Keith Huddleston
Jul 20, 2017 · 1 min read
  1. I mean, personally, yeah. Reading MacBeth really struck me with how relatable the idea of power corrupting a soul could be. It wasn’t just intellectual; it was visceral. In that moment I even ran through our culture’s stock example for evil and in that moment of feeling the vertigo that’s Shakespeare’s language can induce, I did feel sorry. . . even for Adolph Hitler. (And, yes, I’ve worked myself over sick and in tears over the holocaust. . . I don’t want anyone to suffer or die).
  2. My spirituality is also a very non-dualistic one. I try to see the darkness inside myself and the light in my enemies.

3. I had an interesting discussion on a lot of these issues with a good friend of mine and posted it:

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Keith Huddleston

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Truth, beauty, agape, and the dao. Seeking to do more with less requires understanding.

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