Year of Dancing with Life – Week 24
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Human life runs its course in the metamorphosis between receiving and giving. — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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Tip of the Day:
“The topic for this week’s meeting was: ‘What are you doing to keep your business going in these crazy-making economic times?’ Several people said they have upped the number of cold calls they’re making; others talked about creative ways they’re using social networking to market themselves. Some are revamping their web sites and blogs; a few are exploring new business ideas, as they worry that their current businesses might not survive. When it was my turn to speak, I said, ‘I’ve stopped making sales calls. I make service calls instead.’ The group looked at me, their faces registering everything from confusion to curiosity to disbelief to disdain. So I explained what I had learned.” Author BJ Gallagher explains how she made the transition in her own life and work.
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Be The Change:
At work, school, or at home, try unconditionally offering something, just to be of service.
**Share A Reflection**
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Half the spiritual life consists of remembering what we are up against and where we are going. — Ayya Khema
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Inspiration of the Day:
“Yesterday I went to the nursing home to visit my step mom’s grandma. She just got out of the hospital recently where she underwent some serious operations. I wanted to surprise her after work so I stopped by for a quick visit. When I got there she was happy to see me. We hugged, kissed and exchanged greetings. Then I heard a woman crying. It was my great grandma’s roommate. The curtain was drawn so I could not see her. She started calling out a name that wasn’t mine but she was definitely talking to me, begging me to go to her side of the room. I ignored her at first and continued visiting with my great grandma. Then she started begging and saying, ‘Please, come see me!’ So I went to see her. When I drew the curtain back she looked so old and frail but flashed me the biggest smile!” So begins this real world kindness story.
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Be The Change:
Call or visit someone undergoing physical or mental healing.
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Miracles are a retelling in small letters of the very same story which is written across the whole world in letters too large for some of us to see. — C.S. Lewis
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Good News of the Day:
One day in 1987, 5-year-old Saroo Brierley spent the afternoon begging for change with his brother at a local train station. When it was time to go home, the boys boarded what they thought was the correct train. They were wrong. Exhausted, the young brothers fell asleep, only to wake up 10 hours later on the other side of India, hundreds of miles away from their family. 25 years later, using little more than a vague recollection of his childhood and some help from Google Earth’s mapping technology, Saroo began his miraculous journey home.
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Be The Change:
Is there a wholesome connection from your own childhood that you still remember? Try reconnecting to it.
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Dalai Lama Quote of the WeekOur sense of self In a similar manner, our aversion to someone we dislike arises as a result of attributing inherent negative qualities to the person. When we relate this process to how we experience our own sense of existence–how the thought “I” or “I am” arises–we notice that it invariably does so in relation to some aspect of our physical or mental aggregates. Our notion of ourselves is based upon a sense of our physical and emotional selves. What’s more, we feel that these physical and mental aspects of ourselves exist inherently. My body is not something of which I doubt the specificity. There is a body-ness as well as a me-ness about it that very evidently exists. It seems to be a natural basis for my identifying my body as “me.” Our emotions such as fear are similarly experienced as having a valid existence and as being natural bases for our identifying ourselves as “me.” Both our loves and our hates serve to deepen the self sense. Even the mere feeling “I’m cold” contributes to our sense of being a solid and legitimate “I.”(p.61) –from A Profound Mind: Cultivating Wisdom in Everyday Life by The Dalai Lama, edited by Nicholas Vreeland, afterword by Richard Gere A Profound Mind • Now at 4O% off! |
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It is only when we silent the blaring sounds of our daily existence that we can finally hear the whispers of truth that life reveals to us, as it stands knocking on the doorsteps of our hearts. — K.T. Jong
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Inspiration of the Day:
This charming and chirpy video pays tribute to the happy wholesomeness of being alone. Tanya Davis recites her poem about the ways of solitude, gently cataloging all the places where aloneness can bring freedom and healing. Whether at a lunch counter, park bench, mountain trail, or on the edge of a dance floor — all we have to do is love ourselves enough, to love being alone.
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Be The Change:
What can solitude have to do with leadership? A speech at West Point on the value of introspection, concentration, and nonconformity.
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Dharma Quote of the WeekIn the Mahayana, there exist the vows of the Bodhisattva…but in Dzogchen, there exist no such rules or vows. When the Indian Buddhist master Atisa came to Tibet in the eleventh century, he met the famous Tibetan translator Rinchen Zangpo. Atisa asked him how he practiced the Tantras which he had translated, and he replied that he practiced them meticulously one after the other. But Atisa told him that this was not the correct way. He pointed out to the translator that all of the Tantras could be condensed and integrated into a single Upadesa and one need only practise that in order to maintain all of the transmissions which he had received. The same is true with Dzogchen. If we really understand this single teaching here which comes directly from Guru Padmasambhava, we can attain liberation. But we must grasp this vital core of the teaching. No matter what we are doing, which ever among the four modes of behavior–walking, sitting, lying down, or eating, we must always hold to awareness, never forgetting, never losing this awareness. This is the real meaning of Rigdzin, one who is totally aware. In Dzogchen, there is only one rule–always be aware in whatever we do, never be distracted!(p.68) –from Self-Liberation through Seeing with Naked Awareness by translation and commentary by John Myrdhin Reynolds, foreword by Namkhai Norbu, published by Snow Lion Publications Self-Liberation • Now at 5O% off! |
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