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For many people, the holiday season isn’t filled with joy and nostalgia — it’s filled with grief, loneliness, exhaustion, and complicated memories. This episode is especially for those who find this time of year difficult.
In Part One of this two-part holiday conversation, we’re joined by our dear friend Alexander Shaia for a reflective, unhurried dialogue about meaning, presence, and the wisdom found in honoring seasons rather than fighting them.
Rather than offering platitudes or quick fixes, Dr. Shaia invites us to slow down — to consider what it looks like to live faithfully and humanely when certainty feels thin and the world feels overwhelming. Drawing from ancient Christian wisdom, lived experience, and deep compassion, this conversation offers space to breathe, reflect, and feel less alone.
This is not a teaching session or a debate. It’s a pastoral, contemplative conversation — meant to be received gently, especially by those who are carrying more than they can name this season.
Part Two will continue the conversation, moving deeper into themes of hope, transformation, and what it means to move forward without rushing resolution.
Dr. Alexander Shaia is a theologian, speaker, author, and Quadratos-trained scholar best known for his work on the ancient Christian fourfold Gospel model, a framework that predates modern linear approaches to Scripture and spiritual formation.
His work focuses on helping individuals and communities rediscover cyclical wisdom, spiritual maturity, and transformative faith — especially for those who feel disillusioned, wounded, or worn down by rigid or overly simplistic expressions of Christianity.
Dr. Shaia is widely respected for his ability to bridge scholarship, spirituality, and real human experience, offering language for faith that is honest, compassionate, and deeply grounded in history.
Ph.D., Clinical Psychology, California Institute of Integral Studies, San Francisco, CA, 1991
Graduate Certificate, Pastoral Psychotherapy, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, 1982
Master of Religious Education, Seattle University, Seattle, WA, 1981
M.A., Counseling Education, University of Alabama in Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, 1976
B.A., Cultural Anthropology, University of Notre Dame du lac, Notre Dame, IN, 1974
Jungian and Sandplay Studies, 1973 - Current; month intensive with Dora M. Kalff – Jungian analyst & originator of Sandplay, Zollikon, Switzerland, July/August 1989
Psychosynthesis Certificate, Psychosynthesis Training Institute, San Francisco, CA, Two year training, 1986-1988
➡️ Part Two of this holiday conversation continues with deeper reflection on wisdom, hope, and what it means to live faithfully in uncertain times.
If this episode resonates with you, consider sharing it with someone who might need a quieter, gentler voice this season.
www.thedeconstructionists.org
or on social media!
Support: https://patreon.com/TheDeconstructionistsPodcast
By John Williamson4.4
781781 ratings
For many people, the holiday season isn’t filled with joy and nostalgia — it’s filled with grief, loneliness, exhaustion, and complicated memories. This episode is especially for those who find this time of year difficult.
In Part One of this two-part holiday conversation, we’re joined by our dear friend Alexander Shaia for a reflective, unhurried dialogue about meaning, presence, and the wisdom found in honoring seasons rather than fighting them.
Rather than offering platitudes or quick fixes, Dr. Shaia invites us to slow down — to consider what it looks like to live faithfully and humanely when certainty feels thin and the world feels overwhelming. Drawing from ancient Christian wisdom, lived experience, and deep compassion, this conversation offers space to breathe, reflect, and feel less alone.
This is not a teaching session or a debate. It’s a pastoral, contemplative conversation — meant to be received gently, especially by those who are carrying more than they can name this season.
Part Two will continue the conversation, moving deeper into themes of hope, transformation, and what it means to move forward without rushing resolution.
Dr. Alexander Shaia is a theologian, speaker, author, and Quadratos-trained scholar best known for his work on the ancient Christian fourfold Gospel model, a framework that predates modern linear approaches to Scripture and spiritual formation.
His work focuses on helping individuals and communities rediscover cyclical wisdom, spiritual maturity, and transformative faith — especially for those who feel disillusioned, wounded, or worn down by rigid or overly simplistic expressions of Christianity.
Dr. Shaia is widely respected for his ability to bridge scholarship, spirituality, and real human experience, offering language for faith that is honest, compassionate, and deeply grounded in history.
Ph.D., Clinical Psychology, California Institute of Integral Studies, San Francisco, CA, 1991
Graduate Certificate, Pastoral Psychotherapy, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, 1982
Master of Religious Education, Seattle University, Seattle, WA, 1981
M.A., Counseling Education, University of Alabama in Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, 1976
B.A., Cultural Anthropology, University of Notre Dame du lac, Notre Dame, IN, 1974
Jungian and Sandplay Studies, 1973 - Current; month intensive with Dora M. Kalff – Jungian analyst & originator of Sandplay, Zollikon, Switzerland, July/August 1989
Psychosynthesis Certificate, Psychosynthesis Training Institute, San Francisco, CA, Two year training, 1986-1988
➡️ Part Two of this holiday conversation continues with deeper reflection on wisdom, hope, and what it means to live faithfully in uncertain times.
If this episode resonates with you, consider sharing it with someone who might need a quieter, gentler voice this season.
www.thedeconstructionists.org
or on social media!
Support: https://patreon.com/TheDeconstructionistsPodcast

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