We often live our lives within binaries, thinking about ourselves as broken or fixed, sick or well, broke or flush, movin’ on up or on a downward trajectory. But the…
Kye Flannery, MA, HDS MDiv
Board Certified Chaplain; currently providing pastoral care at Wildflower Church.
Chaplain Kye Flannery has lived in Austin for three years, working as a palliative and Hospice chaplain. Before that, she lived in Boston and can upon request offer you the signature South Boston greeting, "Howaya?" She enjoys painting and the Alamo theater and would love to hear your thoughts on this sermon or other topics. She is a candidate for ministerial fellowship and will finalize this process in March of 2020.
A morning of calm and retreat, with song and spiritual practice, as we explore and practice presence together. Kye Flannery is Wildflower's chaplain and a metal worker in Austin, who…
The congregation’s theme this month is Transformation and Liberation, and with the light of Diwali lamps, ofrendas, bonfires and jack-o-lanterns rising up around us this October, we will consider how…
Practicing love and compassion in this world begins at home — with our own self-care and spiritual practice. Whether we are activists seeking balance or seekers distressed by the imbalances…
We are born with family and many of us also choose who we will understand to be our family — and we are all born into an entire ecosystem around…
Join us this Sunday for a warm, eclectic service led by our chaplain, Kye Flannery, who will celebrate the beauty of becoming and the ease that a mutual commitment to…
As Unitarian Universalists and currently as a lay-led congregation, members of Wildflower live out a shared ministry. We will be exploring big and small ways we show up for one…
During this service, we will work to spend time in "the now," engaging body and mind together appreciating the power of community. Today's intergenerational service will contain elements of movement…
It can be hard to tell the truth. It can put us in a place that feels dangerous, or *is* dangerous. But as UUs our Universalism infuses how we view…