In association with hhdlstudycirclemontreal.org

Archive for May 1, 2012

Kindness Daily: A Random Act of Recycling

kindness daily
home smileCards smileGroups
A Random Act of Recycling May 1, 2012 – Posted by dailybread
Last Saturday when I was in the car with my children, I realized that I hadn’t made time to do out usual recycling, and our water bottles had been piling up (in our car actually!).

We were going to be driving past the recycling station at the corner grocery store and as we approached it, I took in the long line of people, bags in hand, waiting their turn to cash in for a few bucks and some change. I thought about the times I’ve waited in that line, not always just for a little extra cash or purely to help the environment – but sometimes simply because I actually needed to buy milk or bread didn’t have the money.

I made a last minute decision and pulled into the parking lot. I jumped out of the car and grabbed the few bags of plastic bottles that I had in the back of the car. I went up to the person at the front of the line (he seemed to be the neediest).

My kids were watching me the whole time wondering what on earth I was doing stopping to recycle when we clearly had to be somewhere and soon 🙂 I hadn’t thought about exactly what I would say to the recipient and the beauty of it always startles me, when I realize it really doesn’t matter. The act alone speaks volumes.

I stood in front of the man while he pushed his cans tiredly into the machine, with my bags hoisted and asked him,

"Would you mind taking mine too?"

He responded with a huge smile and a bit of a laugh……

"I would love to."

Glad he could help me out like that. 😉

Add/View Comment >>

About Newsletter
Kindness Daily is an email that delivers today’s featured story from HelpOthers.org. If you’d rather not receive this email, you can also unsubscribe.

Similar Stories

Give One, Get Two Skates Free, by J. Madden

He Played His Best, by warmth

The Yellow Ribbons, by beckid

Joys of Picking Tamarind, by guin

The Dusting Lady In My Hospital Room, by Maureen Flanagan

Helpful Links

Smile Cards: do an act of kindness and leave a card behind to keep the chain going.

Smile Decks: 52 cards with a kindness idea on each!

Smile Groups: share your own stories, make friends, spread the good.

Smile Ideas: loads of ideas that can support your drive of kindness.

Unsubscribe
If you’d rather not receive these stories by email, you can remove yourself with two easy clicks.

Community
twitterx32.png facebookx32.png

Delivered by HelpOthers.org Click here to unsubscribe

Newsletter: Jungle of Montini

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to our email list from conversations.org. Having trouble reading this email? View it on our website.
Conversations.org Monthly Conversations

Interviews with Social Artists, Uncommon Heroes

April 30, 2012

From the Editor

richard.jpgRichard Whittaker

Welcome to newsletter issue #23. We bring you an unusual selection of material that’s more than just suitable for inner reflection, it’s real food for thought. Long ago I discovered that interviews had the potential for carrying more substance than just about any other form of writing. Too often, of course, what we get is a surface treatment meant just for passing time. But these are like hidden treasures. Each one is remarkable in its own way, reflecting as it does, the wisdom of three individuals who have spent a lifetime engaged in passionate callings. One wonders how much other material of similar quality never reaches us and remains hidden under the media wash of quick and easy entertainment? [more]

More Conversations

Join Us!

Interested in publishing your conversations with everyday heroes and artists? Want to get a hard-copy of our magazine? Want to suggest someone for an interview? Contact Us.

A Man Named Tree

A Man Named TreeA man named Tree says he’s always gone against the grain. Instead of cultivating an ambition to get ahead, he has always wanted to help others. I asked him how far back this feeling went. He told he never imagined anything but doing service. His earliest memory is of having the idea of working on a medical ship that went around to different countries helping people. The Free Farm in San Francisco is the flowering of decades of Tree’s work. It’s his joy and way of giving. The secret of a good life, he says, is very simple. ‘Get your mind off yourself and be good to others.’ Read more about this remarkable man.

Tracy Cochran: Girl with Suitcase and a Dream

Tracy Cochran: Girl with Suitcase and a DreamTracy Cochran, executive editor of Parabola magazine shares a remarkable experience in this interview and some of her wisdom: ‘It’s really quite natural for many of us to approach our spiritual practice as a way to get away from difficult or disappointing material. But I very slowly learned, and I want to emphasize slowly, over decades, that the direction of freedom is to turn towards, very gently. I remember meeting Thich Nhat Hanh and he talked about, if you feel angry or a burst of impatience, to hold that feeling like a child. And I’ve learned very slowly, that this works. Not going into the story and siding with yourself, but just holding your material, whatever it is.’

Conversations.org is a volunteer-run project of CharityFocus. Our newsletter reaches 33,714 people and you can unsubscribe anytime.

10 Evolving Expressions of Simplicity

Let your capital be simplicity and contentment. — Henry David Thoreau

~~~~
Inspiration of the Day:
Voluntary simplicity gives voice to ways of living that are vital for building a workable and meaningful future. In the “garden of simplicity”, as described in this classic article by Duane Elgin, there are many flowering expressions of the simple life, and he goes on to describe ten of them. According to Elgin, the great diversity of these expressions and their intertwined unity, are creating a resilient foundation for sustainable living and a future that nurtures harmony and community.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16AD577:C3009629A010612CDC47657A4117591BB4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
What does simplicity mean to you? Plant a seed to nurture your garden of simplicity.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16AD578:C3009629A010612CDC47657A4117591BB4B847859706E37D&

InnerNet Weekly: Response Vs. Reaction

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Response Vs. Reaction
by Adyashanti

[Listen to Audio!]

796.jpg

When I was 19 and 20, part of what drove my urge to awaken was that we were still in the midst of the Cold War, and it looked as though we might imminently drop bombs on each other. I saw the insanity and violence, and it occurred to me that we were all waiting for someone to solve this problem for us — waiting for our politics to change, for our leaders to change, for some grand leader to inspire us. And somehow I just intuitively sensed that there must be a change of perspective, something much more radical inside. This mantra came to my mind, and it fed my awakening: "If not me, then who? If not now, then when?" And this brought all of the energy back to me.

I started to see, from the standpoint of oneness, that when we look at the world around us and our leaders, it’s important to see them as our own self. And that can be shocking. If it’s all one, then the leaders we don’t like are our own self, our shadow side, which society is denying. Instead of owning these forces of division and violence within ourselves, we project them onto somebody else. We get angry. It’s sort of a noble anger, a noble hatred, a noble division, and it’s easy to justify. “I am right because I’m a peace activist or an environmental activist.” We miss that this anger, no matter how justified, is still inside the movement of division—and it’s only contributing to division. If the cause is wholeness or the cause is peace, then the cause is good—but the ends do not justify the means. Hate is hate; it doesn’t matter why we hate. Anger is anger; it doesn’t really matter why you’re dividing yourself against somebody. In the universe, it registers as division.

When we start to see that, we can see that we are not justified in our divisions. If we are harboring division, we are violent, and that violence will manifest sooner or later. It’s sobering to see this, but when you do, it takes away the justification for being divided.

That’s what I started to see at a young age. My concern drove me to a deeper place, this place that we’re called to when we speak of spiritual awakening. Now from that place, we can have a very active response to the world rather than a reaction against it. A response is inherently positive; a reaction is inherently negative and divisive. A great thing about coming to our own wholeness is that it’s not as though we just sit on our couch and see that everything is perfect. We do see that everything is perfect—but from that sense of perfection arise great love, great compassion, and a great response to the life around us. It’s a response that is undivided. As a whole, as a world culture, if there is going to be a salvation, it’s going to have to come from the human heart being undivided. And to get there, we all have to wake up.

–Adyashanti, in Quiet Revolution

Share the Wisdom:
Email Twitter FaceBook
Latest Community Insights New!
Response Vs. Reaction
How can we wake up? How can we become aware that behind our seemingly noble judgments, we are making inherently negative divisions? How do we know if our action is a response or a reaction? Can you share a personal story that illustrates the difference between a reaction and a response?
PK wrote: How can we wake up? By being in the present moment and being aware of both acceptance and rejection, fear and courage, love and hate in us. Once we wake up, staying up is an entirely different matter …
madhur wrote: Righteousness is a major problem for all conflicts. When we observe something is Not Right and resist or rise against it, it may arise ego clashes or war depending on the nature and size of con…
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: Adyashanti is correct. We all have to wake up. As far as I can tell, a good way of helping that come about is for me to awaken. It will then be easier for you to awaken. When you and I are…
Share/Read Reflections >>
Wednesday Meditation:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and later became “Wednesdays”, which now ripple out to living rooms around the world. To join, RSVP online.

RSVP For Wednesday

Some Good News

The 8 Core Beliefs of Extraordinary Bosses
What the Internet Does to Your Brain
The Northern Lights in Action

Video of the Week

Ekatva – Oneness

Kindness Stories

Celebrate Pay It Forward Day, April 26th
Doing Good In The Garden
177 Messages of Kindness

About
Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace 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.

Forward to a Friend

InnerNet Weekly is an email service that delivers a little bit of wisdom to 71,089 subscribers each week. We never spam nor do we host any advertising. Archives, from the last 14+ years, are freely available online.

You can unsubscribe anytime, within seconds.

A Gift Economy offering of ServiceSpace.org (2012)

Year of Dancing with Life – Week 30

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 30:
The Paradox of Desire

To receive Phillip’s weekly teaching,
click here:
http://www.lifebalanceinstitute.com/
dharmawisdom/dancing-with-life/
teaching/paradox-desire

May your study of this material deepen
your meditation practice and inspire
your dance with life.

If you are interested in studying Dancing with Life
in more depth, sign up to receive your on-line
study guide and other supplemental materials.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started