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Archive for 2014

Awakin Weekly: What Is Your Storyteller Doing?

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
What Is Your Storyteller Doing?
by Mary O’Malley

[Listen to Audio!]

1015.jpgAt 8:28 AM I slipped into the pool at my gym for my half hour swim. There was a water aerobics class that began at 9:00, which left just enough time for me to complete my swim. At around 8:55 a number of people had jumped into the first lane and were chatting before the class. I was in the second lane and a man was in the third. At 8:56 I started my last lap which takes a little over a minute. After I had made the final turn, just a few strokes before I ran into her, I noticed a woman who had come under the floating lane barriers and was standing right in the middle of my lane. These lanes are big enough for two people to do laps, so she could easily have stood at the side of the lane to let me pass. But because she was in the middle, there was barely enough room to squeeze by her, and as I did, she hit me with her arm.

Can you imagine what my storyteller was doing? It was affronted. Anger came roaring through me, accompanied with the feeling of being right and making her wrong! The stories in my head were saying: “The class starts at 9:00! This is my lane until 9:00. How dare she!” As I got into the shower, awareness kicked in and saw what the storyteller was doing. […] I could see that this is how wars are started, and I didn’t want to allow that level of unconsciousness to take me over! I could also recognize that many times in my life I had played the role of the woman in my lane and felt great compassion for that part of me. And finally my heart opened to the woman. I don’t know what caused her to act as she did, but I didn’t have to put her out of my heart!

There are 3 reason why I wanted to share this with you:

First: We have this strange idea that peace will come when we get rid of the parts we don’t like and hold onto the ones we do! That only brings continual struggle inside. Instead, awakening is about getting to know all the various parts of our storyteller. The more you can see its fears, judgments and despairs, the more you don’t take it personally. And when something very deep has been triggered, its visit will become much shorter, and rather than you getting caught in more struggle, it will wake up the wondrous healing of your own heart (both for yourself and for others!).

Second: In this world that is so aligned with the good/bad, right/wrong view of the world that is at the heart of each of our storytellers, there is nothing inside of you to be ashamed of! We all have these parts. We are just very good at pretending that we don’t – both to ourselves and to others! And these parts deserve kindness just like you do when you have had a difficult day.

Third: The core flavor of my childhood was invasion, and so my storyteller was built with a huge amount of fear about being overtaken by life. I have, over the years, brought my attention to this part to the extent that it is very quiet most of the time. But there evidently was still some vestige of this old fear, so life put me in a situation to bring it up – not to disturb me, or punish me – but so I could see it more clearly without identifying with it and bring it into the healing of my heart.

So the next time you are caught in reaction, become curious about what your storyteller is doing. Life is giving you these situations so you can see more clearly and thus unhook more cleanly from the storyteller’s world of judgment and fear.

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What Is Your Storyteller Doing?
How do you relate to the notion that there is nothing inside of you to be ashamed of? Can you share a personal experience of a time when you became aware of what your storyteller was doing? What helps you avoid identifying yourself with your stories?
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: “We are the Stories we tell.” I am a Professional Storyteller. Yes, that is my “real” job. 🙂 Much of my work is about building bridges between people & cultures, serving both myself and ot…
david doane wrote: Until he recently became too ill to write, Conrad shared his wisdom weekly with all of us on Awakin, always ending his reflection ‘with kind and loving regards, Con’. He loved this sort of shar…
david doane wrote: As to there being nothing inside of me to be ashamed of, my thoughts are that everything in me is me, and all that is in me is very much like all that is in everyone else, and we are all capabl…
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Awakin Wednesdays:
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Some Good News

Ten Things Creative People Know
The Process of Creating New Habits
Slomo: The Neurologist Turned Slow Motion Skater

Video of the Week

The Innovation of Loneliness

Kindness Stories

Marks Of Kindness

Global call with Amit Dungarani!
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About
Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start an Awakin gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

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The Age of Outrospection

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 21, 2014

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The Age of Outrospection

I believe empathy is the most essential quality of civilization.

– Roger Ebert –

The Age of Outrospection

In the age of outrospection, the journey lies in taking a whole-hearted leap into the shoes of another. Outrospection, defined by Maptia as understanding “life through the eyes of others, fostering an adventurous curiosity for other lives and places beyond our own experience.” Widening our circle of compassion from loved ones to embrace all beings with care and goodwill not only has intrinsic value, but can also foster peace-building, help combat climate change, and the many other cross-cutting issues worldwide. To start: listen to somebody else’s story, and tell your own. This article, which includes some of the most current ideas and perennial reflections, shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

“Outrospect” though space and time by thinking about how one of your actions today may affect others in other countries or future generations. Does this change your actions?

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Ten Things Creative People Know

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July 20, 2014

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Ten Things Creative People Know

Creativity is not found just in the chosen few who exhibit artistic talent. It is a force that flows through every single one of us, allowing us to dream things up and make them happen.

– Peggy Taylor and Charlie Murphy –

Ten Things Creative People Know

Do you consider yourself creative? If you answer, “no,” you are in the majority; most people don’t think they are creative. It turns out, though, that you don’t have to be a great artist to be creative. Creativity is simply our ability to dream things up and make them happen. Cooking breakfast, planting a garden, even developing a business plan are all creative acts. Creative expression boosts serotonin levels, decreases anxiety, and opens the door to the inner world of our imaginations. It is here that we make meaning of our lives and that motivation takes root. The more creative we are, the more capacity we have to imagine what’s possible and make those visions real. Read on to learn ten things that creative people know that may help you unleash your own creative impulse. { read more }

Be The Change

This week, look for an opportunity to use your hands and your creativity to make something you would normally buy.

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America’s Most Tenacious Gardeners

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 19, 2014

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America's Most Tenacious Gardeners

Growing food was the first activity that gave us enough prosperity to stay in one place, form complex social groups, tell our stories, and build our cities.

– Barbara Kingsolver –

America’s Most Tenacious Gardeners

Camden, just across the Delaware River from Philadelphia, has about the worst of any city in America. It’s been ranked at various times as both the poorest and the most dangerous. As so many flee the violence and crime, it may seem strange that others are literally putting down roots. A recent study revealed that Camden’s gardens may be the fastest growing in the country. The city needs fresh food, and residents are doing what it takes to grow it. It’s part of the untold story of Camden: a story in which the residents of this blighted city are the protagonists, quietly working to make Camden a place where, one day, you might want to live. This inspiring article shares more. { read more }

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Learn more about urban gardening efforts in your area. If you are lucky enough to have your own garden with fruit trees and/or vegetables, consider ways to share your bounty with the underserved in your community this summer.

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The Science of Play

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 18, 2014

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The Science of Play

Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children play is serious learning. Play is really the work of childhood

– Fred Rogers –

The Science of Play

Psychiatrist Stuart Brown, founder of the National Institute for Play suggests that the rough-and-tumble play of children actually prevents violent behavior and that play can grow human talents and character across a lifetime. Read more of his thoughts about what he calls the science of play. { read more }

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Let your definition of play expand this week, as you find the fun side of everything you do.

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The Innovation of Loneliness

This week’s inspiring video: The Innovation of Loneliness
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Video of the Week

Jul 17, 2014
The Innovation of Loneliness

The Innovation of Loneliness

While our focus is shifting towards individual achievements over community, more and more people are feeling lonely. They feel vulnerable opening up to others for warm, friendly, heart-to-heart conversations. Then, along comes social media… As people share and chat from islands of isolation, filtering and massaging information, they are undermining the genuine credibility of conversation. Bits and pieces of tweets, posts and chats aren’t allowing people either to open up or understand others. Are these online connections actually helping with loneliness, or they are making it worse? Could this social media activity be chipping away at your quiet time as well, when you could think and reflect? Learn more in this fast-pace, animated video based on the work of Sherry Turkle and Dr. Yair Amichal-Hamburger.
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Advocate of the Unwatched Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 17, 2014

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Advocate of the Unwatched Life

Artmaking is making the invisible, visible.

– Marcel Duchamp –

Advocate of the Unwatched Life

“The matter of being alive is something to be investigated. I think we take it for granted too much. That we’re going to wake up in the morning and just go on, do our stuff, run around, go to our jobs, have careers, and all that…In my work I’m trying to find the unmediated self. I think there are aspects of self that are unchanged, that echo the past, the present, and the future. I’m interested in that part of reality, not the culturally created one, although that’s a layer.” Squeak Carnwath is one of the best known artists in the Bay Area, California. This interview with her, which was first published in 1993, is a poignant and thoughtful discussion on what it is to be a witness of life. { read more }

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Pay attention to your breathing and the feeling of your body, and investigate the sensations of being alive.

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The Process of Creating New Habits

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July 16, 2014

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The Process of Creating New Habits

We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then, is not an act, but a habit.

– Aristotle –

The Process of Creating New Habits

Have you ever wanted to change a bad habit or perhaps just form a new, good habit, but then found that you lack the discipline to stick to your intention? if so changing that pattern might not be as difficult as you think. This article share about the research behind forming new habits and also some guidelines for getting started. { read more }

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Make it a point to try and form a new habit that will create a positive effect on either your, or someone else’s life.

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A Physicist Speaks On Randomness & Choice

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July 15, 2014

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A Physicist Speaks On Randomness & Choice

Mankind’s greatest gift, also its greatest curse, is that we have free choice. We can make our choices built from love or from fear.

– Elisabeth Kubler-Ross –

A Physicist Speaks On Randomness & Choice

“When you look at your life…if you think about all the details of what happened to you, you will find that there was a time where you had the extra cup of coffee, where if you hadn’t, you wouldn’t have met Person A. When I look back in my life, I could find so many instances like that…And the course of your life depends on how you react to those opportunities and challenges that the randomness presents to you. If you’re awake and paying attention, you will find that things happen. They might seem good, they might seem bad but the important thing is how you reacted.” Leonard Mlodinow is a physicist and the author of several books including “The Drunkard’s Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives” and “Feynmen’s Rainbow: A Search for Beauty in Physics and in Life.” In this fascinating interview, he speaks about free will, consciousness, chaos, beauty, spirituality, and Star Trek. { read more }

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Try to see the things that happen to you in life, both the good and the bad things, as opportunities to practice responding with love.

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Awakin Weekly: Money is not Wealth

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Money is not Wealth
by Alan Watts

[Listen to Audio!]

1022.jpgMoney is a way of measuring wealth but is not wealth in itself. A chest of gold coins or a fat wallet of bills is of no use whatsoever to a wrecked sailor alone on a raft. He needs real wealth, in the form of a fishing rod, a compass, an outboard motor with gas, and a female companion. But this ingrained and archaic confusion of money with wealth is now the main reason we are not going ahead full tilt with the development of our technological genius for the production of more than adequate food, clothing, housing, and utilities for every person on earth.

It is not going to be at all easy to explain this to the world at large, because mankind has existed for perhaps one million years with relative material scarcity, and it is now roughly a mere one hundred years since the beginning of the industrial revolution. As it was once very difficult to persuade people that the earth is round and that it is in orbit around the sun, or to make it clear that the universe exists in a curved space-time continuum, it may be just as hard to get it through to “common sense” that the virtues of making and saving money are obsolete.

It is an oversimplification to say that this is the result of business valuing profit rather than product, for no one should be expected to do business without the incentive of profit. The actual trouble is that profit is identified entirely with money, as distinct from the real profit of living with dignity and elegance in beautiful surroundings.

To try to correct this irresponsibility by passing laws would be wide of the point, for most of the law has as little relation to life as money to wealth. On the contrary, problems of this kind are aggravated rather than solved by the paperwork of politics and law. What is necessary is at once simpler and more difficult: only that financiers, bankers, and stockholders must turn themselves into real people and ask themselves exactly what they want out of life — in the realization that this strictly practical and hard–nosed question might lead to far more delightful styles of living than those they now pursue. Quite simply and literally, they must come to their senses — for their own personal profit and pleasure.

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Money is not Wealth
What does wealth mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of a time when you understood the “real profit of living with dignity and elegance in beautiful surroundings”? What do you want out of your life?
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Wealth is so much more the money. Wealth is friends, Wealth is health. Wealth is Experiences that bring you illumination, fulfillment, enjoyment. Wealth is not a big bank account, but rather being ri…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: As I was growing up in a poor Hindu family, i knew the difference between money and wealth. Every morning, my mother used to chant in Sanskrit in her melodious voice. I loved sitting besid…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Namaste and HUGS to you, thank you so much for your thoughtful response and how & what your mother spoke of; powerful. Here’s to us all finding balance and in realizing the inner fulfillmen…
Abhishek wrote: To me. economics and our skewed understanding of it is at the heart of our challenges….we have locked up value, as well as our capacity to create it by attaching a ‘price’ to it, while, in fa…
david doane wrote: Financially, wealth means having a lot of money. Other than financially, wealth means ‘having’ or being in love, peace, and good health. Dignity is a sense of self worth, recognizing and …
Share/Read Reflections >>
Awakin Wednesdays:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and later became “Wednesdays”, which now ripple out to living rooms around the world. To join, RSVP online.

RSVP For Wednesday

Some Good News

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A Kindness That Has Become A Habit

Global call with Jake Harriman!
159.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

About
Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start an Awakin gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

Forward to a Friend

InnerNet Weekly is an email service that delivers a little bit of wisdom to 86,858 subscribers each week. We never spam nor do we host any advertising. Archives, from the last 14+ years, are freely available online.

You can unsubscribe anytime, within seconds.

A Gift Economy offering of ServiceSpace.org (2012)

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