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Archive for January 13, 2012

Kindness Daily: Helping A Hungry Women

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Helping A Hungry Women January 13, 2012 – Posted by innerjourney
I was on a holiday to the Bay area.

On a cold, rainy day, me and my uncle went to have some fast food. While we waited for our order to be delivered, I watched a women who came in and sat in a corner. She just sat there. I thought she was just there to take cover from the rain.

A few minutes passed and I had a feeling that she must be hungry and may be didn’t have any money to buy food. I just went close to her and asked her if she was hungry and that if I can buy her some food. She replied in the affirmative. So I got her some food and gave the $10 that I had with me and told her that she can have it.

I could see her face light up with smile and just before I took leave of her she just said – Thank you … God bless you young man. T

That really did warm my heart.

So there goes my first kindness experience here in the US. Hopefully, I will have a lot more opportunity to help and connect with people.

Have a beautiful day everyone and thanks for sharing

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Video of the Week: 365 Grateful

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Video of the Week

Jan 13, 2012
365 Grateful

365 Grateful

Is it possible to harness the power of gratitude through a photo? Thatâs just what Hailey Bartholomew did with her 365 Grateful Project, not only changing her life, but the lives of countless others by inspiring them to create their own gratitude projects.
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How Vulnerability Can Be a Strength

We’re never so vulnerable than when we trust someone — but paradoxically, if we cannot trust, neither can we find love or joy. — Walter Anderson

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Tip of the Day:
The word vulnerable itself comes from the Latin ‘vulnerare’ which means ‘to wound’, and so at the root of vulnerability is our own sense of wounded-ness. To be authentic in a moment in which we feel wounded, we have to honestly acknowledge the places where we feel hurt and then muster up the strength to just be with the pain. If we can embrace this vulnerability, we can fully accept the discomfort and learn to observe our entire reality deeply and intimately — just the way it is. It may seem like such opportunities are rare, but they’re surprisingly accessible. Here are a few statements that crack open a beautiful vulnerability within everyday situations: ‘I was wrong,’ ‘I don’t know,’ ‘I am sorry,’ ‘Thank you,’ and ‘I love …’. This article articulates the relationship between vulnerability and strength.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A2B63:C3009629A010612C251DBA7AED6E3197B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Be wisely vulnerable today — express gratitude, admit fault, profess love, embrace the unknown.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A2B64:C3009629A010612C251DBA7AED6E3197B4B847859706E37D&

Dharma Quote from Snow Lion Publications

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Dharma Quote of the Week

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The many tantras of both the Ancient and New traditions unanimously agree that these, and others, are the consequences of violating the pledges.

Means of Restoration
The proclaimers’ vows, like a clay pot, once broken cannot be repaired;
The awakening mind commitments, like gold or silver, can be restored;
The tantric pledges, like a dented vessel, are restored by the practitioner’s strength.

–Jamgon Kongtrul

When is it possible to restore a vow that has been transgressed? All the tantras and transmissions state that if a monk has incurred a defeat with concealment, the transgressed vow, like a broken clay pot, cannot be repaired. An awakening mind commitment that has been transgressed is like a cracked gold or silver vase which can still be soldered by a blacksmith. A violated vow or pledge in this Secret Mantra system is likened to a dented golden vessel, which can be straightened out by the practitioner’s own strength.

Pledges are restored through action, precious substances, earnest desire, contemplation, and reality.
The Great Cleansing can purify all transgressions.
(p.296)

–from Treasury of Knowledge- Book Five: Buddhist Ethics by Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye, trans. by the Kalu Rinpoche Translation Group, under the direction of Ven. Bokar Rinpoche, published by Snow Lion Publications

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