According to philosopher Danah Zohar, who coined the idea of spiritual intelligence, we live in a "spiritually dumb" culture. How can we find meaning from meaninglessness, hope from despair, reconciliation from alienation, and wholeness from fragmentation? In this book, Brian Draper asks how ordinary people—whether religious or not—can nudge themselves (or be gently nudged) to live on a daily basis with increasing integrity, wholeness, and well-being—in other words, to become more spiritually intelligent. The book is split into four main sections: "awakening," "seeing your world afresh," "living the change," and "passing it on." The narrative style is contemplative, reflective, and engaging.