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The Spirit and the Law (Terri Schiavo) May 25, 2001
St. Petersburg Times ^ | May 25, 2001 | Sharon Tubbs

Posted on 03/30/2005 6:24:33 PM PST by bboop

The spirit and the law How many lawyers does it take to find enlightenment? There's no punch line; one of the lawyers in the Terri Schiavo case has spent his life seeking the way to "litigate without becoming a combatant.'' By SHARON TUBBS

© St. Petersburg Times, published May 25, 2001

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[Times photos: Scott Keeler] Lawyer George Felos practices yoga at his Dunedin home to help him cope with the stresses of cases such as that of Terri Schiavo. Felos represents her husband, Michael Schiavo, in his efforts to have her feeding tube removed. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DUNEDIN -- A cluster of reporters wait, notebooks and pens poised. A cameraman counts down the seconds to the start of the press conference, which will be televised live. In walks lawyer George Felos, wearing a navy suit jacket, beige slacks, blue shirt, tie and -- excuse me? -- brown socks and Birkenstocks.

If he had his druthers, Felos and his Birkenstocks would be at a West Virginia monastery, where he'd sit cross-legged and meditate for hours at a time, as he did on vacation last year. Or maybe he'd be doing yoga and centering his chi.

Instead, in a controversial case, he is here to argue that 37-year-old Terri Schiavo should be allowed to die. Felos represents Schiavo's husband Michael Schiavo, who has been waging an intense and public fight to have her taken off life support after 11 years in a vegetative state.

Felos, 49, has taken on about 10 right-to-die cases in the last decade. He balances his quest for spiritual growth with his lawyerly duty to fight.

"Many people find the litigation process to be aggressive, to be combative, to be harsh," he says. "And the question is: How do you work within that type of system and not become hardened . . . and maintain a spiritual center? How do you litigate without becoming a combatant?

"I look at (the profession) as the opportunity to become more centered. To use it as an opportunity for growth, rather than a reason not to be spiritual."

A soul connection Felos' spiritual and professional lives intersected in a public way 12 years ago, in the case of Estelle Browning. The case gained him a reputation as the person to see when you want to let someone die.

Browning, of Dunedin, had written a living will in 1985, saying she did not want to be kept alive by artificial means if she ever became ill. A year later, she had a stroke. But the nursing home refused to stop feeding her because she was not technically brain dead. Her cousin and former roommate, Doris Herbert, asked Felos to take the case.

He wanted to see Browning for himself. She could not speak, but Felos says his spiritual side picked up on something. He says her soul cried out to his soul and asked, "Why am I still here?"

Browning died in 1989 of natural causes while the case was still unresolved, but the suit has had a lasting effect on the law. In 1990, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that a living will can allow caregivers to withhold food and water from an incapacitated person, even when death is not imminent.

After the Browning case, Felos became a volunteer for the Hospice of the Florida Suncoast, sitting and talking with terminally ill patients. On his living room shelf sits a book for hospice training, Dying Well, by Ira Byock.

In recent years he has been writing a book of his own: Litigation as Spiritual Practice. In 320 pages, to be released this fall by Blue Dolphin Publishing, Felos contends that his belief in God is what drives him, even in the civil courtroom where the object is to win, or at least settle for an adequate sum.

A spiritual being Who is George Felos?

"Well, what we are in essence can't be described by words," he says. "The mind is finite, and what we are is infinite. We know what we're not. We're not the body. We're not the mind. We're not our thoughts. We're not our emotions.

"In essence," he says, "we're spiritual beings."

Felos was a spiritual being first and a laywer second. He was in law school at Boston University when a friend asked if he wanted to try yoga as a stress-reliever.

Felos learned how to meditate, to "notice" his reactions to his thoughts. He says he learned the events in his life were only as important as he thought they were.

And he learned about other cultures and Eastern religions. Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, Greek Orthodox worship -- all may have a point, Felos says.

"I believe that Christ was God incarnate and was resurrected. But, by the same token, I believe that there were other incarnations of God as well," he says. "All the great religions in their essence express the same fundamental truths."

Sometimes, Felos says, he gets nervous or anxious before a hearing.

"If I find that I'm getting nervous or keyed up or off-center, what I'll do is -- which is a type of meditation -- just focus on my breathing," he says. "Home in on the sensation of breathing, the sensation of the air entering the nostrils and exiting the nostrils. If you do that for 30 seconds, you'll find that you're more relaxed."

If people are truly spiritual, that will permeate all aspects of their lives, not just during worship, not just at home, but at work too, Felos says.

"You can't separate your work life from your spiritual life," he says. "A spiritual seeker has no spiritual focus."

At least one opposing attorney sees little spirituality in Felos. Pat Anderson, one of the lawyers representing Terri Schiavo's parents, questions Felos' ethics in fighting to remove the woman's feeding tube.

Furthermore, Anderson says, "I find him to be uncommonly persnickety in his diction."

George Felos begins his morning with yoga, which he has been practicing for 25 years. That’s about as long as he has been practicing law: “How do you work within that type of system and not become hardened . . . and maintain a spiritual center?” he says. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Orthodox beginnings Raised Greek Orthodox in New York, Felos did not aspire to follow his father into law. He spent too much time at his father's office, supposedly on his way to father-son outings but actually waiting for his dad to finish talking to clients.

"I went to law school because I couldn't think of anything else to do at the time," Felos says.

After law school -- and his spiritual awakening -- Felos and his first wife lived on a small Greek island for three months. Each morning, they would wake up and buy a fresh quart of goat's milk for 9 cents and a 10-cent loaf of steaming hot bread. It was one of the best times in his life, Felos says.

Then it was back home and back to reality. His family had moved to the Tampa Bay area, so Felos decided to try for work here. He got an interview with the Pinellas-Pasco State Attorney's office.

"This is a tough job," Felos remembers the prosecutor telling him during the interview. "You've got to be hard. You've got to hit! It's a tough job. Can you do it?"

Having just spent three months living on an island and drinking goat's milk, Felos looked at the man and said, "You know, I really don't know."

He didn't get the job and eventually went into civil practice with his father. The two worked together as Felos & Felos until James G. Felos died in 1995.

Every morning these days, Felos is 160 pounds of elastic on his bedroom floor. He does yoga, inspired by a framed portrait of Paramahansa Yogananda, the founder of spiritual realization. He does more stretches and takes out a machine that helps with his chi, or body energy.

The purpose of the morning routine is to be "present in the sensation of his body."

He takes out a throw pillow and meditates for a half hour before showering and drinking a concoction of protein powder, banana, orange juice, yogurt and goat's milk.

Each morning he checks to see if something has grown on the mango tree and bamboo he planted in the front yard.

Felos visits different places of worship about twice a month, he says. He has spoken at several, including the Palm Harbor Unity Church, the Center for Conscious Living and a spiritual awareness center in Crystal Beach.

He hangs out with friends -- ministers, yoga teachers, but no lawyers. He bought a Steinway grand piano and plays Beethoven on it. He invites friends over for chanting -- "I am that I am. I am that I am." -- while he plays the harmonium.

"He has a good sense of humor, and he has a gentle and kind soul," says Debi Chapman, a Palm Harbor yoga instructor who met Felos about seven years ago at a retreat. "It's just a heartfelt space, a very spirit-filled connection that George and I have."

Felos' reading material includes Handbook to Higher Consciousness, God Talks With Arjuna, The Experience of Insight, In the Meantime.

His home looks more hippie-ish than lawyerly -- red couch with big pillows, multicolored chair in hot tones, mint green carpeting, spry yellow kitchen and one living room wall painted neon blue.

He spends weekends with his 14-year-old son, Alexander, from his first marriage. They fish for mullet in St. Joseph Sound, the body of water that doubles as Felos' back yard. Caladesi and Honeymoon islands are in the distance.

Felos is in the final stages of a divorce from his second wife.

"If I did relationships as well as I did law," Felos says, "I'd probably be happily married."

The journey continues Felos does not mention Schiavo in Law as Spiritual Practice, but says he wants to start a second book when the case is over. He may talk about his spiritual journey with Schiavo then. For now, he is preparing for a hearing before the 2nd District Court of Appeal in Lakeland on June 25. He thinks the court will agree that her feeding tube should be removed.

That is what is necessary, he says, "to accomplish what I believe are Terri's wishes."

Does Felos believe Terri Schiavo's soul has spoken to his?

Felos declines to answer, showing his lawyerly side. "It's a pending case," he says.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: birkenstocks; euthanasia; georgefelos; newage; terrischiavo; yoga
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Get the Holy Water.
1 posted on 03/30/2005 6:24:33 PM PST by bboop
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To: bboop

"That is what is necessary, he says, "to accomplish what I believe are Terri's wishes." "

His comments reflect the self-centered narcistic elitist swamp he swims in. It is not about Terri, the law or justice. It is all about him and what he thinks is "right". He fits right in with our judiciary. No wonder they like him.


2 posted on 03/30/2005 6:43:34 PM PST by Wuli
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To: bboop
In 1990, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that a living will can allow caregivers to withhold food and water from an incapacitated person, even when death is not imminent.

And now it's being done without a living will. The slippery slope is as certain as death and taxes.

3 posted on 03/30/2005 6:45:00 PM PST by atomicpossum (Replies should be as pedantic as possible. I love that so much.)
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To: bboop

Yeah.

Felos is the mouthpiece for Satan.

And I mean that quite literally.


4 posted on 03/30/2005 6:46:12 PM PST by EternalVigilance ("I thirst.")
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To: EternalVigilance

Yes, he does speak for Satan. It's Prophets of Ba'al Time.


5 posted on 03/30/2005 6:50:27 PM PST by bboop
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To: bboop

Why post a week old article?


6 posted on 03/30/2005 6:54:17 PM PST by don-o (Stop Freeploading. Do the right thing and become a Monthly Donor.)
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To: bboop

I know that Terri's situation is tragic and I don't mean to make light of it, but I laughed out loud when I read parts of this article. Felos is a New Age loon. And he's a dangerous loon because he believes that his efforts serve some wacky spiritual purpose.


7 posted on 03/30/2005 6:56:55 PM PST by SilentServiceCPOWife ("It's a good life...if you don't weaken." - - my grandmother)
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To: don-o

Actually it's about 4 years old.


8 posted on 03/30/2005 7:13:46 PM PST by Norman Bates (Pray for Terri)
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To: don-o
As you well know, many times freepers find an OLD gem of an article and they share it with SOME OF US who are interested in this case of Terri or some other subject.

As is so often written of FR, if you don't like the article, then... don't read it!!

9 posted on 03/30/2005 7:14:13 PM PST by Lion in Winter (LIFE SPRINGS ETERNAL!!)
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To: bboop
GREAT FIND THERE, BBOOP!!!

Thanks so much for posting!!

10 posted on 03/30/2005 7:15:34 PM PST by Lion in Winter (LIFE SPRINGS ETERNAL!!)
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To: Lion in Winter
My bad.

sorry -

11 posted on 03/30/2005 7:18:57 PM PST by don-o (Stop Freeploading. Do the right thing and become a Monthly Donor.)
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To: bboop
Lawyer George Felos practices yoga at his Dunedin home to help him cope with the stress.

stop eating or drinking George, after about 10 days I hear that it's 'peaceful & beautiful.'

12 posted on 03/30/2005 7:18:59 PM PST by feedback doctor (it's Schindler, Her name is Terri Schindler)
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To: SilentServiceCPOWife
You do realise that if this Felos character were an evangelical Christian preaching the Salvation of Jesus Christ and was for keeping Terri alive, the MSM would kick his carcass from here to the ends of the earth.

But since he is the opposite of that.... Did you note how they wrote about him like he was some kind of great guy???

Just ugly... he is just nasty.

13 posted on 03/30/2005 7:24:45 PM PST by Lion in Winter (LIFE SPRINGS ETERNAL!!)
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To: don-o

Good. Now, do not let me catch you doing that again.


14 posted on 03/30/2005 7:26:16 PM PST by Lion in Winter (LIFE SPRINGS ETERNAL!!)
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To: don-o
Why post a week old article?

Because I didn't see it.

15 posted on 03/30/2005 7:44:31 PM PST by An American In Dairyland
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To: EternalVigilance
Felos is the mouthpiece for Satan. And I mean that quite literally.

How would you know?

As if these kinds of inflammatory and meanspirited accusations come from God.

I don't think so.

16 posted on 03/30/2005 7:50:27 PM PST by Jorge
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To: Lion in Winter

I'm not so sure if they would treat him differently. They'd love to use the fact that Felos was a Christian against other Christians if he was one.


17 posted on 03/30/2005 7:51:40 PM PST by SilentServiceCPOWife ("It's a good life...if you don't weaken." - - my grandmother)
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To: Jorge

There once was a nation so great
In its glory the hour is late
Starving girls in their bed
With armed guards til they're dead
The robed tyrants now rule the whole State


18 posted on 03/30/2005 8:20:48 PM PST by EternalVigilance ("I thirst.")
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To: Jorge

What you might call mean spirited, God may see as just and truthful.

I tend to agree with the statement that Felos is a mouthpiece of Satan, due to my own reading of Felos' book. Felos chanting "I AM that I AM" while in his yoga position is just slapping God right across the face in my opinion.

Discernment is the key here.


19 posted on 03/30/2005 8:58:33 PM PST by Seina ("Pride is concerned with who is right; HUMILITY is concerned with what is right.")
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To: don-o

It's 4 years old. But terrifically relevant.


20 posted on 03/31/2005 6:20:11 AM PST by bboop
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