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Archive for August, 2015

The Whole Child & Urban Education

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 24, 2015

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The Whole Child & Urban Education

If you just bring everybody together then good things will happen.

– Ida Oberman –

The Whole Child & Urban Education

In this rich interview, Ida Oberman, founder of the Community School for Creative Education in East Oakland, California, talks to Richard Whittaker about applying the enrichment of a Waldorf education to urban public schools. { read more }

Be The Change

Think of education beyond the three Rs, like poetry, art and music. And support some creative act today in yourself or in someone you love.

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Stunning Images of the Power of Education

Before I Go: A Neurosurgeon’s Final Reflections On Mortality

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Service Surf Dog Ricochet

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 23, 2015

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Service Surf Dog Ricochet

Sometimes the best thing about us isn’t what we’re gifted with, but what we can make others feel just by our very nature of existing.

– Sarah Noffke –

Service Surf Dog Ricochet

Ricochet was a puppy prodigy. From the moment she was born, she was training to become a service dog for a person with a disability. As she grew, it was clear her talents were undeniable; but her free, youthful spirit could not be contained — Ricochet would give in to her instincts to run playfully and chase birds and small animals. A definite no-no for a service dog. Rather than push harder to make Ricochet something she was not or give up on her entirely, her trainer had the heart and vision to see that Ricochet’s special talents and energy could be used to help in other ways. Turns out Ricochet’s unique gift is surfing! Watch the story of how Ricochet became a SURFice dog helping charitable foundations and people with disabilities. Paw-abunga! { read more }

Be The Change

Everyone has a special gift to give to the world. How can you help someone else apply their unique talents to realize their fullest potential?

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Kindness Weekly: 21-Day Mindfulness Challenge

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

About KindSpring

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

Mindfulness is about love and loving life. When you cultivate this love, it gives you clarity and compassion for life, and your actions happen in accordance with that. –Jon Kabat-Zinn

Member of the Week

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August 22, 2015

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Small Acts of Kindness

space charleygirl13 wrote: “I had the privilege of delivering a “sneak attack” of a Gerber daisy (bright red – so pretty!) to a coworker who is under a lot of pressure. Best part – it’s totally anonymous. So much fun!”
space gmahin wrote: “Provided a shallow dish of water for birds and lizards today…we are experiencing smoke from all the fires in the west plus relative humidity less than 5%….very dry”
space kidd352 wrote: “Gave my neighbor some vegetables from my garden. She was grateful.”
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 He was facing the first thunderstorm in a new country when this lady shows up by his side.
Story2 As she glanced back on the road, she saw an injured hawk lying in the middle of the lane.
Story3 Sometimes it’s the simple things. A chain of kindness extends to everyone in her life.
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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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We Can’t Eat GDP

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 22, 2015

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We Can't Eat GDP

Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything.

– -George Bernard Shaw- –

We Can’t Eat GDP

What does GDP – gross domestic product – fail to account for? When we really start to dig into the numbers, we find that this long-held standard for a countryâs âsuccessâ ignores many of the positives (and negatives) that determine a populationâs welfare and well-being. But new possibilities are already out there. Lorenzo Fioramonti shares exciting ideas for new measurements of progress, and what they can tell us about ourselves, and where weâre going. { read more }

Be The Change

How do you measure progress in your own life? Would your top three make it into the GDP?

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Three Tricks to Help Find Your Flow

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 21, 2015

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Three Tricks to Help Find Your Flow

When you are living in your sweet spot you feel … calm and energetic, accomplished and joyful.

– Deepak Chopra –

Three Tricks to Help Find Your Flow

As more and more things continue to drain and distract our attention, it is imperative that we uncover ways to gain back our focus. In this inspiring article, Dr. Christine Carter, author of “The Sweet Spot,” details three tricks to help create an environment that is relaxed, comfortable and productive, versus a mental state that is filled with anxiety and stress. { read more }

Be The Change

Next time you have an important task to tackle, be sure to make an effort to see if you can get achieve a deep focus by getting into your ‘sweet spot.’

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Seeds: A Story of Uncommon Change

This week’s inspiring video: Seeds: A Story of Uncommon Change
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Video of the Week

Aug 20, 2015
Seeds: A Story of Uncommon Change

Seeds: A Story of Uncommon Change

Discover the story of Aruna, who’s journey speaks of the transformative power of love and service. Aruna grew up in a poor leprosy community in India and, like so many other kids growing up in the harsh reality of a slum, did not believe in her dreams or that much good would come from her life, other than a prescribed arranged marriage. That was, until, she met Jayesh Patel, co-founder of Manav Sadhna, an NGO based on the Gandhi Ashram in Ahmedabad, India, who recognized and nurtured her potential as a leader. His belief inspired Aruna to take her education and life more seriously, and to take a more active role in her community’s affairs. As a result, she is now one of a handful of young women — the first in the community’s history — who successfully enrolled in college, who actively volunteer, and who have opened up an entirely new path for girls growing up. This film gives the viewer a privileged insight into a humble corner of the world in Ahmedabad India. It also reveals that no matter where you are from, you can bring about change through compassionate service and can grow from the love that it brings.
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17 Ways You Can Work for Social Justice

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 20, 2015

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17 Ways You Can Work for Social Justice

Until the great mass of people shall be filled with the sense of responsibility for each other’s welfare, social justice can never be achieved.

– –

17 Ways You Can Work for Social Justice

“If you’re feeling inspired by the Supreme Court’s historic same-sex marriage decision, then do your part to help build and sustain forward momentum toward justice for all. Inequality takes many forms, and people are still waiting on their ability to live freely, safely, or, just to live.” In this article, learn about some ways you can be involved in creating a more just and peaceful world — after all, social transformation starts with everyday people working for change. { read more }

Be The Change

Identify a personal goal or a social issue you care about deeply, and try one or more of the 17 ideas to implement transformation.

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Surprising Lessons from Nature’s Engineers

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 19, 2015

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Surprising Lessons from Nature's Engineers

Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.

– Albert Einstein –

Surprising Lessons from Nature’s Engineers

Biomimicry is the design and production of materials, structures, and systems that are modeled on biological entities and processes. In this eye-opening Ted Talk, Janine Benyus offers up some incredible insight into the fast-growing world of biomimicry and all the promise it holds for humankind. As Benyus states in her talk, “Learning “about” the natural world is one thing; learning “from” the natural world… that’s the profound switch.” { read more }

Be The Change

Discover more of Janine Benyus and her fascinating TED Talks on the inspiring TED website. { more }

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5 Reasons to Be Mindful

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 18, 2015

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5 Reasons to Be Mindful

The best way to capture moments is to pay attention. This is how we cultivate mindfulness. Mindfulness means being awake. It means knowing what you are doing.

– Jon Kabat-Zinn –

5 Reasons to Be Mindful

In a hyper connected world, bombarded by multiple forms of stimulation, how do we remain aware of the quiet gifts that the present moment has to offer? Cultivating a mindfulness practice can be a powerful way to train our minds and tune into the beauty of here and now. The benefits are manifold. Drawing on the latest research as well as age-old wisdom traditions, this inspiring article offers up five reasons to practice mindfulness in daily life. { read more }

Be The Change

Sign-up for the upcoming 21-Day Mindfulness Challenge! { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Choosing Suffering over Safety

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Choosing Suffering over Safety
by Bonnie Rose

[Listen to Audio!]

2100.jpg“Can you walk, sweetheart?” I say these words to our dog Stella who is dying. It’s time for breakfast and if she walks from our bed to the kitchen, maybe that will be a sign. Maybe she will be alright. So I ask her again, “Can you walk?”

As I ask, I remember eleven years of sleeping twisted like a pretzel so the dog could get a good night’s sleep. I remember mornings, how she rose at dawn and stomped her Pointer’s feet on the mattress to get me up, to flush me out of the brush of sleep as she would a wild quail. Now it’s nine a.m. and she sighs at the foot of the bed, eyes alert and breathing rapidly.

When my mother was dying, I didn’t ask that question. I didn’t ask any question. I didn’t want to know the answer because the answer would change everything. We didn’t talk about the cancer – how it was devouring my mother’s bones and internal organs, how it was planning to steal my favorite person. We didn’t talk about love and loss, or her longing to see me find a life that would blossom. We didn’t mention how death would assassinate that joy for her or how death would rob me of the pleasure of coming home from college for Thanksgiving break and seeing her face at the kitchen window, eager to hear every detail of my life. Death would kill that. So we didn’t talk about it.

I was immobilized. Together in our once safe home in Briarcliff that last morning my mother couldn’t speak. She wanted something from me. She wanted my help. I was seventeen and I didn’t know what to do. Something bad was in the room. I was too scared to show my fear. I wanted to fix it. I didn’t know what to do.

So I held her hand, tears without sobs pouring down my cheeks, bewildered in the face of unspeakable death. She looked at me and said “Thank you.” Thirty-six hours later, she died. Those were the last words she ever said to me.

Somehow, through the years of living, ministry, dying loved ones, lost pets and lost loves, I’m learning to ask “Can you walk?” I’m learning to ask the other hard questions and be still and present with the answers. I am learning how to suffer.

I took my first cautious steps toward suffering in Shadowlands, the Broadway production where by fluke and connections, I was cast as an understudy for eight weeks. The play is about C.S. Lewis’s transition from intellect to experience. When Lewis was a child, his mother died. He never cried, never allowed himself to feel the loss. Late in life, when Lewis was a crusty bachelor professor, he met his true love Joy Gresham. Shortly after they met and married she got cancer and died. When Joy died, he allowed the devastation to overtake him.

He said, “The boy chose safety, the man chooses suffering.”

Eight shows a week, sitting backstage listening to the monitors, I hear those words: The boy chose safety, the man chooses suffering.

And now, every day, I make the choice between safety and suffering. Will I have the courage to face what happens and keep my heart in the room?

Because I don’t know if I can walk. I don’t know if I can stand. There are days I stagger about this stage called earth, confronted with the sorrows of being human – the loss, the death, the indignity of perpetual change.

But sometimes suffering is not suffering.

Those last days with Stella, I would gladly suffer again. It was an honor to hold her as she let go. It was a joy to put her needs first. It was a joy to ask, “Can you walk?” and be in love with whatever was true. It was joy to cherish her, to understand that love is love and it doesn’t matter if she’s just a dog, and that death can never kill a love like that. Suffering is not suffering. Suffering is the new joy.

About the Author: Bonnie Rose is a minister with Ventura’s Center for Spiritual Living. Above reading was excerpted from her blog.

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Choosing Suffering over Safety
How do you relate to choosing suffering over safety? Can you share a personal experience of a time when you became aware of this choice? What practice helps you see the joy within your experience of suffering?
david doane wrote: Suffering means to me to bear or carry my experience. My experience is my truth. To accept, value, express, utilize what I am experiencing is for me to suffer it. I can carry my exp…
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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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