On their podcast “Poog,” comedians Kate Berlant and Jacqueline Novak often refer to secular things as “godly” and “godless.” As in: liking a friend’s Instagram, godless; running into a friend on the street, godly. I think about this bifurcation all the time. Kate and Jacqueline are forever fixated on finding a new wellness routine that might change their lives, but I think their notion of what’s sacred offers a more intriguing blueprint for how to be well, or how to orient, than any particular order of events. Maybe, similarly, in some aspects of my life where I think I’m craving more routine—around movement, for instance, or food—what I’m actually craving is something like godliness. More time spent being aware of my world, worshiping its details, as opposed to more time spent lost in a mechanized rhythm.