| With all the terrible
news that’s going on in the world, what are parents to tell
their kids? Is it any wonder kids today are feeling powerless, adrift,
and, well, a little out of control?
One Mom felt something had to be done. Keren Clark Posey, a licensed
marriage and family therapist, decided to find a way for her family
members to better connect with each other. At the same time she
wanted to help them develop a belief in their ability to effect
change in everyone around them: their community, their country,
their world—as well as in their own lives.
“It was a tall order,” admits Keren. “Then one
day the phrase, ‘Wish for the World’ just came to me.”
As she envisioned them, the wishes would address areas that concern
most of us, but are particularly perplexing to children: the environment,
the earth’s creatures, war, disease, famine, and other seemingly
intractable issues. All the wishes would prompt discussion about
world healing and spirituality.
So Keren set aside a little time each night where she and her kids
took turns choosing a wish for the world—each night a different
wish. Not surprisingly, each wish prompted a discussion. Keren found
it was a great way to spend time with her kids—and it was
also a whole lot of fun.
“Over the next year, I kept a small spiral-bound notebook
with all of the wishes we generated. I also began to add inspiring
quotations for each wish” says Keren. “I found many
of them in my personal library and others in magazines and Online.”
It wasn’t long before the therapist in Keren began recognizing
the potential therapeutic value in these family discussions. The
altruist in Keren also began imagining the power these wishes could
generate if her small circle could be united with others.
Those musings led Keren Clark Posey, with the help of her twin
sons, Ethan and Dyson, to create Wish for the World: A Daily Meditation
for Personal and Planetary Peace, a book of three hundred and sixty-five
wishes for the world. Each wish is accompanied by an inspirational
quotation to enhance the vision of the wish or to use as a jumping
off point for further conversations about the importance of each
wish to the planet and humanity. “We wanted to create something
that was both a world healing book and a family spirituality book.
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