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Archive for November, 2013

Estonia’s Bank of Happiness

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November 10, 2013

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Estonia's Bank of Happiness

A bone to the dog is not charity. Charity is the bone shared with the dog, when you are just as hungry as the dog.

– -Jack London- –

Estonia’s Bank of Happiness

Estonia’s capital, Tallinn, is considered to be one of the world’s leading technological cities – a city in which the majority of transactions occur online. But nestled deep within the constructs and limitations of this digital world, there resides one group — whose sole purpose it is to harness the true power of the Internet for good. This “Bank of Happiness” doesn’t transact in currency or credit, rather, it utilizes the good energy of over 2,000 like-minded, people from all over the word to connect or to offer services free of charge. Read more from NPR … { read more }

Be The Change

We have so much to offer this world. Today, take inventory of the many ways you might help provide comfort and service to others within your community. Be proactive, volunteer…but mostly, get involved in creating a global happiness exchange.

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A 5-Year-Old’s Reflection On Life & Death

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November 9, 2013

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A 5-Year-Old's Reflection On Life & Death

Keep me away from the wisdom which does not cry, the philosophy which does not laugh and the greatness which does not bow before children.

– Khalil Gibran –

A 5-Year-Old’s Reflection On Life & Death

Steve Lewis has seven kids and 16 grandchildren crowding into a life lived at the loud edge of chaos, so any quietly intimate moments with his five-year-old granddaughter are rare. He is touched as she wishes him a long life in her own way. This beautiful piece shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Open the doors of your heart to the wisdom of children and their needs this week…

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The Meanings of Life

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November 8, 2013

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The Meanings of Life

The sole meaning of life is to serve humanity.

– Leo Tolstoy –

The Meanings of Life

Professor Roy Baumeister wonders why parents often say: ‘I just want my children to be happy,’ rather than: ‘I just want my children’s lives to be meaningful.” Yet we fear meaninglessness, and when we lose a sense of meaning, we get depressed. What is this thing we call meaning, and why might we need it so badly? This thoughtful article shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

We often find meaning in the little things we do, and in relationships. Look for what you really care about, and honor it with your attention.

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A $5000 Surprise, Making Her Smile, and Receiving With Grace

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

About KindSpring

For over a decade the KindSpring community has focused on inner transformation, while collectively changing the world with generosity, gratitude, and trust. We are 100% volunteer-run and totally non-commercial. KindSpring is a labor of love.

Inspiring Quote

“If we learn to open our hearts, anyone, including the people who drive us crazy, can be our teacher.”- Pema Chodron

Member of the Week

39.jpgWe are so grateful that you are a part of the KindSpring community Jacinda! Thank you for everything you do and for bringing smiles to all! Send Jacinda some KarmaBucks and say hello.

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November 7, 2013

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space EditorEditor’s note: Hey everyone! We’re thrilled to start our 21 Day Gratitude Challenge today with over 9 thousand of you from 119 countries! And we’re grateful that Yes Magazine has come on board to help us spread more gratitude in the world. More stories coming soon. 🙂 space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space kendallrhea wrote: “I left a dollar on the bus with a note that said "have a nice day"”
space liebermadonna wrote: “Our volunteer choir sang at a Harvest luncheon given for the low income community. I’m so grateful to be part of a group than can bring smiles to people’s faces. Music speaks to our souls.”
space clarsen88 wrote: “As I reflect on the day ahead, I hear the rain on the skylights and am reminded of the gift of rain. Rain falls to earth bringing life with every drop to all it touches. I am grateful for the rain.”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 A $5000 surprise and an amazing group of friends.
Story2 How do you make a sad and lonely woman smile? She had the secret.
Story3 What is as amazing as giving? Learning to receive… with grace.
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Idea of the Week

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A Journey to Inspire

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Video of the Week

Nov 07, 2013
A Journey to Inspire

A Journey to Inspire

Sri Lestari is a paraplegic who lives in Jakarta, Indonesia. She lost the use of her legs while riding as a passenger on a motorcylce and, for ten years, never left her home. Indoensia, like many places in the developing world is a hostile environment of people with disabilities. Not only are the streets, footpaths, and buildings inaccessible, but their physical limitations carry broad stygmas. But Sri was tired of life as a shut-in. So she raised the money to buy a modified motorcycle she could ride from her wheelchair and began to re-engage with the world. Now, she and her bike are on a 12,000km journey across the Indonesian achepelago, both to celebrate her own freedom and to inspire others with disabilities to find their own.
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40 Days: The Productivity of Retreat

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November 7, 2013

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40 Days: The Productivity of Retreat

Wilderness is not a luxury, but a necessity of the human spirit.

– Edward Abbey –

40 Days: The Productivity of Retreat

“When I was a child, I wanted to be a hermit. I can remember in particular a strange background desire I had for some years to live alone in a pine forest. Why a pine forest? I have no real idea. I have never spent much time at all in a real pine forest. But that was where I wanted to be. I could imagine myself dwelling in the dark, dank heart of a pinewood. Life there, I knew, would be more intense, more magical, than life at home. For a time, as a romantic and imaginative child, I entertained the idea that my desire to be surrounded by pines was due to my having been a Viking in a previous life… But beyond the Viking theme, there was something else in here: something about being alone. Wild loneliness, ringing like a bell. A sense of connection to something far greater than me, in a place which is not controlled by my kind, and is not in thrall to us. A sense of smallness, from which can come greatness.” This beautiful article shares more about the productivity of retreat. { read more }

Be The Change

Take the time to retreat from your day-to-day routine, and make a genuine effort to reconnect with yourself and your natural surroundings.

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The Place Where I Write

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November 6, 2013

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The Place Where I Write

I am rooted, but I flow.

– Virginia Woolfe –

The Place Where I Write

“Sometimes I can’t find tape to save my life, but I have all of these other objects always at my fingertips, and it is in the midst of these juxtapositions, this disorder and uncertainty, that I write. Not only does being neat and organized take time, but a tidy environment makes me feel compelled to have tidy thoughts. And never do they come that way. The disorder is freeing; may it all come any which way. May I dip into the sea of disarray and pluck out the objects that gleam in the light of the present. May I keep that which is important and push aside the rest for another day.” To author Yelizaveta Renfro, everything is temporary, and she writes in the ever-changing home of “right here, right now.” { read more }

Be The Change

Do not wait for everything to be perfect, permanent and neat. Bloom where you are planted, and start doing what brings you joy in the shelter of the present moment.

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From Ego-System to Eco-System

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November 5, 2013

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From Ego-System to Eco-System

All change is a miracle to contemplate; but it is a miracle which is taking place every instant.

– Henry David Thoreau –

From Ego-System to Eco-System

“We live in an age of profound disruptions. Global crises in finance, food, fuel, water, resource scarcity and poverty challenge every aspect of our societies. These disruptions also open up the possibilities for personal and societal renewal. To seize these possibilities we need to stop and ask ourselves some basic questions: why do our actions collectively create results that so few people want? What keeps us locked into old ways of operating? And what can we do to transform the root problems that keep us trapped in the patterns of the past?” Read on to hear the thoughts of Otto Scharmer, senior lecturer at MIT and founding chair of the Presencing Institute. { read more }

Be The Change

Write a letter to yourself as if sent from someone in the future. See if this future figure has any advice to offer for what you can do now to be a part of the shift from an ego-system to a new eco-system.

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Awakin Weekly: Reaching Underneath Our Protective Shell

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Reaching Underneath Our Protective Shell
by Pema Chodron

[Listen to Audio!]

976.jpgThere’s a slogan in the Mahayana teachings that says, "Drive all blames onto oneself." The essence of this slogan is, "When it hurts so bad, it’s because I am hanging on so tight." It’s not saying that you should beat yourself up. It’s not advocating martyrdom. What it implies is that pain comes from holding so tightly to having it our own way, and that one of the main exits we take when we find ourselves uncomfortable, when we find ourselves in an unwanted situation or an unwanted place, is to blame.

We habitually erect a barrier called blame that keeps us from communicating genuinely with others, and we fortify it with our concepts of who’s right and who’s wrong. We do that with the people who are closest to us and we do it with political systems, with all kinds of things that we don’t like about our associates or our society. It is a very common, ancient, well-perfected device for trying to feel better. Blame others. Blaming is a way to protect your heart, trying to protect what is soft and open and tender in yourself. Rather than own that pain, we scramble to find some comfortable ground.

The slogan is a helpful and interesting suggestion that you could begin to shift that deep-seated ancient habitual tendency to hang on to having it on our own terms. The way to start would be first, when you feel the tendency to blame, to try to get in touch with what it feels like to be holding on to yourself so tightly. What does it feel like to blame? What does it feel to reject? What does it feel like to hate? What does it feel like to be righteously indignant?

In each of us, there’s a lot of softness, a lot of heart. Touching that soft spot has to be the starting place. This is what compassion is all about. When we stop blaming long enough to give ourselves an open space in which to feel our soft spot, it’s as if we’re reaching down to touch a large wound that lies right underneath all that protective shell that blaming builds (…)

Compassionate action starts with seeing yourself when you start to make yourself right and when you start to make yourself wrong. At that point you could just contemplate the fact that there is a larger alternative to either of those, a more tender, shaky kind of place where you could live.

This place, if you can touch it, will help you train yourself throughout your life to open further to whatever you felt, to open further rather than shut down more. You’ll find that as you begin to commit yourself to this practice, as you begin to have a sense of celebrating the parts of yourself that you found so impossible before, something will shift in you. Something will shift permanently in you. Your ancient habitual patterns will begin to soften and you’ll begin to see the faces and hear the words of people who are talking to you.

If you begin to get in touch with whatever you feel with some kind of kindness, your protective shield will melt and you’ll find that more areas of your life are workable. As we learn to have compassion for yourself, the circle of compassion for others – what and who you work with, and how – widens.

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Reaching Underneath Our Protective Shell
What does celebrating those parts of ourselves that we’ve earlier found impossible mean to you? Can you share a personal experience that illustrates such a celebration? How can we connect with our feelings with a sense of kindness?
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: Wow! I have read Pema Chodron but I did not read this piece before. I was touched by this one. I frequently write about how closed schools and universities are for doing excessi…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Growing up is not always easy for anybody. The most difficult part of growing up for me when I was going through my young adulthood, a time to be connected with someone romantically and p…
david doane wrote: It means accepting qualities about me and others that I don’t like, rather than hiding them, denying them, repressing them, demonizing them. It means allowing and getting to know those disliked…
Amy wrote: I have read this more than once. In it, I admire your growing wisdom of self. Appreciate, very much! Love yourself as others love You. …
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5 Life Lessons From 56 Up

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November 4, 2013

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5 Life Lessons From 56 Up

If there is meaning in life at all, then there must be meaning in suffering.

– Victor Frankl –

5 Life Lessons From 56 Up

Have you ever stopped to look back and reflect on the journey of your life thus far? Do you wonder what it would be like if at different phases in the past, you had the wisdom you have now from lessons learned through the years? “The “Up” documentaries have followed 14 people from ages seven to 56 — and in the process illustrated recent discoveries about the science of a meaningful life.” Their findings reflect insights on notions like happiness and purpose which are commonly known, however become deeply compelling when seen in the context of real lives and people. { read more }

Be The Change

Talk to someone who has known you since childhood and reflect on your own journey of life to see what lessons you have so far, and how you can live your future informed by the wisdom of the past.

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