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Archive for May 12, 2015

Kindness Weekly: Random Acts of Generosity

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

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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.

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“What goes around comes around. Do good and good will follow you. For whatsoever a man sows, that shall he also reap.” –unknown

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thumb.jpgWayfarer! He truly lives by what he shares on his profile, “Kindness is the outward expression of Love – and Love is the stuff of the universe.” 🙂 Send Wayfarer some KarmaBucks and say hello.

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May 12, 2015

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space EditorEditor’s note: Dear Friends, We continue to be inspired by your stories. This week we were especially touched by the serendipity in one of the stories. A girl listened to her inner voice to do a small act for someone she would never see, and within days, someone returned the kindness to her in the same exact quantity. Her story is listed below as "Random act of generosity Part I & II" below. space
space Smile Big space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space KatBeLove wrote: “Today is the USPS food collection day. I donated a bag of my favorite organic foods. Sharing organic foods makes me blissful!”
space SmoothSkin wrote: “Bought a hungry friend a sandwich as a surprise”
space SM2000 wrote: “Today morning I bought 4 veg patties at the airport. I ate 2 and asked one of the cleaning staff if he would like to have some. He accepted with a smile full of grace and it felt really good……”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 Random act of generosity. (Part I)
Story2 Random act of generosity. What goes around comes around. (Part II)
Story3 An unexpected gesture of kindness that carried him home in the rain.
space Love Unconditionally space
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Idea of the Week

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For more ideas, visit the ideas section of our website.
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David Whyte on the True Meaning of Friendship, Love & Heartbreak

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 12, 2015

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David Whyte on the True Meaning of Friendship, Love & Heartbreak

Friendship is always a sweet responsibility, never an opportunity.

– Khalil Gibran –

David Whyte on the True Meaning of Friendship, Love & Heartbreak

After a certain age, words flow from us, often without a second thought. So how can we come back into a conscious relationship with some of the most common words in our language? How can we return with fresh eyes to words like love and friendship? Poet David Whyte dives deeply into these terms, and encourages us to return to their visceral truths. { read more }

Be The Change

Pick a word to write a poem about. And don’t forget to smile!

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Awakin Weekly: Mistake of Immense Proportion

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Mistake of Immense Proportion
by Jacob Needleman

[Listen to Audio!]

tow1.jpgSince the beginning of recorded history, man has been haunted by the intimation that he lives in a world of mere appearances. In every teaching and spiritual philosophy of the past we find the idea that whatever happens to us, for good or ill, is brought about by deeper forces behind the world that seems so real to us. We are further told that this real world is not accessible to the senses or understandable by the ordinary mind.

But, and this is a point that is not usually understood, we live in a world of inner appearances as well. We are not what we perceive ourselves to be. There is another identity, our real self, hidden behind the self that we believe ourselves to be.

It is only through awakening to this deeper self within that we can penetrate behind the veil of appearances and make contact with a truer world outside of ourselves. It is because we live on the surface of ourselves that we live on the surface of the greater world, never participating—except in rare moments which do not last and which are not understood—in the wholeness of reality.

It is this all-important second aspect of the ancient wisdom, the aspect that speaks of our inner world, that modern thought has been blind to. And the question about the meaning of life is inextricably linked to the need for contact with the real self beneath the surface of our everyday thoughts, emotions, and sensations.

Without this contact, the external world of appearances assumes for us the proportions of an overwhelmingly compelling force. We cannot see the real world because we are not in contact with the deeper powers of thought and sensing within ourselves that could perceive it. Because of this, it is inevitable that we experience the external world as the strongest force in our lives. This is the meaning and the origin of materialism.

The error, or, to use Christian language, the “sin” of materialism has at its root nothing to do with greed or possessiveness. Nor does it involve, at its root, some philosophical view about matter and spirit in their usual meanings. No, the error of materialism is an error of reality perception, based on lack of experiential contact with the inner world. What we know as greed and possessiveness, with their attendant traits of cruelty and human exploitation, are results of this ignorance of the inner world. We turn to the superficially perceived outer world for that which can only be obtained through deep access to the inner self. Materialism is not a “sin”; it is a mistake.

But a mistake of immense proportions, and with deadly consequences. It is like searching for water on the surface of the moon to search for meaning in the external world. Like grasping a picture of food and trying to eat it. Not only meaning, but also health, safety, service, love, and power can be obtained only through turning to reality. The unreal world can never yield these things to man.

About the Author: Jacob Needleman is an American philosopher, author and religious scholar.

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Mistake of Immense Proportion
What do you understand by awakening to the deeper self within? Can you share a personal story of a time that you were able to go beyond outer and inner appearances and connect with a truer world? What practice helps you make this connection?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Reading this writing is like listening to my inner voice with no noise disrupting this deep listening. It feels like being in the infinite sky with no clouds obstructing the clear space. …
david doane wrote: Each of us is very complex, with many layers and facets, with core and surface, with stage and backstage, with conscious and unconscious, with persona and shadow. My challenge and responsibilit…
AJ wrote: When I was a youth, I recall my doctor (after checking my reflexes with his little rubber hammer) assessed me to be “hyper reflexive”. As I grew, I wondered if the “hyper” in me exte…
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