Homosexuality is normal. It's a settled issue as far as I'm concerned.
A recent survey indicates that less than 6% of the U.S. population identifies as LGBT. That's not a lot.
I believe homosexuality is normal because it has persistently existed regardless of societal acceptance.
Historical records show that homosexual behavior was far more acceptable in past cultures.
There is a Christian scriptural reference worth noting. Phillip and the eunuch seems to be a gay story to many, including myself.
The ancient Romans were very accepting of individual sexual preference. Their empire existed for centuries.
The ancient Egyptians were very accepting of individual sexual preference and their empire and culture existed for thousands of years.
Homosexuality in the animal kingdom is widespread. I had a gay dog. His behavior at the dog park was very telling.
Homosexuality is normal. Let's not belabor the issue.
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Caring for the Body as Part of a Spiritual Practice
Many people want to get old without being old. They want the years, but not the consequences. They hope for wisdom without decline, vitality without restraint, and spiritual insight without the discipline required to maintain the body through which life is actually lived.
This hope is understandable. It is also unrealistic.
The human organism is not an accessory to the spiritual life. It is the medium through which perception, thought, and awareness occur. Every spiritual tradition ultimately operates through a biological system with limits, vulnerabilities, and predictable responses to neglect. To disregard those realities while claiming to pursue higher awareness is not transcendence—it is a kind of denial.
It is therefore not unusual to encounter individuals who sincerely believe they are on a spiritual path while maintaining habits that steadily degrade their health. Chronic overeating, poorly chosen diets, lack of metabolic discipline, and disregard for physical conditioning gradually diminish energy, clarity, and resilience. These patterns are often rationalized as irrelevant to spiritual development, as though consciousness could somehow flourish independently of the body that sustains it.
But the body keeps the ledger.
Over time, metabolic dysfunction, inflammation, and declining physiological resilience impose limits that cannot be bypassed by philosophy or belief. The organism responds to inputs—food, activity, rest, fasting—with remarkable consistency. When those inputs are careless, the results are equally predictable.
A more coherent view recognizes that caring for the body is not separate from a reflective life. It is part of it.
Food choices require awareness. Restraint around consumption requires discipline. Periods of fasting require patience and the ability to tolerate discomfort without immediate gratification. These are not merely health techniques. They are practices that mirror the same qualities cultivated in contemplative traditions: attention, restraint, and clarity about one's habits.
In this sense, health practices can function as a form of grounded spirituality—one that does not pretend the biological organism can be ignored while pursuing meaning or insight. Instead, it treats the body as the necessary foundation for sustained awareness and agency over the long arc of a lifetime.
For readers interested in exploring this perspective in practical, evidence-minded terms, Longevity Secrets examines how food choices, fasting patterns, and metabolic awareness can support a longer healthspan and a clearer relationship with the body that makes every human experience possible.
Longevity Is Cumulative
Healthspan reflects how well decisions were understood when they mattered.
A practical, evidence-minded book on fasting, nutrition, and aging—without hype or programs.