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Archive for May, 2012

When Nothing Works

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May 27, 2012

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When Nothing Works

Sitting quietly, doing nothing, Spring comes, and the grass grows, by itself.

– Basho –

When Nothing Works

I’d had tendinitis in my elbow for over a year. Even something as gentle as twisting a doorknob made me wince in pain. I went to see my brother, Bertie, who also happens to be my doctor. As Bertie examined my elbow, I reminded him of everything I had done to try to fix my problem. When it began to hurt, I used ibuprofen. When that didn’t work, we tried two injections of cortisone, six months apart. Meanwhile, I did physical therapy, tried ultrasound, used a brace, performed daily exercises, applied ice, and went to acupuncture and massage….”Nothing has helped!” I complained. “I have an idea,” Bertie said. “Something we haven’t yet tried.” “What?” I hoped it wouldn’t be too time-consuming or expensive. “You just said it yourself,” he replied. “Nothing.” { read more }

Be The Change

A beautiful passage by the celebrated Japanese farmer, philosopher – whose “Do Nothing” approach to cultivating the land, and one’s own life inspired millions. { more }

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Kindness Daily: The Cab Driver On A Rainy Day

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The Cab Driver On A Rainy Day May 26, 2012 – Posted by lovelightbug
I woke up the other day to a phone call from a taxi driver who had my friend’s cell phone.

My friend had apparently left it in the cab the night before. The driver had called others but I was the first one who had answered.

It was a rainy morning which for cab drivers in this big city is a very busy time. He asked me where he could drop the cell phone off. I told him the street where I lived and quickly jumped out of bed and got dressed so I could meet him on the corner. I guessed that if he had taken on a passenger of two he could have made some good money from driving all that distance.

When he arrived I thanked him and blessed him for having such a kind and beautiful soul. I was so happy for my friend who had only recently moved to this country – and I could only imagine how important his cell phone was to him!

I asked the taxi driver for his name so my friend could thank him in person. He said my blessings and gratitude was all that he needed. Then he drove off.

I e-mailed my friend telling him I had his phone and then met up with him to tell him how I had received it. Along with the phone I handed him a Smile card on behalf of the taxi driver and myself. My friend smiled even wider after reading the card and said he couldn’t believe such kindness existed in this big city.

Now he can’t wait to pay it forward!

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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.

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

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The Boy Who Played With Fusion

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 26, 2012

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The Boy Who Played With Fusion

The young do not know enough to be prudent, and therefore they attempt the impossible – and achieve it, generation after generation.

– Pearl S. Buck –

The Boy Who Played With Fusion

Taylor Wilson always dreamed of creating a star. Now he’s become one. “Taylor would transform the family’s garage into a mysterious, glow-in-the-dark cache of rocks and metals and liquids with unimaginable powers … he would conceive, in a series of unlikely epiphanies, new ways to use neutrons to confront some of the biggest challenges of our time: cancer and nuclear terrorism…he would build a reactor that could hurl atoms together in a 500-million-degree plasma core– becoming, at 14, the youngest individual on Earth to achieve nuclear fusion.” This article shares the remarkable journey of a boy who followed his dream against perilous odds. { read more }

Be The Change

What is your own “impossible” dream? Take a step towards it today.

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Video of the Week: Seeing

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Video of the Week

May 25, 2012
Seeing

Seeing

“The ordinary… is the part of our world where beauty is interlaced in each detail… Itâs the part of our world that can knock our socks off… but so many of us walk by everyday, never knowing, never caring… But some see…”

This lovely meditation on the blessing of vision — both metaphorically and explicitly — was shot on a budget of $25 (for the prop sunglasses), using a digital SLR and an iPhone.

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Peace Artist Gifts Half A Million Works of Art

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 25, 2012

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Peace Artist Gifts Half A Million Works of Art

All works of love are works of peace.

– Mother Teresa –

Peace Artist Gifts Half A Million Works of Art

April 23rd, a little after lunch. 1991. That was the moment Joe Murphy, decided that he would make something for peace. The details weren’t clear to him at the time, but he knew that it would be something symbolic of connection, a chain of sorts. He knew that he would create small art pieces, and that he would give them away, and that he would do this for the rest of his life. This idea evolved into the exquisite Peace Chains: a continuing series of ceramic pendants in vivid hues, each with the word “peace” etched into it in one of over 90 different languages. To date Joe has gifted over half a million of them to people all over the world. This catchy, foot-tapping video captures his work-of-heart in action. { read more }

Be The Change

Read more about Joe in this beautiful interview. Do something today in the spirit of sharing peace. { more }

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Kindness Daily: My Smile Deck Adventure

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My Smile Deck Adventure May 24, 2012 – Posted by MakeSomeoneSmile
I have received a few Smile Decks and decided I would use one.

I read through the cards and love all the different ideas. I try to make sure I do at least one random act of kindness each week and thought the Smile Deck could help me with that!

There are many ways you can use the cards. Each suite has a different focus and they get progressively more challenging the higher you go. Since I have been committed to practicing kindness I figured I would just shuffle the deck and every few days pull one out and do whatever it says.

So that is what I did!

Yesterday I had the eight of hearts, which asks you to acknowledge an act of kindness by someone else and thank them. I have been the recipient of an act of kindness in the past week so this was a perfect card!

I put together a "smile package" and mailed it off to my kind friend. I am sure it will make them smile!

Today I pulled the two of hearts which says to hide spare change where a stranger will find it within the hour. I put some change and Smile cards in two little baggies. I left them this morning in two of the vending machines at work. I am sure they will surprise people and make them smile and that is what it is all about for me! Even when things are tough, anytime I can feel life and spread kindness, it matters!

I’ll keep you posted on how this goes. There are a few hard ones in there so those should be interesting – but rewarding!

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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.

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Helpful Links

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

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4 Ways Happiness Can Hurt You

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 24, 2012

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4 Ways Happiness Can Hurt You

Your joy is your sorrow unmasked. And the selfsame well from which your laughter rises was often times filled with your tears. And how else can it be?

– Kahlil Gibran –

4 Ways Happiness Can Hurt You

The recent explosion of scientific research reveals precisely how positive feelings like happiness are good for us. We know that they motivate us to pursue important goals and overcome obstacles, protect us from some effects of stress, connect us closely with other people, and even stave off physical and mental ailments. This has made happiness pretty trendy. The science of happiness made the covers of Time, Oprah, and even The Economist. But can feeling good ever be bad? New research says yes — and points the way to a healthier, more balanced life. This article share four things to watch out for in the pursuit of happiness. { read more }

Be The Change

As you start the day today, orient yourself toward well-being more so than happiness.

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Quote of the Week | Allowing Space

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Learn More | Books and Audio | The Pema Chödrön Foundation
May 23, 2012

ALLOWING SPACE

It is never too late for any of us to look at our minds. We can always sit down and allow the space for anything to arise. Sometimes we have a shocking experience of ourselves. Sometimes we try to hide. Sometimes we have a surprising experience of ourselves. Often we get carried away. Without judging, without buying into likes and dislikes, we can always encourage ourselves to just be here again and again and again.

EXCERPTED FROM

Book cover

When Things Fall Apart:Heart Advice for Difficult Times, page 27.

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Teachings by Pema Chödrön, from works published by Shambhala Publications. Photo by ©Andrea Roth.

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Einstein on Thinking and Belief

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May 23, 2012

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Einstein on Thinking and Belief

A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he thinks, he becomes.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

Einstein on Thinking and Belief

“Einstein explained that psychologically, our beliefs and axioms rest upon our experiences. There exists, however, no logical path from experience to an axiom, but only an intuitive connection based on our interpretation of the experience, which is always subject to revocation. At one time, ancient astronomers believed that the heavens were eternal and made of ether. This theory made it impossible for them to observe meteors as burning stones from outer space. Although the ancients witnessed meteor showers and found some on the ground, they couldn’t recognize them as meteors from outer space. They sought out and observed only those things that confirmed their theory about the heavens. We are like the ancient astronomers and actively seek out only that information that confirms our beliefs and theories about ourselves and the world.” Michael Michalko shares further. { read more }

Be The Change

” A belief is simply an interpretation that you hold to be true.” A short reflection follows. { more }

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InnerNet Weekly: Nature and Nonviolence

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Nature and Nonviolence
by Thich Nhat Hanh

[Listen to Audio!]

771.jpg You don’t discriminate between the seed and the plant. You see that they ‘inter-are’ with each other, that they are the same thing. Looking deeply at the young cornstalk, you can see the seed of corn, still alive, but with a new appearance. The plant is the continuation of the seed.

The practice of meditation helps us to see things other people can’t see. We look deeply and we see that father and son, father and daughter, mother and son, mother and daughter, corn seed and cornstalk, have a very close relationship. That is why we should awaken to the fact, to the truth, that we inter-are. The suffering of one is the suffering of the other. […] When we see that we and all living beings are made of the same nature, how can there be division between us? How can there be lack of harmony? When we realize our ‘interbeing nature’, we’ll stop blaming and exploiting and killing, because we know that we inter-are. That is the great awakening we must have in order for the Earth to be saved.

We human beings have always singled ourselves out from the rest of the natural world. We classify other animals and living beings as ‘Nature’, a thing apart from us, and act as if we’re somehow separate from it. Then we ask, “How should we deal with Nature?” We should deal with Nature the same way we should deal with ourselves: nonviolently. Human beings and Nature are inseparable. Just as we should not harm ourselves, we should not harm Nature.

Causing harm to other human beings causes harm to ourselves. Accumulating wealth and owning excessive portions of the world’s natural resources deprives fellow humans of the chance to live. Participating in oppressive and unjust social systems creates and deepens the gap between rich and poor, and aggravates the situation of social injustice. While the rest of the human family suffers and starves, the enjoyment of false security and wealth is a delusion.

It’s clear that the fate of each individual is inextricably linked to the fate of the whole human race. We must let others live if we ourselves want to live. The only alternative to coexistence is co-nonexistence. A civilization in which we must kill and exploit others in order to live is not a healthy civilization. […] To bring about peace within the human family, we must work for harmonious co-existence. If we continue to shut ourselves off from the rest of the world, imprisoning ourselves in narrow concerns and immediate problems, we’re not likely to make peace or to survive. The human race is part of Nature. We need to have this insight before we can have harmony between people.

–Thich Nhat Hanh in "Nature and Nonviolence"

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