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Archive for July, 2015

Kindness Weekly: Being Present

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.

Inspiring Quote

The present moment is filled with joy and happiness. If you are attentive, you will see it. –Thich Nhat Hanh

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July 24, 2015

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space EditorEditor’s note: Dear Friends, I’ve often noticed that there are so many opportunities to be a little kinder, a little more graciously giving, if I can just be more aware and more present to my surroundings. The featured stories this week honor moments like these, where someone was present enough to notice that there was a need and immediately followed their instincts and stepped-in to fill it. –Guri space
space Smile Big space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space Bluelobster wrote: “this week I am consciously trying to make eye contact or have a short conversation with the panhandlers or street people that cross my path.”
space Mel37865 wrote: “Last night I went with Dylan and the Salvation army youth group to help feed the homeless at the knoxville area rescue ministry”
space pyronik wrote: “I pulled lots of grass to give the bunnies a treat, & I saved some of my chocolate for husband – that counts as kindness to him & kindness to me ;-)”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 Two quarters worth of kindness create a beautiful connection.
Story2 A teacher organizes a “Kind Bomb” at her work.
Story3 One wallet is lost but another beautiful purse is found.
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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Music And The Developing Brain

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 24, 2015

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Music And The Developing Brain

Where words leave off, music begins.

– Heinrich Heine –

Music And The Developing Brain

Can music make you smarter? Research demonstrates it most certainly can. In fact, a 1993 study of college students showed them performing better on spatial reasoning tests after listening to a Mozart sonata. But, what is the connection? And, more importantly — why would acquiring musical skills influence language and other higher brain functions? Read this fascinating article to learn why. { read more }

Be The Change

Find ways in which you might incorporate a little more music into your day.

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Unseen Connectivity

This week’s inspiring video: Unseen Connectivity
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Video of the Week

Jul 23, 2015
Unseen Connectivity

Unseen Connectivity

Spoken word artist Marshall Davis Jones eloquently reminds us how connected we all are. "We are more than us… It is when we are connected that we are most alive… This universe is one big game of connect the dots." In this TEDx performance, Jones hope that when we are gone, someone will look back and say: “We were here, and when we were, we lived not for us, because we were more than us, we where all of us, we… were… one.”
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Saying Farewell To A Family Pet

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 23, 2015

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Saying Farewell To A Family Pet

The story of life is quicker than the blink of an eye, the story of love is hello, goodbye.

– Jimi Hendrix –

Saying Farewell To A Family Pet

There are many in life who walk beside us. Be they human or animal, we are touched by those beings who accompany us through the unfolding mystery of space and time. And even knowing that the spiral of life moves ever onward, from birth to death and round again, how, when the time comes, do we say goodbye to those we love? Shannon Hayes shares the story of Spriggan, and of holding sadness, joy, and truth in the moment of a friend’s passing. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you say hello to someone, take a moment to look them in the eyes as you ask how they’re doing.

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Eulogy Vs Resume Virtues

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July 22, 2015

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Eulogy Vs Resume Virtues

Beautify your inner dialogue. Beautify your inner world with love light and compassion. Life will be beautiful.

– Amit Ray –

Eulogy Vs Resume Virtues

Do you want to be remembered for the bullet points on your resume, or for the way you interacted with others on a daily basis? In a culture that often greatly favors the former, how do we cultivate the intangible values that form the cornerstones of a higher self? New York Times columnist David Brooks wrestles with these complex questions, and poses further inquiries to help guide our thinking and growth. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a look at your resume and ask: “what’s between the lines?” How accurately does your resume reflect who you are and want to be in the world?

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Stop Worrying About How Much You Matter

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July 21, 2015

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Stop Worrying About How Much You Matter

Too many people overvalue what they are not and undervalue what they are.

– Malcolm S. Forbes –

Stop Worrying About How Much You Matter

There are some who will exude happiness well into their nineties. And, others who willl fall into the predicament of feeling life has lost its purpose. But, what makes the difference? And, more importantly — how do we maintain our inner sense of relevance through every circumstance? The answer could be much simpler than you might realize. Read on to discover simple practices to infuse a little more joy into your day. { read more }

Be The Change

Take time to talk with a stranger, enjoy a rest along a well-wooded path. Notice what happens when you don’t feel the need to prove or to fix anything.

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Awakin Weekly: Effects of Adversity

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Effects of Adversity
by Eranda Jayawickreme

[Listen to Audio!]

1082.jpgAdversity may help people distinguish between events they can really control by changing their environment versus uncontrollable events. While they cannot change the environment in the latter case, they can control their response to them by accepting and adjusting their beliefs to fit with facts on the ground. Thus, on receiving a serious health diagnosis, I would respond positively by accepting the diagnosis and acknowledging that I have led a full life and would soon be going to a “better place.” Adversity may thus “humble” us in a way that is vital for our character growth, by educating us about the limits of the self, the limits of our control on the world, the weaknesses in our character, and the appropriate place of the self in the universe. In other words, adversity may free us from the tyranny of ego, by promoting a healthy sense of humility and helping us answer the question, “Why be good?” with the best response possible.

But we still don’t know everything about the effects of adversity. We don’t know, for example, what type and degree of adversity is “best” for our character, and it is important to be clear that some types of adversity provide few silver linings, if any. Not too long ago, Blackie and I traveled to a country with a terrible recent history of ethno-political conflict to talk with war survivors. During our travels, we heard heartbreaking stories of death, rape, injury, and loss. One young woman who remained positive and upbeat throughout our conversation had been severely wounded by gunfire. A second woman continued to search for her most likely dead son. A man of strong faith had no stable home apart from his visits to the treatment center we were visiting. We were stunned into silence, and as we drove off that evening, we asked ourselves, “Why be good when life is stacked against you?”

It may take a lifetime for these people to recover from such trauma, if ever. The fact that all of us will encounter tragedy at some point in our life does not necessarily mean that we should actively seek it out or be indifferent when suffering befalls others. And of course, we must do our utmost to protect people from severe suffering. But the people we met all had admirable faith, and some remained remarkably graceful and positive despite all they had suffered. The fact that these people were able to continue about their lives without succumbing to complete despair — and even respond with forgiveness and grace — is one of the greatest testaments to the human spirit and fundamental human goodness I can imagine.

About the Author: Eranda Jayawickreme is an assistant professor of psychology at Wake Forest University.

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Effects of Adversity
What do you make of adversity helping answer the question ‘Why be good?’ Can you share a personal experience of a time adversity helped you grow? What helps you to avoid despair when faced with adversity?
Dan Duncan wrote: When it is really adversity and not just inconvenience, I get through it one breath at a time. And I remind myself of G.K. Chesterton’s aphorism: “Inconvenience is an adventure wrongly considered, an…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Why be good? Because being good opens the opportunity for others to be as well. I interpreted good as Compassionate; being compassionate serves everyone and often costs nothing but energy and t…
david doane wrote: There are a lot of comments in this piece that I had difficulty with. For example, I believe all events are uncontrollable — at best I have some influence on events. I believe our contro…
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Martin Luther King on the 6 Pillars of Non-Violent Resistance

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 20, 2015

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Martin Luther King on the 6 Pillars of Non-Violent Resistance

Non-violence is not a garment to be put on and off at will. Its seat is in the heart, and it must be an inseparable part of our being.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

Martin Luther King on the 6 Pillars of Non-Violent Resistance

Non-violence is a term one often hears next to names like Martin Luther King and Gandhi. It may bring to mind boycotts and “passive”forms of resistance — but when one digs deeper into the writings of Martin Luther King, we find so much more underlies the spirit and loving force of non-violence. Maria Popova of Brainpickings walks through six tenets of non-violent resistance, as outlined by Martin Luther King in his essay “An Experiment in Love.” { read more }

Be The Change

Who can you forgive today?

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Uncommon Gratitude

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July 19, 2015

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Uncommon Gratitude

Does a place have consciousness, such that it can receive gratitude for what it has given just by being itself?

– Trebbe Johnson –

Uncommon Gratitude

“When I consider the places I’ve loved and lost, I long to bring them comfort…I who have been gifted by a place wish to figure out some way to return the gesture. But what kind of gift would be right for a scraped hillside slated for fracking? For calves confined to life in crates? For all the polluted rivers, clearcut forests, diminishing wildernesses, and smoldering dumps?” { read more }

Be The Change

Open your eyes to the gifts of nature around you and ask yourself how you might return them. What can you do to honor the earth?

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Where Children Play: Photographs of Playgrounds of the World

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July 18, 2015

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Where Children Play: Photographs of Playgrounds of the World

Children help us to mediate between the ideal and the real.

– Juliet Kinchin –

Where Children Play: Photographs of Playgrounds of the World

Photographer James Mollison captures the sacred spaces of childhood around the world in Playground. He became fascinated by how the great diversity of playgrounds around the world has shaped the experience of childhood, calling them “a space of excitement, games,bullying, laughing, tears, teasing, fun, and fear.”This post shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Think back this week to how playgrounds served you in childhood, and perhaps find a way to create a sacred space for a child you know.

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