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Archive for June 26, 2012

Behind the Beautiful Forevers

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June 26, 2012

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Behind the Beautiful Forevers

I don’t try to fool myself that the stories of individuals are themselves arguments. I just believe that better arguments, maybe even better policies, get formulated when we know more about ordinary lives.

– Katherine Boo –

Behind the Beautiful Forevers

“My husband is an Indian citizen, and since we met in 2001, I’ve been watching the landscape of his country transform as its economy grows. Some of the change is staggeringly obvious, like the skyscraping luxury condominiums with stirring views of other skyscraping luxury condominiums. But I couldn’t quite make out what had and hadn’t changed in historically poor communities. I generally find issues of poverty, opportunity, and global development to be over-theorized and under-reported. And it seemed to me that in India, as in the U.S., some of the experts most ready to describe how lower-income people are faring weren’t spending much time with those people.” Pulitzer Prize winner Katherine Boo spent two years in a Mumbai slum seeking to understand the gritty realities and moral complexity of the urban poor. In this interview she describes the experience and what it revealed for her. { read more }

Be The Change

Seek to understand more about someone who lives in a context dramatically different from your own.

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InnerNet Weekly: Looking With Head, Heart, and Hands

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Looking With Head, Heart, and Hands
by Jane Rosen

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgWhen I speak of seeing, I feel that the mind is open and in a relationship to the hands working, which opens a feeling of being more fully alive. That is what I call seeing.

More than one part of you needs to see. You can’t see with your head alone. You can’t see with your heart alone, because it’s very partial. You can’t see with your body alone because, basically, I don’t want to put down the cigarette or the cake.

One day I heard the dogs barking in the living room. Not a bark like, “Some­one is here,” which is an announcement. Not a bark like, “Get away from my stuff.” That’s a territorial thing. Not a bark of fear like, “Oh, my God there’s a bobcat on the deck!” It was a bark I ­wasn’t used to, a kind of “What are you doing?”

I walked into the living room and there was the raven underneath the chair at the dining room table. I looked at this big raven with huge claws and this huge Roman beak. The raven somehow had walked into the house before we had become friends and had gotten stuck underneath the chair. I believe it was a mom and she was coming in looking for food.

I looked at the raven and the raven looked at me. She had these beautiful eyes and she blinked at me. It was clear she said to me, “I’m stuck. I don’t know how I got under this chair. I can’t get out, and you’ve got two pretty big dogs. I’m in a situation here.”

So I looked at the raven and said, “Okay. Here’s the deal. You’re big. You have sharp claws and this beak. You could hurt me. I’m going to pet your back and if you don’t try to peck me or claw me, I will get you out from under the chair. If you try to peck me or claw me, you’re on your own.”

She looked at me, cocking her head like she was thinking about it. It wasn’t like she understood my words or I understood hers. There was something in my tone that was explaining to her that I was about to make a move. So I pet the back of the raven and not only does she not claw me, she pulls her claws into her belly and tucks her beak into her chest. I pick her up and I hold her like this [cradled in her arms] and she is ­perfectly still. I put her out on the picnic table figuring she would make a beeline out of there. She turned around, she looked at me, and she nodded.

–Jane Rosen, from "Looking With your Whole Body"

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Looking With Head, Heart, and Hands
What does seeing with your head, heart and body mean to you? How do you cultivate such a seeing? Have you had an experience where such a seeing has happened in your life?
Conrad P Pritscher wrote: I love Jane Rosen’s words. She acts like a whole person. I still am afraid of wild animals and wild birds. I would probably not have had to the courage to do what she did. …
madhur wrote: This piece explains a beautiful connection! Its unbelievable how kindness can be understood and responded to. Loved reading this. …
BCKMishra wrote: To me seeing with your head, heart and body means make heart your leader, brain the follower and body the doer. …
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Year of Dancing with Life – Week 38

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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 38:
Transcending the Ego

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