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Archive for January 3, 2012

A Eulogy For My Mother

We’re all just walking each other home. — Ram Dass

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Inspiration of the Day:
“For the first 58 years of my life, I would have to say that my relationship to my mother was a complex and difficult one. She was a huge personality, full of great passions, creativity, rages, and generosity. I remember saying to friends that I loved my mother in small doses, but that she didn’t come in small doses. She was a force of nature.” Celebrated filmmaker Mickey Lemle has shared the stories of some of the most evolved figures of our time. Here, in this candid and moving eulogy, he pays tribute to the extraordinary spirit of his mother Edna, and details the difficult but transformative journey he undertook — to serve the person who brought him into this world, as she transitioned out of it.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A1E10:C3009629A010612CBDA4A07EBA70EA51B4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
Make a special effort today to connect with your parents, children, or other loved ones you don’t always stay in touch with.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A1E11:C3009629A010612CBDA4A07EBA70EA51B4B847859706E37D&

Year of Dancing with Life – Week 13

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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 13 :
Willingness to “Stand Under”
Suffering

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dharmawisdom/dancing-with-life/
teaching/willingness-%E2%80%9
Cstand-under%E2%80%9D-suffering

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InnerNet Weekly: How Randomness Rules Our Lives

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from CharityFocus.org
How Randomness Rules Our Lives
by Leonard Mlodinow

[Listen to Audio!]

786.jpgI remember, as a teenager, watching the yellow flame of the Sabbath candles dancing randomly above the white paraffin cylinders that fueled them. I was too young to think candlelight romantic, but still I found it magical-because of the flickering images created by the fire. They shifted and morphed, grew and waned, all without apparent cause or plan. Surely, I believed, there must be rhyme and reason underlying the flame, some pattern that scientists could predict and explain with their mathematical equations.

"Life isn’t like that," my father told me. "Sometimes things happen that cannot be foreseen." He told me of the time when, in Buchenwald, the Nazi concentration camp in which he was imprisoned and starving, he stole a loaf of bread from the bakery. The baker had the Gestapo gather everyone who might have committed the crime and line the suspects up. "Who stole the bread?" the baker asked. When no one answered, he told the guards to shoot the suspects one by one until either they were all dead or someone confessed. My father stepped forward to spare the others. He did not try to paint himself in a heroic light but told me that he did it because he expected to be shot either way. Instead of having him killed, though, the baker gave my father a plum job, as his assistant. "A chance event," my father said. "It had nothing to do with you, but had it happened differently, you would never have been born." It struck me then that I have Hitler to thank for my existence, for the Germans had killed my father’s wife and two young children, erasing his prior life. And so were it not for the war, my father would never have emigrated to New York, never have met my mother, also a refugee, and never have produced me and my two brothers.

My father rarely spoke of the war. I didn’t realize it then, but years later it dawned on me that whenever he shared his ordeals, it was not so much because he wanted me to know of his experiences but rather because he wanted to impart a larger lesson about life. War is an extreme circumstance, but the role of chance in our lives is not predicated on extremes. The outline of our lives, like the candle’s flame, is continuously coaxed in new directions by a variety of random events that, along with our responses to them, determine our fate.

–Leonard Mlodinow, in The Drunkard’s Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives

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How Randomness Rules Our Lives
Conrad wrote: Thanks for the opportunity to respond. I had great parents and that was lucky randomness. They modeledl well and I learned much from their modeling. They chose their behavior, but for me, much o…
Ummed wrote: submission to bigger intelligence. Many chance occurences, have majorly changed direction of my life. Yes, receptiveness to accept and try new direction coming has also been my nature. Thanks an…
Ricky wrote: We may see it as randomness, but this is why all the greatest writers and orators, and elders of the ages state that while we may set out to live our lives with the best intentions and hopes for a fav…
manyam wrote: Wonderful passage that captures an essential force in our lives that we rarely speak about and acknowledge. This should not mean we become vagabond flames of the winds but create meaning in our lives …
susan schaller wrote: Thank you for the reminder that trusting life which is so much bigger than I am is a better way to live than trying to impose my ideas on any situation. I planned to be a doctor, but a car hit me.&nbs…
ummed wrote: Thanks Susan for such beautiful thoughts, " trusting life which is much bigger than I am, is a better way than trying to impose my ideas on any situations" also " The more I let g…
gayathri wrote: randomness…..maybe universe’s spontaneity or fruits of karma; working your will……could be the power of intention and Action to break through the vicious cycle of karmic influences and to e…
David Doane wrote: The message is true. We want certainties. We like to pretend there are guarantees. The fact is life is uncertainties. We might as well accept that, for to fight it is to fight…
PK wrote: Most of my life, i have experienced serendipidy — I prefer to call seeming randomness this way. i do plan many different things meticulously — only to see them fall apart and something else ma…
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Audio Reflections

From last week’s Bay-Area circle on Make Your Life Into a Giving

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Video of the Week

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Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, CharityFocus blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start a Wednesday style meditation gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

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