Love, Purpose, and the Art of Living – Three Evenings with Tom Monte

Love, Purpose, and the Art of Living – Three Evenings on What Matters Most with Irene Nolte and Tom Monte
Following the great interest generated by the previous conference with Tom Monte, I am delighted to invite you to a new series of three in-depth conversations.
Tom Monte is an extraordinary teacher and healer, author or co-author of more than thirty-five books on health, healing, and personal transformation, including Unexpected Recoveries, Recalled by Life, and Living Well Naturally. His work has appeared in leading publications such as Life Magazine, The Saturday Evening Post, The Chicago Tribune, Runner’s World, and Natural Health.
Those of you who have read my book A Healing Map know the profound influence Tom has had on both my personal and professional life. This conversation will touch on healing, crisis as opportunity, and the deeper paths that lead us home.
Be welcome to these compelling dialogues that bridge two generations and two distinct yet deeply attuned perspectives. Tom Monte brings decades of inquiry into the nature of the heart, spirit, and human relationships, while Irene Nolte offers a refined, contemporary sensitivity to presence, holistic embodiment, and inner listening.
Dates: April 15th, May 6th, June 10th
Time: 19:30–21:00 CET, followed by 30 minutes of Q&A until 21:30
Price: €60 for the three talks – New to this circle? You’re welcome to join the first session free.
1) On Love and Relationships
The traditional model of family and partnership is changing—and many find themselves disoriented. Relationships seem increasingly fragile; more people are single, and many find themselves either alone or struggling within connection.
But is there a way of engaging with relationships differently? Perhaps there are fundamental steps that can be taken to address that which seemingly sets us up for failure.
2) On Purpose
What does it truly mean to live with purpose? And how do we find it? In the absence of purpose, we can experience great suffering. So how do the two relate—purpose and freedom from suffering?
3) On True Health
What does it mean to be genuinely alive and healthy in today’s world? In a time marked by global tension, conflict, and uncertainty, we will explore whether health extends beyond the physical into a deeper state of being. Could the suffering we witness—both within ourselves and in the world—be part of a larger transformation? Might it even serve as a catalyst for a long-awaited paradigm shift?