"The experience of getting my Kriya, which is the meditation process that I do, was very powerful for me - though, as I explain in the book, I was really suspect of that kind of thing"
About this Quote
Hemingway’s line lands because it stages a modern conversion story without the messianic aftertaste. “Getting my Kriya” sounds almost procedural, like acquiring a certification, which quietly updates spiritual seeking for a self-help era: enlightenment as an accessible practice you can learn, repeat, and fold into a schedule. Then she pivots to “was very powerful for me,” the kind of plainspoken testimony pop culture has trained us to trust, not because it’s lofty, but because it’s personal and unpolished.
The key pressure point is the confession of suspicion. By admitting she was “really suspect of that kind of thing,” she builds credibility in a media ecosystem saturated with wellness branding, guru economies, and celebrity spirituality. Skepticism becomes the receipt. She’s not selling mysticism; she’s narrating how a skeptical person gets surprised. That subtext matters: it positions Kriya not as belief but as experience, a felt result that bypasses ideology.
“As I explain in the book” is also a tell. The quote isn’t only reflective; it’s promotional scaffolding that frames her spiritual practice as part of a broader memoir arc - doubt, encounter, recalibration. Coming from a public figure with a famously loaded surname, the stakes are doubled: she’s signaling a life shaped by legacy and scrutiny, then claiming a tool that offers agency and steadiness. The line works because it’s less about transcendence than about permission - to be wary, to try anyway, to be changed without having to join a tribe.
The key pressure point is the confession of suspicion. By admitting she was “really suspect of that kind of thing,” she builds credibility in a media ecosystem saturated with wellness branding, guru economies, and celebrity spirituality. Skepticism becomes the receipt. She’s not selling mysticism; she’s narrating how a skeptical person gets surprised. That subtext matters: it positions Kriya not as belief but as experience, a felt result that bypasses ideology.
“As I explain in the book” is also a tell. The quote isn’t only reflective; it’s promotional scaffolding that frames her spiritual practice as part of a broader memoir arc - doubt, encounter, recalibration. Coming from a public figure with a famously loaded surname, the stakes are doubled: she’s signaling a life shaped by legacy and scrutiny, then claiming a tool that offers agency and steadiness. The line works because it’s less about transcendence than about permission - to be wary, to try anyway, to be changed without having to join a tribe.
Quote Details
| Topic | Meditation |
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