificial intelligence is changing how we think, work, and learn. Climate change and political instability are reshaping what it means to live on this planet. And what was once the stuff of science fiction, like UFOs, is now being discussed in Congress and covered by mainstream news.

    These days, the term UAP, or Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena, is used instead of UFO. “Anomalous” reflects how strange and hard to classify these sightings are. They’re not always in the sky. Some have been reported in oceans or space. Others seem to defy known physics entirely. The term helps make space for the unknown, without assuming too much.

    In recent years, credible sources have begun to acknowledge the existence of phenomena we don’t yet understand.

    And yet, for a long time, topics like these, along with consciousness, non-human intelligence, and alternative knowledge systems, have been silenced by stigma. We’ve been taught not to ask questions that challenge the norm. To keep things simple. Safe. Predictable. But it doesn’t have to be that way anymore.

    If you’ve ever wondered what’s real, what’s true, or what it all means, you’re not alone.

    We don’t need to have all the answers. What we do need is to model intellectual curiosity, humility, and critical thinking—and to make the search for understanding feel like an adventure. As educators, our role is to create space for better questions.

    Questions that stretch our imagination. That cross disciplines. That invite mystery. That make us pause and say, Wait… what? What if?

    We can model what it looks like to live inside the questions. To sit with uncertainty. To wonder openly and stay grounded anyway. That’s what students need—not polished certainty, but the courage to think out loud.

    We don’t need to be experts. We just need to be real.

    Kids love big questions. They want to talk about what truly matters. When we make room for wonder, they lean in. And honestly, we need that wonder too. It’s what keeps us alive in the work.

    Wonder is the antidote to burnout. To disconnection. To apathy. It reminds us why any of this matters.

    Whether you’re skeptical (welcome), curious (you belong here), or already exploring these questions (hello, friend), I welcome you.

    This is a space to challenge what we’ve been told, question assumptions, and open to what else might be true.

    Conversations around UAPs, non-human intelligence, and consciousness are becoming harder to ignore. We’re being invited to rethink science, history, and what it means to be human.

    And maybe, just maybe, religion was more literal than we thought. Maybe ancient stories weren’t just metaphor or myth. They were people’s best attempts to describe real experiences. Mythology, too, may hold truths that were never given the respect they deserved. What have we dismissed too easily because it didn’t fit our frameworks?

    Who decides what counts as knowledge? What stories have been left out? What questions have been dismissed too soon?

    Science was never meant to be a set of fixed answers. It’s a process. History should be a living inquiry, not a closed narrative.

    Educational narratives have long been shaped by colonial systems that marginalized Indigenous epistemologies and excluded knowledge systems that diverged from Western paradigms.

    What if we made room for those, too?

    What if wonder mattered just as much as knowledge?

    What if we prepared students not by handing them facts, but by giving them permission to explore the unknown?

    Right now, conversations about human consciousness are accelerating. Podcasts like The Telepathy Tapes explore our untapped potential. The psychedelic renaissance is bringing together ancient wisdom and modern neuroscience. And across disciplines, more people are asking what it means to truly know, to feel, to connect.

    This work isn’t just for teachers. It’s for school leaders, chaplains, counselors, parents—anyone who cares about how young people make sense of the world.

    I’m not here to convince you of anything. I’m not selling certainty. I’m offering an invitation: to be curious, to wonder, and to ask the questions that don’t yet have answers.

    How do we best serve our kids in this moment?

  • fostering intellectual humility: addressing stigma in education

    fostering intellectual humility: addressing stigma in education

    Deeper Questions for Self-Reflection

    Fostering Intellectual Humility and Navigating Stigma in Education
    Reflective Questions for Educators

    This set of questions invites educators to reflect deeply on their teaching practice, embracing complexity and uncertainty while considering how the role of the teacher may be evolving. Encouraging a balance between openness and critical inquiry, these questions invite you to explore how stigma and fear may limit what is explored in the classroom. Perhaps most importantly, they ask how intellectual humility can be modeled without compromising rigor.


    What questions or topics have you hesitated to explore, either for yourself or with your students? How might concerns about stigma or acceptability influence those boundaries?

    In moments of uncertainty or when faced with unknowns, how do you demonstrate intellectual humility? How can you admit what you don’t know while still guiding and supporting your students confidently?

    What might it look like to bring awe, ambiguity, and curiosity about anomalies into your teaching practice? How could embracing these elements shift not only school culture but also broader societal attitudes toward knowledge and learning?

    How do you foster a safe environment for students to share unusual or deeply personal experiences and perspectives without fear of judgment or dismissal?

    In a rapidly changing world, what kind of educator do you aspire to be? Are you preparing students primarily to recall facts, or to engage with uncertainty and complexity using courage, discernment, and empathy?

    How do you balance openness to new ideas with healthy skepticism and critical thinking? What role does intellectual humility play in maintaining this balance?

  • Start Where You Are: Personal Reflections for Teaching on the Edge of Mystery

    Start Where You Are: Personal Reflections for Teaching on the Edge of Mystery

    Personal Reflections: Start Where You Are

    These prompts invite you to reflect inwardly. Use them as journaling tools, warm-ups, or group conversation starters. Begin from wherever you are. There are no wrong answers, only your honest perspective.


    Think globally, locally, internally. What’s changing for you?

    Have you ever experienced something that didn’t quite fit with what you’ve learned from science? How did it make you feel? Did you try to explain it, or just sit with it?

    How do you respond to words like non-human intelligence, unidentified anomalous phenomena, or consciousness? Which word feels the most curious or strange to you? Why?

    What happens inside you when you allow something entirely new into your understanding of reality? Is it unsettling? Exciting? Confusing? Beautiful?

    How do you react when certainty begins to slip away? Do you try to hold on tighter, or let go and see where it takes you?

    What signs do you notice that something big might be shifting in the world?

  • rethinking education: what does It mean to be human?

    rethinking education: what does It mean to be human?

    This is the question I’ve spent my life exploring, with children, educators, and communities. It’s the thread that runs through everything I do: teaching, curriculum design, the humanities, justice work, mindfulness, and now helping others navigate the unfolding reality of UAPs and Non-Human Intelligence (NHI).

    For centuries, we’ve explored this question through history, science, religion, literature, and philosophy. We’ve defined ourselves by our intellect, creativity, compassion, and desire to make meaning. Some of the stories we’ve told about ourselves have been expansive and beautiful. Others have been limiting or exclusionary.

    But today, something is shifting. If we are not alone in the universe, if there are other forms of life, intelligence, or consciousness, what does that mean for how we understand ourselves?

    How do we define what it means to be human if we are not the only ones asking the question?


    Expanding Our Definition

    For too long, education has centered on delivering the “right” answers. But now, more than ever, we need the courage to ask better questions.

    In my teaching, I invite children to wonder freely. Together, we explore:

    • Do you consider humans animals?
    • What makes us similar to other animals? What makes us different?
    • What might explain those differences?
    • How do we treat other species in science and industry? What does that reveal about our values?
    • What if another species treated us the way we treat animals?
    • What if humans are not the pinnacle of creation?
    • What else on this planet might be sentient?
    • How might other animals or beings experience reality in ways we cannot imagine?

    These are no longer just imaginative or philosophical questions. They now live at the edge of science, history, and spirituality. And they are becoming more timely and real.


    Rethinking Education

    As new information emerges and challenges our assumptions, we have an opportunity to rethink the very purpose of education.

    Education should not be a conveyor belt of facts. It should be a space where we learn to hold questions. A space for imagination, empathy, and critical thinking. A place where we unlearn what no longer serves us and begin to see the world, and ourselves, with new eyes.

    This is not about replacing one worldview with another. It’s about learning to live with complexity. To remain curious and open in the face of mystery.

    If the unknown includes forms of intelligence beyond humanity, or beyond Earth, then the classroom becomes more than a site of knowledge. It becomes a space for deep, transformative inquiry.


    Practicing Inquiry Together

    These questions are not abstract. They can be brought into real classrooms with real students, right now, as journaling prompts, circle discussions, art explorations, or collaborative projects.

    Here are a few that can guide inquiry:

    • What makes us human?
    • What assumptions do we hold about our uniqueness or superiority?
    • Are we alone in the universe? What do you believe, and why?
    • How might other forms of life experience reality?
    • What counts as sentience, and who gets to decide?
    • What stories or cultural traditions suggest we’ve been connected to other intelligences?
    • How has knowledge about other beings or deeper human potential been dismissed, hidden, or controlled?
    • Who decides what is real or valid knowledge?

    When we explore these questions together, we practice exactly the kind of thinking and courage this moment asks of us.


    A New Chapter

    As we step into the next chapter of human history, we will need more than just new technologies. We will need new ways of knowing and being. We’ll need empathy, imagination, and a willingness to stretch our understanding beyond old boundaries.

    This is the spirit of education I believe in.

    Not one that prepares students only for college or tests, but for the mystery of existence itself. One that honors our place in a vast, complex universe. One that teaches us how to ask honest questions, and how to live with them.

    So I’ll ask again:

    What do you think it means to be human?