Dan Dangler is a coach, mystic, change agent and poet. He has nurtured a practice of guidance in leadership as well as spiritual, relationship, and sexual growth. His approach and teachings consist of helping seekers discover self-acceptance and inner wisdom while accessing their vast imagination to rediscover their true original, joyful selves. His approach has been influenced by the work of various thought leaders and authors in the fields of archetypal psychology, mysticism, change theory, and mindfulness including Thomas Moore, William Bridges, Carl Jung, James Hillman, John O’Donohue and Thich Nhat Hanh, to name a few.
Dan was born as the youngest of five to an Irish Catholic family. At an early age, he felt he had the calling for a spiritual path, but had little knowledge of what this path was other than being a priest. In his twenties as an undergrad, he took a route away from Catholicism into the world of evangelical Christianity. As a successful leader in that community for seven years, he began to see the superficiality and danger of this spirituality, reaching for a deeper sense of authenticity and mindfulness within himself. This led him on a rich and profound inner journey for the past 35 years through various Eastern and Western faiths, Unitarianism, depth psychology, many personal development paths, the sex positive movement and mysticism. Dan continues on his own path of growth by integrating requisite insights and teachings to his practice along with his own daily practice of meditation, chanting and yoga.
Concurrently, Dan has worked as an organizational change and leadership development consultant for 30 plus years. Working as an internal consultant for 20 years and building a private consulting practice for 10 years, the focus of his work has been on creating effective collaborative relationships among groups and developing capable and confident leaders. He use of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and The Hogan assessment helps him assess his clients tendencies and preferences as well as their values, motivations and stress hurdles. Dan has been building leaders in healthcare for 20 plus years along with other industries.
Dan earned a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from Northern Vermont University, a Master of Science degree in Organizational Change and Leadership from the American University, Washington, D.C. in 1993. Dan was Assistant Professor at Newbury College and Adjunct Professor for the Masters program at Emmanuel College for twelve years. Dan has integrated and weaved both his personal and professional experience and knowledge together to use as a gentle, accepting yet potent approach to help individuals and partners uncover what brings them joy, integration and wholeness in their lives.
Dan was married for 28 years but he and his wife agreed that they would walk separate paths but remain deep and meaningful friends. He has a beautiful 23 year old daughter and he lives alone in Dorchester, Ma where he teaches, coaches, loves dogs, and writes poetry.
A blessing on the eyes that do not see me as I wish. A blessing to the ears that can never hear the far inward footfall of my own shy heart. Blessings to the life in you that will live without me, to the open door that now and forever takes you away from me, blessings to the path that you follow alone and blessings to the path that awaits you, joining with another.
A blessing for the way you will not know me in the years to come, and with it, a blind outstretched blessing of my hands on anything or anyone that cannot ever come to know me fully as I am, and therefore, a blessing even, for the way I will never fully know myself, above all, the deepest, kindest wishes of my own hidden and untrammeled heart for what you had to hide from me in you.
Let me be generous enough and large enough and brave enough to say goodbye to you without understanding, to let you go into your own understanding, may you always be in the sweet central, hidden shadow of my memory without needing to know who you were when you first came, who you were when you stayed and who you will become in your freedom now that you have passed through my life and gone.
What happens when we die? What happens to me? Myself.
Myself? Myself? That’s the problem. That’s the whole problem with the whole thing. Myself. Self. That’s not right. That just isn’t right. That isn’t. There is none.
The body stops a cell at a time. But the brain keeps firing those neurons. Little lightening bolts, like fireworks inside. And I thought I’d despair and feel afraid but I’m too busy in this moment, remembering.
Of course. I remember that every atom in my body is forged in a star. This matter, this body, is mostly just empty space after all. And solid matter is just energy vibrating very slowly and there is no me. There never was.
The electrons in my body just mingle and dance with the electrons of the ground below me and the air. I’m no longer breathing and I remember that there is no point when any of that ends and I begin.
I remember, I am energy, not memory. Not self. My name, my personality, all came after me. I was before them and I will be after. Everything else is pictures picked up along the way. Fleeting little dreamlettes, printed on the tissue of my dying brain. And I and the lightening that jumps between. I am the energy firing the neurons. And I’m returning just by remembering. I’m returning home.
I’m just like a drop of water falling back into the ocean of which it’s always been a part. All things a part. All of us, a part. You, me, the little girl, my mother, my father, the puppy, everyone that has ever been. Every animal, every plant, every star, every galaxy, all of it.
There are more galaxies than grains of sand on the beach. And that’s what we’re talking about when we say god. The one. The cosmos and its infinite dreams.
We are the cosmos dreaming of itself. It’s simple a dream that I think it’s my life, every time.
But now, in the split second I remember. In the moment I remember. The instant I remember, I comprehend everything at once. There is no time. There is no death. Life is a dream. It’s a wish. And again, and again and again and again and again, and again on into eternity.
And I am all of it. I am everything. I am all. I am that I am.
The dark times leave their mark and make you a person of insight and compassion. Oscar Wilde, an Victorian writer jailed for his homosexuality, went through a dark night of the soul and wrote from this place, ‘My desire to live is as intense as ever, and though my heart is broken, hearts are made to be broken. That is why God sends sorrow to the world. To me, suffering seems now a sacramental thing, that makes those whom it touches holy.’
Give yourself what you need at the deepest level. Care for your soul rather than cure it. Arrange your life such that you can be tender and kind to yourself. Talk with those you love about subtleties of your struggle and don’t allow any of us to give you an easy answer. Loss, even death, is a mystery that if you can honor your own experience, may give you a glimpse of the divine.
“The soul has its own sets of rules which are not the same as those of life. Unlike the steady forward movement of progress, reaching goals, achieving dreams, the events of the soul have little concern for outcomes, even achievement.
The soul events are cyclic & repetitive. Familiar themes come round and round. The past is more important than the future. The living and the dead have equal roles. Emotions and the sense of meaning are paramount. Pleasures are deep and pain can reach the very foundation of our existence.
The soul is more concerned with the dynamics of the heart and imagination. Moods, attitudes, influences, aspirations, and fears also ask for a degree of sophistication in our response.
The soul doesn’t evolve or grow. It cycles and twist, repeats and reprises, echoing ancient themes common to all human beings. The soul cares little for outward success, but rather looks at places deep within, both at the individual level and the archetypal world.
The soul is always circling home and calls us to a foreign and strange world. The soul is constantly homesick and yearns for its own milieu. The odyssey of the soul is not a straight line of progress. Rather it is a drifting at sea, a floating towards home, not an evolution towards perfection.
Live as though nothing exists except momentarily in its present form. We should remain attached to nothing, not even to our philosophy of life or our spiritual pat. Better to be present to what is happening than to be lost in our ideas and beliefs.
If we were to embrace the past without excessive judgment and calmly step, not leap, into the future, we might feel the vitality of the all-embracing soul.
The secret of a soul-based life is to allow someone or something other than the usual self to be in charge.”
Imagine there’s no heaven So instead you color the sky Imagine you’re a painter Spreading beauty through your eyes
Imagine your tear drop Could sprout a sequoia tree Imagine that your smile Could heal a broken heart
Your imagination could grow a rainforest If you let it seep way down inside It could cast a silver shadow across a dark horizon sky It could take all your regrets and recast them into pillars of gold
So grow your world with imagination Open the box inside with the key you didn’t know you held Roll away the stone and let your imagination fly like bats from a cave And let your imagination sprinkle golden rain on all those you know
Bask in the wilds of your imagination It’s just the beginning…