Diane Hageman opened the Om Home as a non-denominational place for people to practice meditation.
Diane Hageman opened the Om Home as a non-denominational place for people to practice meditation.

This is a little different. I havenโ€™t really tried to cover the business of spirituality, although itโ€™s a perfectly logical topic for Filet. At any rate, Iโ€™ve caught the flu, and I try to avoid the rest of humanity as much as possible when Iโ€™m contagious, so Iโ€™ll write the experiential thing later.

The Om Home was opened by Diane Hageman as a non-denominational place for people to practice various forms of meditation and other metaphysical pursuits. Not that meditation itself is metaphysicalโ€”but if the meditative state is a destination, there are many ways to get there. The Om Home offers several types of meditative practice, including drum circles (led by Glenda Mahin), mandala meditations, and group meditations. The business also has classes on meditation for $15. Most of the practices are by donation. Along more New Age-y metaphysical lines, they offer โ€œangel oracleโ€ card readings ($25), animal spirit guide workshops, and prayer and healing circles.

โ€œI have been on the spiritual path for almost 20 years now,โ€ Hageman said. โ€œIt started because Iโ€™m a recovering alcoholic. You start with the 12 steps, and they start talking about โ€˜the power greater than yourself.โ€™ And all of a sudden it just sort of seemed like I was going farther and farther down the spiritual path, but I didnโ€™t want to get into the religion. Religion seemed like too many rules, too much dogmaโ€”too much like shame and guilt. And I thought there has to be someplace thatโ€™s about spirituality and exploring spirituality and the metaphysics without having to haveโ€”quote unquoteโ€”the religion side of it.โ€

Hageman said she had a hard time finding anything like that, so she found a church in Oregon that was ordaining ministers. She studied with them for about nine months before they ordained her. She learned about how to perform weddings and how to do certain ceremonies. But, she says, that was still not enough. It was still part of a church. She decided what was needed was more of a community support center.

She was doing guided meditations when the Odyssey bookstore was still in town. Her friend Carla Sanders, a massage therapist, was changing offices, and they decided to throw in together for office space, and The Om Home was born (in an office building).

โ€œWe donโ€™t want to compete with churches,โ€ she said. โ€œWeโ€™d like to be in addition to peoplesโ€™ churches and religion.โ€

Even though The Om Home has only been open for a few months, there is a small core of people who are already frequenting the business.

โ€œWe have new people that come in, kind of slowly, but weโ€™re not getting in a huge amount of people yet.โ€

She has studied meditation from a Buddhist orientation, but describes her personal style as eclectic.

โ€œIโ€™m right now studying with a modern-day shaman, John Englishโ€”heโ€™s in Phoenix. Iโ€™m learning an awful lot about energy work from him. I think our western minds need to find our own way in meditation. What works for one person doesnโ€™t necessarily work for somebody else. Meditation for me is just kind of stopping that crazy monkey mind that just drives us crazy. And I have lots of different techniques and ideas and breathing exercises and all of it is kind of incorporated.โ€

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