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Archive for June, 2012

How Gift-Giving Creates Community

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 13, 2012

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How Gift-Giving Creates Community

We have all known the long loneliness and we have learned that the only solution is love and that love comes with community.

– Dorothy Day –

How Gift-Giving Creates Community

“Wherever I go and ask people what is missing from their lives, the most common answer (if they are not impoverished or seriously ill) is “community.” What happened to community, and why don’t we have it any more? There are many reasons — the layout of suburbia, the disappearance of public space, the automobile and the television — and, if you trace the “why’s” a few levels down, they all implicate the money system. More directly posed: community is nearly impossible in a highly monetized society like our own. That is because community is woven from gifts…” { read more }

Be The Change

Consider the different ways in which you can increase the giving of gifts and gratitude in your own life.

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Kindness Daily: The Traffic Warden’s Toes

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The Traffic Warden’s Toes June 12, 2012 – Posted by sethi
I was recently on a working trip to Mumbai. One evening I took an autorickshaw home from work. It was around 6 p.m. and there was heavy rush hour traffic. Because of this the rickshaw was traveling at a snail’s pace.

I was lost in my own thoughts, thinking about the day’s events, when a Mumbai police traffic warden materialized as if from nowhere. He ran alongside the rickshaw and slapped the driver three times, quite violently, across his face.

I was shocked by this sudden turn of events! I asked the driver to take the rickshaw to one side of the street and stop. I asked if he was hurt and he said his eyes were sore because of the slap. Other than that, he said, he was fine.

I asked what had happened. He said that, by mistake, he had run over the traffic wardens shoes. I told him he should have stopped and apologized. But, at the same time, I knew that the driver did not deserve getting beaten up like that!

So, I asked the driver to accompany me to the spot where the traffic warden was directing the traffic.

Then I called the traffic warden to one side and in a gentle voice told him that the rickshaw driver accepted his mistake and wanted to apologize for it. The warden, who was all set to react again when he saw the driver, calmed down on hearing my words and the tone of my voice. The driver accepted his mistake but started complaining loudly that he did not deserve to get beaten up.

The heated discussion began to attract a crowd. Some of them were other rickshaw drivers who were taking the side of their fellow worker. Sensing that matters might quickly spin out of control I calmly told the traffic warden to accept the apology of the rickshaw driver and let bygones be bygones.

Fortunately good sense prevailed and the traffic warden accepted the apology of the rickshaw driver. Then the voice within said, "Please bring about a true reconciliation between them."

I listened to the inner voice and persuaded both of them to shake hands, which they did and they parted as friends.

We went back to the rickshaw and proceeded to my destination. As I finished paying the fare he said in a soft voice, "Sahib, thank you for what you have done."

Hearing those words I knew I had a made a difference in somebody’s life. I thanked God for the support He gave me!

On Missions and Metrics

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 12, 2012

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On Missions and Metrics

What you appreciate — appreciates.

– Lynne Twist –

On Missions and Metrics

“There is an old Zen story about a man riding a horse, galloping frantically down a path. His friend, who is sitting by the side of the road, calls out ‘Where are you going?’ The man replies: ‘I don’t know. Ask the horse!’ When we build our tools, we often depend on metrics to guide our development. We keep graphs of unique visitors and pageviews and watch them closely. This keeps us honest. It’s hard to convince anybody that we’re building a useful tool if our metrics show that nobody is using it. But we must take care when we use metrics. Metrics can be like the horse in the old Zen story. Once we decide on them, they have a habit of setting the agenda. As the old adage goes, what gets measured gets managed.” MIT Media Lab Professor Sep Kamvar shares a thoughtful reflection on mission and measures. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on and question how you measure things in your own life, personal and professional.

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InnerNet Weekly: A Whole New Dimension of Love

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
A Whole New Dimension of Love
by Tenzin Palmo

[Listen to Audio!]

801.jpgEverything is flowing. And this flow isn’t made up only of external things. It includes relationships, too. Some relationships last for a long time, and some don’t—that’s the way of things. Some people stay here for some time; some people leave very quickly. It’s the way of things.

Every year millions and millions of people are born and die. In the West, our lack of acceptance is quite amazing. We deny that anyone we love could ever be lost to us. So often we are unable to say to someone who is dying, “We’re so happy to have had you with us. But now, please have a very happy and safe journey onwards.” It’s this denial which brings us grief.

Impermanence is not just of philosophical interest. It’s very personal. Until we accept and deeply understand in our very being that things change from moment to moment, and never stop even for one instant, only then can we let go. And when we really let go inside, the relief is enormous. Ironically this gives release to a whole new dimension of love. People think that if someone is unattached, they are cold. But this isn’t true. Anyone who has met very great spiritual masters who are really unattached is immediately struck by their warmth to all beings, not just to the ones they happen to like or are related to. Non-attachment releases something very profound inside us, because it releases that level of fear. We all have so much fear: fear of losing, fear of change, an inability to just accept. […]

It’s like a dance. And we have to give each being space to dance their dance. Everything is dancing; even the molecules inside the cells are dancing. But we make our lives so heavy. We have these incredibly heavy burdens we carry with us like rocks in a big rucksack. We think that carrying this big heavy rucksack is our security; we think it grounds us. We don’t realize the freedom, the lightness of just dropping it off, letting it go. That doesn’t mean giving up relationships; it doesn’t mean giving up one’s profession, or one’s family,or one’s home. It has nothing to do with that; it’s not an external change. It’s an internal change. It’s a change from holding on tightly to holding very lightly.

–Tenzin Palmo, in an extract from "Into the Heart of Life"

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A Whole New Dimension of Love
What does “holding lightly” as opposed to “holding tightly” mean to you? Can you share a personal experience to illustrate the difference? How do you stay unattached without becoming cold and indifferent?
Derek wrote: Holding Lightly.. It’s recognizing that we are all unique individuals on this earth. I see my partner, my friend, my dad and myself as these tiny beings on earth. We come here alone. We make our u…
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: Tenzin Palmo is a beautiful writer. I do not experientially know the difference between "holding tightly" and "holding lightly." I want to hold lightly but if my …
Chria wrote: I have had the privilege of watching my mother gracefully transition this past year. She told me she never expected to live so long (93) and did not know why she ha…
David Doane wrote: " Holding lightly" is being more free than "holding tightly," but it’s still holding. Ideally, instead of holding, I be with someone or something, and there is no holding…
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Some Good News

7 Essential Books on Optimism
Mr. Rogers at the Emmy Awards
When Life is Ugly Make it Beautiful

Video of the Week

Why I Dance

Kindness Stories

A Warm Embrace And Presence
At A London Bus Stop
A Warm Gift Left In His Basket

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Year of Dancing with Life – Week 36

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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 36:
Three Stages of Realization

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Kindness Daily: Best Day Of My Life

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Best Day Of My Life June 11, 2012 – Posted by kassiewright
Today is the best day of my life!

I say this every day before I even get out of bed! Then I think what I am grateful for – a nice warm bed, heat in my house on this cold, wintery day, coffee, running water, a nice house, my family, my health, my kids, my hubby, his job, our town, etc. Then I get up and get on with my wonderful day!

As I drove into town I saw a lady my grandma knew walking along. I stopped and offered her a ride, which she gladly accepted. I dropped her off at her destination, less than five minutes away.

Next, I did my grocery shopping – and noticed someone waiting for a ride outside! I knew her face so I inquired if I could help. "Sure," she said. "My ride won’t come for an hour and I could call and cancel when I get home." And so another five minute journey was made.

Then, thankful for my Tim Horton’s coffee, I offered to pay for the person behind me. I didn’t know him but I left $5 towards his order, knowing it would put a smile on his face. Then I headed home.

That’s three acts of kindness in one trip to town, I thought. Now I will write them up for HelpOthers and maybe they will be contagious!

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Mr. Roger’s at the Emmy Awards

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 11, 2012

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Mr. Roger's at the Emmy Awards

See how nature — trees, flowers, grass — grows in silence; see the stars, the moon and the sun, how they move in silence…we need silence to be able to touch souls.

– Mother Teresa –

Mr. Roger’s at the Emmy Awards

For 33 years, Fred Rogers — known to one-and-all as Mister Rogers — invited children into his television “neighborhood” to teach them curiosity, ethics, and self-belief. When honored with an Emmy Award for lifetime achievement, Mister Rogers delivered a thank-you speech very much in keeping with his role as educator and role model — using ten very special seconds of silence. { read more }

Be The Change

Take ten seconds in silence to think of the people who are responsible for helping to shape your life.

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Quote of the Week | Pleasure and Pain

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Dharma Quote of the Week
June 11, 2012

PLEASURE AND PAIN

The primordial push to pleasure is important to acknowledge because it explains the knee-jerk response we have to pleasure and pain and the patience that is required to reverse it. The spiritual path, with its open invitation to pain, goes against the grain of the very foundation of our ego-centered being.

This means that the path will give us exactly what we need and not necessarily what we want. We may not want to face our fear, loneliness, and heartache, but we need to if we want to grow. It is the adult version of having to eat our vegetables. They may not taste good, but fear, loneliness, and heartache can be good for us.

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The Radical Linguist Noam Chomsky

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 10, 2012

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The Radical Linguist Noam Chomsky

When did the rain explain “drink” to the earth,
and the earth explain “grow” to the seed?
Who taught the brook the concept of “mirth”
and who explained “bend” to the reed?

– Pavi Mehta –

The Radical Linguist Noam Chomsky

For centuries experts held that every language is unique. Then one day in 1956, a young linguistics professor gave a legendary presentation at MIT. He argued that every intelligible sentence conforms not only to the rules of its particular language but to a universal grammar that encompasses all languages. And rather than absorbing language from the environment and learning to communicate by imitation, children are born with the innate capacity to master language, a power imbued in our species by evolution itself. Almost overnight, linguists’ thinking began to shift.” In this article Noam Chomsky shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on an experience from your own life that transcends words.

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Kindness Daily: At A London Bus Stop

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At A London Bus Stop June 9, 2012 – Posted by j.asmara
One late winter’s evening I was standing at a bus stop in gloomy, wet and windy London. Then I noticed a young man running as fast as he could and just behind him there was a number eight bus.

He wasn’t going to make it to the bus stop in time – unless I did something!

I held my hand out and stopped the bus. The guy was still running, so I proceeded to walk slowly towards the bus. I put my right foot on the step to keep the door open and, finally, the young man reached the bus stop!

He stopped next to me and leaned against a tree to catch a breathe and let me get on the bus first. But I turned around and stepped back. He looked at me with surprise. Then he understood what I had done for him.

He got on the bus but still kept looking at me. I smiled and turned away. The bus left. I felt good.

Every little helps!

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Similar Stories

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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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