“We all have the wisdom and we all have the foolishness, whether you are the Dali Lama or the person bagging your groceries. Each one is way more rich and beautiful and deep, and also wounded, and silly and dark. All of us, and I mean that. Please greet everyone you meet knowing they are way more than I thought they were, and they are not as different than me as I thought they were.”
ELIZABETH LESSER is a bestselling author and the cofounder of Omega Institute, the renowned conference and retreat center located in Rhinebeck, New York. Elizabeth’s first book, The Seeker’s Guide, chronicles her years at Omega and distills lessons learned into a potent guide for growth and healing. Her New York Times bestselling book, Broken Open: How Difficult Times Can Help Us Grow (Random House), has sold more than 300,000 copies and has been translated into 20 languages. Her latest book, Marrow: A Love Story (Harper Collins/September 2016), is a memoir about Elizabeth and her younger sister, Maggie, and the process they went through when Elizabeth was the donor for Maggie’s bone marrow transplant.
Elizabeth cofounded Omega Institute in 1977—a time when a variety of fresh ideas were sprouting in American culture. Since then, the institute has been at the forefront of holistic education, offering workshops and trainings in: integrative medicine, prevention, nutrition, and the mind/body connection; meditation and yoga; cross-cultural arts and creativity; ecumenical spirituality; and social change movements like women’s empowerment and environmental sustainability. Elizabeth is also the cofounder of Omega’s Women’s Leadership Center, which grew out of the popular Women & Power conference series featuring women leaders, activists, authors and artists from around the world. Each year more than 30,000 people participate in Omega’s programs on its campus in Rhinebeck, New York and at urban and travel sites, and more than a million people visit its website for online learning.
A student of the Sufi master, Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan for many years, Elizabeth has also studied with spiritual teachers, healers, psychologists, and philosophers from other traditions. In 2008 she helped Oprah Winfrey produce a ten-week online seminar based on Eckhart Tolle’s book, A New Earth. The webinar was viewed by more than 8 million people worldwide. She was a frequent host on Oprah’s Soul Series, a weekly radio show on Sirius/XM, and a guest on Oprah’s Super Soul Sunday. In 2011, she gave a popular TED talk called “Take The Other to Lunch,” a call for civility and understanding as we negotiate our differences as human beings.
Elizabeth attended Barnard College, where she studied literature, and San Francisco State University, where she received a teaching degree. In 2011 she received an honorary doctorate from the Institute of Transpersonal Psychology, in Palo Alto, California. Early in her career she was a midwife and birth educator. Today, besides writing and her work at Omega Institute, she lends her time to social and environmental causes, and is an avid walker, cook, gardener, friend, mother, grandmother, and homebody. She and her husband live in New York’s Hudson River Valley.
What a nice treat! I was blessed to hear/see/feel Elizabeth at the October meeting of conscious folks, hosted by Sounds True and Eckhart Tolle. I purchased her book and she sweetly inscribed it (because I told her I was going to share it with my own ONE sister) “…for the love of sisters.” By my bedside (right next to Jack Kornfield’s “After the Ecstasy … the Laundry) and next for my absorption. I am so impressed with Elizabeth’s humility. We all know what great things she’s accomplished, yet she’s just as real, and knowable, as you or me (I’ve met you Paul, so yes, you are!). I’ve met too many “people of position” who let their knowledge keep them separate. Not this charming gal. Thanks for the interview, I’ve learned a lot. Especially the opening mentions of the political situation, which both of you express, as I too feel, is an opportunity for a giant leap forward — for all of us. Shock is necessary for growth, and, like a cancer diagnosis such as Maggie gets, it shock pushes us to a place of reconciliation, or else! love your podcasts! love and Light, teZa Lord