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Viktoria Vidali is an educator, published writer, and poet. Her love of metaphysics and the natural world inspire her work, as do memories of her 40,000 nautical-mile sailing voyage. Viktoria has recently published The Art of Homeschooling: Foundations of Inspired Education. She may be contacted at: viktoriavidali@gmail.com.

Latest Posts By Viktoria Vidali

5 months ago

Friendship’s Quiet Responsibility

It begins with a small request: an address, an article, a product lost in the vastness of the Internet. You find it, send it, and think nothing more of it. Days later, she asks for the same thing again. A playful memory-jog of your earlier reply is met with surprise, perhaps a dismissive…

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6 months ago

Enjoying the Luxury of What Is Already Ours

We live under a constant spell – quiet, persuasive, and everywhere – an endless mantra repeating: new is better. The advertisements promise that happiness lies in the next purchase, the latest upgrade, the state-of-the-art model. But somewhere along the way…

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6 months ago

A Woman’s Life Through Three Metamorphoses

Friedrich Nietzsche’s allegory of the camel, the lion, and the child maps uncannily onto the arc of a woman’s life – her seasons of endurance, rebellion, and rebirth. These metamorphoses are not linear milestones but cyclical returns, each revealing deeper layers of strength…

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7 months ago

Do You Know How to Fill a Space in a Beautiful Way?

This phrase carries quiet power; like a stone placed just so on a sunlit windowsill or a single brushstroke on bare canvas. Georgia O’Keeffe lived by this principle, though she first learned it from Arthur Wesley Dow, her teacher who saw art not as imitation but as harmony…

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8 months ago

Why Your Story Matters – Regardless of Who’s Listening

Most people won’t deeply engage with your life story – not because it lacks value, but because they’re preoccupied with their own. Polite nods, vague responses, or distracted glances don’t diminish its significance. The truth is, external indifference is ultimately secondary…

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8 months ago

The Oracle of Caieta and the Power of Choice

In the ancient world, an oracle was a sacred source of divine guidance, often delivered by priests or priestesses at temples, and believed to convey the will of the gods through cryptic messages, visions, or signs. For Marcus Aurelius, Roman Emperor and Stoic philosopher…

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10 months ago

Changing How We See the World Around Us

When we witness a breathtaking sunset or the quiet unfolding of a morning, do we dismiss it with: I’ve seen this before – one sunset is like any other, one dawn is much the same as the last? There’s truth in this, but it’s not the whole truth. Each sunrise follows the same rhythm…

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12 months ago

For Beauty’s Sake: A Lighthouse Keeper’s Tale

The wind howled outside, a relentless beast clawing at the old lighthouse. Its wooden beams groaned in protest, but inside, Elara, the solitary keeper, remained calm. She sat by the fire, a worn poetry book resting on her lap. The lighthouse had been her home for years…

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1 year ago

Can You Enjoy the Process?

George Lucas famously advised aspiring writers, “Don’t avoid the clichés – they are clichés because they work!” Why? Because they contain a truth. Yet, he also cautioned that clichés become problematic when overused. Predictability saps their impact and strips…

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1 year ago

Revisiting Ancient Myths: Timeless Wisdom for Modern Life

Ancient myths, far from being relics of the past, offer invaluable insights into the human condition. These perennial narratives distill complex experiences, providing guidance to navigate life’s choices, struggles, and triumphs…

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