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Archive for February 21, 2012

Kindness Daily: A Train Delayed And A Life Saved

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A Train Delayed And A Life Saved February 21, 2012 – Posted by redrose
I had been spending some time in my home town and was about to return to my workplace. Arriving at the railway station I found my train was two hours late thanks to monsoon weather.

I had arrived half an hour early, which meant I now had two and a half hours to wait in the bus station. I was more than a little worried about that! I took my luggage to a bench where only one other lady was sitting.

Even sitting at the opposite end of the bench I couldn’t help but notice how sad she looked. Her pretty face seemed very worried. Rather than sit in silence I asked her if she was waiting for the next train. She didn’t respond. I asked her again. She replied, "Uhuh. Yes." Then she wiped her eyes.

I moved closer and said, "Hey dear, what is wrong with you? Why are you weeping? " She responded that it was nothing and I should mind my own business. I realized something wrong had happened. I gave her a Smile card and moved back along the bench.

She looked at the card for a moment. Then she turned to me and said, "I’m sorry for being so rude. Would you mind if I talked to you like a sister for a little while?" I smiled and nodded.

She told she is from a family of four. Her father died last year and she has a elder brother and mother. She used to have a job but after her dad died she stopped working so she could help her mother.

She told that her mum and brother were trying to arrange a marriage for her and she was forced to stand, all dressed up, for each potential husband to inspect whether she liked him or not. She once asked if this was fair and her mother shouted that it didn’t matter what she felt, she would marry who her mother chose for her.

One of these suitors, a much older guy, asked her to go to bed with him. She told her mother and the unsympathetic response left this lovely young lady in tears.

By now I was really feeling sorry for her. Then she said she had planned to kill herself in the train station. I was shocked!

She sat with me for another half an hour while I tried to convince her life was worth living. I told her to e mail me her resume and I would try to get her good job. Then I gave her some money to help her get where she needed to go. I told her to forget her suicidal thoughts and to believe she could have a better life.

I gave her my phone number and asked her to ring me if I could help. She smiled and hugged me tightly and told me, "Thanks for your time and I promise I wont think any more suicidal thoughts. Hopefully I will get a good job and my wedding, when it comes, will be a happy affair I can invite you to!"

Please join me in praying that her dreams come true and her future is a bright and happy one.

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Social Media for Social Transformation

Transformation literally means going beyond your form. — Wayne Dyer

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Inspiration of the Day:
“Any social-change hero succeeds in doing three fundamental things — raising awareness, creating impact, and transforming the heart. Today’s technologies, particular social media, can be significant tools. For awareness, the Internet has been an absolute amplifier. For impact, the Internet has been a mixed bag: remarkable potential in democracy movements, but significant problems ranging from cyber-bullying to “slacktivism.” Where it has been downright lacking, though, is in transformation. If we consider the profound revolutionaries of our time, from Gandhi and Mother Teresa to Cesar Chavez and Aung San Suu Kyi, their own inner transformation is what empowered them to touch the hearts of their communities. This is the place of our greatest leverage, and this is where the designs of our technologies have to be rooted.” An inspiring talk at the UN on social media for social change.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A6ECF:C3009629A010612C606C7F0E818D396DB4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
Today, make an effort to step outside the box of your own identity, form, or function — to transform, even momentarily.

**Share A Reflection**
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InnerNet Weekly: What I Learned In Africa

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from CharityFocus.org
What I Learned In Africa
by Henning Mankell

[Listen to Audio!]

785.jpgI ended up in Africa because the plane ticket there was cheapest. I came and I stayed. For nearly 25 years I’ve lived off and on in Mozambique. Time has passed, and I’m no longer young; in fact, I’m approaching old age. But my motive for living this straddled existence, with one foot in African sand and the other in European snow, in the melancholy region of Norrland in Sweden where I grew up, has to do with wanting to see clearly, to understand.

The simplest way to explain what I’ve learned from my life in Africa is through a parable about why human beings have two ears but only one tongue. Why is this? Probably so that we have to listen twice as much as we speak.

In Africa listening is a guiding principle. It’s a principle that’s been lost in the constant chatter of the Western world, where no one seems to have the time or even the desire to listen to anyone else. From my own experience, I’ve noticed how much faster I have to answer a question during a TV interview than I did 10, maybe even 5, years ago. It’s as if we have completely lost the ability to listen. We talk and talk, and we end up frightened by silence, the refuge of those who are at a loss for an answer. […]

A number of years ago I sat down on a stone bench outside the Teatro Avenida in Maputo, Mozambique, where I work as an artistic consultant. It was a hot day, and we were taking a break from rehearsals so we fled outside, hoping that a cool breeze would drift past. The theater’s air-conditioning system had long since stopped functioning. It must have been over 100 degrees inside while we were working.

Two old African men were sitting on that bench, but there was room for me, too. In Africa people share more than just water in a brotherly or sisterly fashion. Even when it comes to shade, people are generous.

I heard the two men talking about a third old man who had recently died. One of them said, "I was visiting him at his home. He started to tell me an amazing story about something that had happened to him when he was young. But it was a long story. Night came, and we decided that I should come back the next day to hear the rest. But when I arrived, he was dead."

The man fell silent. I decided not to leave that bench until I heard how the other man would respond to what he’d heard. I had an instinctive feeling that it would prove to be important.

Finally he, too, spoke.

"That’s not a good way to die — before you’ve told the end of your story."

It struck me as I listened to those two men that a truer nomination for our species than Homo sapiens might be Homo narrans, the storytelling person. What differentiates us from animals is the fact that we can listen to other people’s dreams, fears, joys, sorrows, desires and defeats — and they in turn can listen to ours.

–Henning Mankell, translated from Swedish by Tiina Nunnally

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What I Learned In Africa
PK wrote: I am a talkative guy. When i listen to something deep or interesting, it stirs some memories, insights and then I talk. There were a few situations, where, i just listened and did not know what …
Ganoba wrote: Listening from the heart begins when we listen to our own voice. This prepares us to listen to others, particularly when they ramble. When a person is beating around the bush he/she has somethin…
Derek wrote: When we listen more.. we connect more……
Ricky wrote: What an amazing insight, not only with the observation about western culture and it’s incessant white noise, but about the art of listening, and the application of the African parable two ears, …
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: When it comes to hearing about my flaws, I find I am a poor listener. I immediately start thinking of how I might defend myself. My experience with a wide variety of exercises at the…
David Doane wrote: I also think we talk compulsively and listen poorly. As Alcoholics Anonymous points out, we would do well to get the cotton out of our ears and put it in our mouths. Talking can be v…
Manisha wrote: Months ago I was sitting by the fire on a chilly night in the mountains. We had just finished watching the sun set and I turned my attention downward, looking deep into the lake. There was the crackle…
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Year of Dancing with Life – Week 20

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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 20:
Sustaining Wholesome Desires

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