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Archive for June, 2014

Guiding Rage into Power

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 30, 2014

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Guiding Rage into Power

America is the land of the second chance – and when the gates of the prison open, the path ahead should lead to a better life.

– George W. Bush –

Guiding Rage into Power

Jacques Verduin is painfully aware of the ugly statistics: one in 107 Americans are in prison; one in 28 children have an incarcerated parent; and within 18 months, 64% will be back behind the walls. Thankfully, Verduin has shown that the empowerment and transformation of prisoners is a big part of what prison reform can look like, and with it has created a successful social experiment that is one of the best-kept secrets around. { read more }

Be The Change

Visit the Insight-Out website to learn more about Verduin’s inspiring work. { more }

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A Thousand Paper Cranes

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

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June 29, 2014

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space EditorEditor’s note: This week, we’d like to express our deepest gratitude to Poornima, our Kindness Contest winner this month. Her story about helping the homeless elderly in the streets in of India touched our hearts. Check it out in this week’s newsletter! Thank you Poornima! space
space Smile Big space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space jsmc10 wrote: “Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence.

Helen Keller”

space mandymoo900 wrote: “Sat outside with Dad to help cheer him up. We had a butterfly fly near us & I saw a tiny lizard & pointed it out to Dad. Felt like Mother Nature was looking out for us.”
space tessa wrote: “Life isn’t about waiting for the storms to pass,it’s about learning to dance I the rain! It rained last night,and now the sun is shining !”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 One day, she found a mysterious paper crane with this message attached.
Story2 The amazing story of this month’s kindness contest winner! You gotta check it out.
Story3 A disastorous flood left her house in shambles, and this small act was all she needed.
space Love Unconditionally space
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Idea of the Week

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All In On Love

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June 29, 2014

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All In On Love

The key to success, the key to happiness, is opening your mind and your heart to love.

– -John Legend- –

All In On Love

Love others. Sounds simple, right? As Vinoba Bhave confessed, “I said it was simple; I did not say that it was easy.” And this message of the simplicity of the idea, yet the ever-present challange of putting love into practice is found in all times, across all areas of life. Enter American singer-songwriter John Legend. A graduate of Penn State, passionate about music his entire life, the greatest lesson not only of his career, but of his upbringing and experiences in life has been to expand his conceptions of how to love others. He shares this insight in one of the most unlikely places–a Penn State commencement address. { read more }

Be The Change

Think of someone who challenges you in a negative way. Do something for that person today, even if just a meditation in their honor, to help draw you closer to him or her.

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Meditations On An Apple

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June 28, 2014

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Meditations On An Apple

Apples, grapes… any kind of fruit gives me the energy I need to get through my busy day.

– Kristin Chenoweth –

Meditations On An Apple

As you hold an apple, remember that the ancestor of all apple trees arose in southwestern Asia, in Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, and all across the Caucasus Mountains. Protected and nourished by observant stewards for thousands of years through their system of agriculture, their culture of the land, the apple contains their vision. We are all dependent on the living soil for our needs. In each crumb of living soil, billions of organisms are growing, reproducing, and dying. The apple contains their lives… { read more }

Be The Change

This week as you bite into any fruit practice a moment of gratitude for the many people and conditions that brought it into your hands.

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The Dalai Lama: On Why I Laugh

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June 27, 2014

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The Dalai Lama: On Why I Laugh

Anger and hatred are the real enemies that we must confront and defeat, not the “enemies” who appear from time to time in our lives.

– The Dalai Lama –

The Dalai Lama: On Why I Laugh

Those who have had the chance to be in his presence, know him — in part — by his infectious laugh. “I have been confronted with many difficulties throughout the course of my life, and my country is going through a critical period. But I laugh often, and my laughter is contagious.” In an excerpt from his book, “My Spiritual Journey”, the Dalai Lama shares his beliefs regarding the healing power of laughter, and the ability of a smile to reach all others — including our enemies. { read more }

Be The Change

Instead of becoming unraveled by the challenges of your day, make a conscious effort to find the humor surrounding you instead.

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Freedom Inc.: Dropouts Being the Change

This week’s inspiring video: Freedom Inc.: Dropouts Being the Change
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Video of the Week

Jun 26, 2014
Freedom Inc.: Dropouts Being the Change

Freedom Inc.: Dropouts Being the Change

Homeless, jobless, high school dropouts hanging out in parking lots, doing nothing. These are the dispossessed youth that came together to end violence within and against low income communities of color in Madison, Wisconsin. Freedom Inc., one of four 2013 Torchlight Prize winners, started out 15 years ago as a group of Hmong girls coming together in a parking lot. Today, Freedom Inc. works to build leadership and organizational capacities to help marginalized communities create a world they want to live in.
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The Happiness Index

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June 26, 2014

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The Happiness Index

The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.

– Martin Luther King, Jr. –

The Happiness Index

Bhutan is a country roughly the size of Vermont and New Hampshire combined, but with less than half the population, sandwiched between China and India. A Fulbright scholar on a visit there asks, is it demolition or progress for the country to move from an isolated, largely self-sustaining Buddhist kingdom to a modern democracy? As workers build a new road to a cliff temple and secret holy lake, her guide says, “It is the thirst of people for an easier life. But there is a trade-off between peace and convenience.” Read more about what that trade-off entails for the country that birthed the concept of Gross National Happiness. { read more }

Be The Change

Experiment with such trade-offs between peace and convenience in your own life. What could be changed and what left alone to flower in its own way?

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Unleashing Empathy Through Emotional Learning

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June 25, 2014

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Unleashing Empathy Through Emotional Learning

When you start to develop your powers of empathy and imagination, the whole world opens up to you.

– Susan Sarandon –

Unleashing Empathy Through Emotional Learning

According to a recent Harvard study, cultivating empathy among students has been linked to a variety of desirable outcomes, including positive peer relationships, better communication skills, and fewer interpersonal conflicts. Author Lennon Flowers examines how it is part of a growing education trend broadly referred to as “social and emotional learning,” where children, teachers and parents learn to manage emotions and effectively collaborate with others, which ultimately leads to a better learning environment. { read more }

Be The Change

If you want to try to better understand – and increase your own empathy toward others – click on the link to help you get started. { more }

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7 Keys To A Good Death

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June 24, 2014

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7 Keys To A Good Death

They also serve who only stand and wait.

– John Milton –

7 Keys To A Good Death

“Some years ago, I helped tend to a friend of mine who was dying of cancer. Near the end of his life, he had reached a place of equanimity around dying. But instead of honoring his wishes for a peaceful death, his doctors ordered aggressive chemotherapy treatment, which did nothing to halt his cancer. The treatments caused him immense suffering, rendering him unable to sleep, eat, or converse with family and friends as he was dying. Unfortunately, deaths like my friend’s are not that rare…Is there a better way? Is a “good death” just an oxymoron? Or can the experience of death be far more positive — an opportunity for growth and meaning?” Charles Garfield shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Think about the ways that this article inspires hope in your own life, and take action on one or more of these reflections.

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Awakin Weekly: The Order on the Other Side of Chaos

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Order on the Other Side of Chaos
by Margaret Wheatley

[Listen to Audio!]

996.jpgI use the word "chaos" to describe those times in an organization when people are confused, don’t know what to do, and feel overwhelmed by information that they can’t make sense of. If we recognize chaos as a potentially generative force in our organization, then the first task, when chaos erupts, is not to shut it down, not to reach for early closure, not to immediately move back to our past comfort level. At those moments, what people do not need is for someone else to come in and make sense of it all for them. Nor do they need the other normal strategy, which is to back away from all of this information and just work a piece of it. What they need instead are processes by which they can stay with the discomfort of that information long enough that they get knocked off their certainty, long enough for them to reach the clarity that they no longer know what works, that their model, their frame for organizing this problem or this organization doesn’t work any more.

That’s what I call chaos, when people move into such deep confusion that they let go of their present conceptions of how to solve a problem. When they move into that place of not knowing, and stay there for a while, what happens is that the process of "self organization" kicks in.

Living systems, when confronted with change, have the capacity to fall apart so that they can reorganize themselves to be better adapted to their current environment. We always knew that things fell apart, we didn’t know that organisms have the capacity to reorganize, to self-organize.

We didn’t know this until the Noble-Prize-winning work of Ilya Prigogine in the late 1970’s. But you can’t self-organize, you can’t transform, you can’t get to bold new answers unless you are willing to move into that place of confusion and not-knowing — which I call chaos.

In my work, I find that you can create intentional chaos by overloading people with important and relevant information that they can’t make sense of. We help people generate information that finally overwhelms them. The information has to be relevant, and it has to be important. It has to deal with big questions. People get scared and frustrated, and they want to problem-solve their way out of the chaos. But we don’t let them. We keep generating even more information. Finally they let go.

Once they let go, they have the capacity to come up with bold solutions that integrate all of the information. At the other side of chaos, you get a new kind of order — an order that is adaptive, that is transforming, that is all the things we want an organization to be.

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The Order on the Other Side of Chaos
What do you make of chaos being a potentially generative force? Can you share an experience of a time when you found order on the other side of chaos? What has helped you develop the patience to find order on the other side of chaos?
Abhishek Thakore wrote: In my experience the person holding space during chaos is of essence. Just as a natural child birth has to be facilitated by a skillful mid-wife, the birth of new adaptive order from chaos requires a…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: “One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star.” Nietzsche. Interesting article, especially given the fact that the rate of change is faster than Eve…
me wrote: Time. Failing again and again. Sitting back . . . Rest and contemplation. Learning. Reaching beyond myself and circumstance. New friends. Trust. . . But, ult…
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