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Archive for January, 2015

Brilliant Impersonators: Celebrating The Rip-Off

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 11, 2015

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Brilliant Impersonators: Celebrating The Rip-Off

Originality is nothing but judicious imitation. The most original writers borrowed one from another.

– Voltaire –

Brilliant Impersonators: Celebrating The Rip-Off

Inventors are our heroes — the geniuses who keep progress surging forward. Copycats — we call them pirates — are a threat. But according to researchers, throughout human history, innovation has been fueled and sustained by imitation. Copying is the mighty force that has allowed the human race to move from stone knives to remote-guided drones. We’re natural-born rip-off artists. To be human is to copy. { read more }

Be The Change

Notice this week how often you make a generous gesture that is rooted in what you admired in someone else.

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16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

Gandhi’s Ten Rules for Changing the World

Maya Angelou On Resilience and Children

Ten Things Creative People Know

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Building Empathy In Healthcare

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 10, 2015

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Building Empathy In Healthcare

I think we all have empathy. We may not have enough courage to display it.

– Maya Angelou –

Building Empathy In Healthcare

Doctors are now being taught the communication of empathy, along with the ability to understand patients’ emotions, in the hope that it can facilitate more accurate diagnoses and more caring treatment. In an interview, Dr. Helen Riess, the founder of Empathetics, discusses her innovative work on fostering empathy in the physician-patient relationship and its implications for improving healthcare delivery. { read more }

Be The Change

This week lend a sympathetic ear: practice empathy with a friend, an acquaintance or even a stranger.

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A Moving Letter from Fiona Apple

6 Habits of Highly Grateful People

Gandhi’s Ten Rules for Changing the World

Ten Things Creative People Know

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Which Countries Are The Happiest?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 9, 2015

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Which Countries Are The Happiest?

It is not how much we have, but how much we enjoy, that makes happiness.

– Charles Spurgeon –

Which Countries Are The Happiest?

Is it income or social inclusion that determines the level of happiness one feels? To what extent, if any, does geography contribute to one’s happiness? In a study of more than 40,000 students representing 200 countries, researchers examined these questions to try to arrive at the science of happiness. Read on for the results and to see if your country is represented in the study! { read more }

Be The Change

What are the things that make you happy in your life? Take time today to evaluate those things that make you happiest and those things that don’t.

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Gandhi’s Ten Rules for Changing the World

Ladder to the Pleiades

Maya Angelou On Resilience and Children

Resilience: The Opposite of Depression

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“Life is Easy”

This week’s inspiring video: “Life is Easy”
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Jan 08, 2015

“Life is Easy”

"Life is easy" says Jon Jandai. "Why do we have to make it so difficult?" After pursuing "success" in Bangkok for several years, Jo dropped out of university to return to village life. There, he went back to the life he knew as a child, working 2 months of the year to grow rice (with an additional 15 minutes a day to grow vegetables), dug a couple of fish ponds, built his own homes using earthen bricks, and gave up buying clothes (he has so many clothes from friends and visitors that he has to give them away). Jo contends that to be happy, we cannot just rely on money; we have to reconnect with each other.
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From Rwandan Garbage Dump To Harvard

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 8, 2015

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From Rwandan Garbage Dump To Harvard

You cannot get through a single day without having an impact on the world around you. What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.

– Jane Goodall –

From Rwandan Garbage Dump To Harvard

After 2-year old Justus’ parents vanished during the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda, he lived in a stripped-out car in the Kigali City Dump, surviving on food scraps thrown out by nearby restaurants and hotels. Six years later, Clare Effiong was driving through Rwandan dirt roads in a taxi cab, looking for ways to “do good.” Her intuition told her to pull over when she saw a group of children, including Justus, on the side of the road. After learning that Justus wanted to go to school, Clare found him a place to stay and paid for his schooling. Justus was a brilliant student and eventually earned admission into Harvard University. Today, Justus believes passionately that “What has been done for him, he must now do for others…Self-affirmation requires him to pay it forward.” Read on to learn more about this remarkable story. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to think about what kind of impact you want your being to have on the world. Do one thing today to honor that aspiration.

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7 Ways To Change Negative Beliefs About Yourself

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6 Promising Trends For The New Nature Movement

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 7, 2015

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6 Promising Trends For The New Nature Movement

Let children walk with Nature, let them see the beautiful blendings and communions of death and life, their joyous inseparable unity…

– John Muir –

6 Promising Trends For The New Nature Movement

When we view nature as a collection of resources, it’s easy to lose sight of our place in the greater scheme of life on planet earth. Fortunately, more and more research is affirming what many feel in their bones: that connecting with the natural world is intimately tied to our health and development. Here are six promising trends for those striving to reintegrate nature into the lives of children around the world. { read more }

Be The Change

Crack your window open today and let some fresh air flow into your lungs.

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Building A Regret Free Life

6 Habits of Highly Grateful People

What School Doesn’t Teach You: How To Learn

Resilience: The Opposite of Depression

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A Brand-new 21-Day Challenge For 2015: Are You In?

Dear Friends,

To kick off the New Year, we are hosting an exciting, new 21-Day Simple Living Challenge!

In our fast-paced and increasingly complex world, we can often forget the beauty, joy, and wisdom of the simple things in life. Starting on January 9th, for 21 days, this challenge will provide daily prompts to help you rediscover the joy of simplicity, and create small, sustainable changes from the inside out. On our newly launched platform, you can share your stories and photos, explore inspiring new ideas, and connect with a vibrant online community of like-minded hearts.

To join thousands of others from around the globe, please visit: http://www.kindspring.org/challenge/join/339/

Thank you for a fantastic 2014, and we look forward to spreading more goodness together in the coming year!

In service,

KindSpring Volunteers

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Former Orphan Creates Safe Haven For Street Kids

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January 6, 2015

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Former Orphan Creates Safe Haven For Street Kids

The flute of the infinite is ceaselessly playing and its sound is love.

– Kabir –

Former Orphan Creates Safe Haven For Street Kids

Crouching in the back of a van is a young boy with a fresh injury. He’d been hit with a bottle when he got into a fight. Stanislas Lukumba, a tall, good-looking, fortyish nurse, checks for shards of glass as the driver shines his cell phone on the wound. For the past eight years, Stanislas has made nightly trips in the van, a mobile clinic that runs in Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Stanislas, a former orphan himself, intentionally stops in neighbourhoods where street children hang out. He is accompanied by Kapeta Benda Benda who interacts with street children and listens to their problems. Together, this courageous and compassionate duo engage heart-to-heart with some of Kinshasa’s most vulnerable kids, fostering trust, connectivity, and opportunities for a better life. { read more }

Be The Change

Create a safe haven for someone by offering them your full and loving presence.

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Awakin Weekly: Creating Welcoming Space

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Creating Welcoming Space
by Sister Marilyn Lacey

[Listen to Audio!]

1034.jpgOne way of measuring whether our love is genuine, however, is to examine how far we’ve extended the boundaries that determine whom we are willing to be in relationship with. When these borders reach out as far as they can go, there will be no one left outside, there will be no one cursed. There will be no more strangers. Everyone will be welcome.

Reflect for a minute on what it feels like to be welcomed. The word means, simply, ‘come and be well’ in my presence. It’s a fundamental human experience, and a very crucial one. When I am welcomed, I feel good. I can be myself. I relax and feel unself-conscious, energized, happy. On the other hand, when I am not welcomed, I doubt myself, turn inward, shrivel up. I feel excluded, not accepted, and not acceptable. This is painful. If it happens often enough, I will question my own self-worth.

Hospitality means creating welcoming space for the other. Henri J. Nouwen notes that the Dutch word for hospitality, gastvrijheid, means ‘the freedom of the guest.’ It entails creating not just physical room but emotional spaciousness where the stranger can enter and be himself or herself, where the stranger can become ally instead of threat, friend instead of enemy.

[…] That precious experience — when contemplated, cherished, and celebrated — enables me in turn to welcome others: I begin to be less fearful of the other; I start to see the stranger as gift. I become willing to create space in myself to invite the other in, and I open myself to the possibility of being changed by the presence of the other.

I invite the reader to sit with any of the wonderful hospitality stories found in the traditions of all the great religions. Mull them over; ask God for insight into them. Then ask for courage to take small steps in expanding your own circle of hospitality. These might be as tentative as smiling at the stranger in line with you at the grocery store, as deliberate as hosting a get-together for all the strangers in your apartment building, or as dramatic as volunteering to foster an unaccompanied refugee child in your own home. It might not cost you much, or it might mean going out on a limb: Can you imagine yourself during Thanksgiving dinner speaking up to your brother-in-law in defense of the undocumented, pointing out that, really, everyone is kin to us, and everyone has a human right to live where they can support their own family?

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Creating Welcoming Space
What does “creating welcoming space for the other” mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of hospitality where you felt your boundaries of relationship greatly expand? What has helped you mindfully create spaces of welcome?
susan schaller wrote: Henri Nouwen also described Hospitality as “the creation of an empty and safe place for all to discover their gifts to share.” This, along with the finding out that the original Latin and in mo…
sheetal V wrote: Creating welcoming space for the others to me includes everything from physical space of dwelling to being present for the person in any moment. I love hosting people and offering them space that wil…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Creating welcoming space for others means extending our hearts and souls outward and realizing that as we allow ourselves to Know strangers, there are no strangers. I’ve lived this way fo…
Smita wrote: During the time I spent in the Bay Area, Hawaii, and in India, I had the great privilege to experience feeling soooooo welcome into many friends’ homes. These experiences have touched me deeply…
Abhishek wrote: A welcoming space has to be an empty space i.e. empty of ‘me’ (where typically I tend to be full of ‘my’self). The empty-Me space is where the other person truly can walk in as themselves, unju…
david doane wrote: “Be welcome” was the greeting I received from my mentor, partner, and friend. He said and lived those words. His name was Jim Guinan. Being on the receiving end of his welcome, I fe…
navinsata wrote: 1. saint kabir when ever he helped needy his eyes whare at their feet,when asked why he did this his explanation was lord [narayna] comes in many forms to bless us [na jane kis roop mae mi…
navinsata wrote: true love is infinite, no boundries of ego left, to find that state of mind heart , one opens heart ,where there is no more ego no more you yours ,me mine left. only unconditional love shine ev…
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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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10 Ways To Live Simply In 2015

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January 5, 2015

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10 Ways To Live Simply In 2015

There is no greatness where there is not simplicity, goodness, and truth.

– Leo Tolstoy –

10 Ways To Live Simply In 2015

We are now entering radically changing times — and it’s only natural for our worldly expressions of simplicity to evolve in response. For more than thirty years Duange Elgin has explored the “simple life” and articulated it for tens of thousands of people all over the world. To Elgin, the most accurate way of describing this approach to living is with the metaphor of a garden. Here he describes 10 unique expressions of the simple life that we can work with. { read more }

Be The Change

Step up your simplicity: join the 21-Day Simple Living Challenge to receive a daily suggestion for 3 weeks. { more }

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