In association with hhdlstudycirclemontreal.org

Archive for November, 2015

Choosing Suffering Over Safety

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 23, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

Choosing Suffering Over Safety

Love the moment, and the energy of that moment will spread beyond all boundaries.

– Corita Kent –

Choosing Suffering Over Safety

“Can you walk, sweetheart?” I say these words to our dog Stella who is dying. Its 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 nights sleep. I remember mornings, how she rose at dawn and stomped her Pointers feet on the mattress to get me up, to flush me out of the brush of sleep as she would a wild quail. Now its nine a.m. and she sighs at the foot of the bed, eyes alert and breathing rapidly.” In this poignant piece the writer reflects on the relationship between joy, love and suffering. { read more }

Be The Change

This week pay attention to the tension of choosing between safety and ‘suffering’ as it arises in your own life.

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

Power of Place: Photos From Around the World

Ten Things Creative People Know

18 Things Highly Creative People Do Differently

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

The Science of Forgiveness

The Power of Story

Can You Teach People to Have Empathy?

19 Uplifting Photos That Capture The Human Spirit

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 165,032 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

The Life We Spend at Work

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 22, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

The Life We Spend at Work

I don’t know what your destiny will be, but one thing I know: the only ones among you who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve.

– Albert Schweitzer –

The Life We Spend at Work

Most of us are taught from a very early age, that hard work is the key to happiness. As a result, we learn to measure success in terms of benchmarks and milestones, rather than the satisfaction that comes by way of the doing. Though, what if we could view things in an entirely new way? In this thought-provoking interview, organizational psychologist Adam Grant discusses the newer value measurement–one derived directly from the satisfaction of being of service. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider your interactions within the workplace. Why not lead today’s discussions with openness of a generous heart?

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

Ten Things Creative People Know

The Power of Story

How To Retrain Your Brain With Three Words

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

Resilience: The Opposite of Depression

Because I’m Happy

This Is Your Brain On Scarcity

10 Timeframes For Measuring Life

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 164,888 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

Kindness Weekly: 21-Day Gratitude Challenge Starts in Two Days!

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

“It is not happy people who are thankful but thankful people who are happy” –Anonymous

Member of the Week

3.jpgAsslin! Thanks for always keeping your heart open to what each day brings, and meeting it with kindness and thoughtfulness. Send Asslin some KarmaBucks and say hello.

In Other News

Follow Us Online

facebook.png twitter.png
This newsletter reaches 134,622 subscribers, and you can unsubscribe instantly.
space

November 21, 2015

space
space EditorEditor’s note: Dear Friends, Deepak Chopra once said, "Gratitude opens the door to the power, the wisdom, the creativity of the universe. — You open the door through gratitude." We are just 2 days away from the start of the 21-Day Gratitude Challenge. Join thousands of people from around the world in building our gratitude muscles. Click HERE for more info. Happy Thanksgiving! –Guri space
space Smile Big space
space

Small Acts of Kindness

space llmoody wrote: “I noticed a car parked beside a meter that had expired so I put in some money for them. I hope they got back to the car before getting a parking fine.”
space Mel37865 wrote: “I left a 32 percent tip today.”
space marysterz wrote: “By taking care of a person who has not been kind to my family, I believe I found a way to forgive this person. It made a difference in how I think about unpleasant people. They need kindness too.”
space Give Freely space
space

Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 Mother-Daughter Circle of Kindness in North Carolina brings blooms in the winter.
Story2 On a cold rainy day, she rang the doorbell of a lady she had never met.
Story3 This is how her lovely husband responded to a bad day at work.
space Love Unconditionally space
space

Idea of the Week

space Idea of The Week
For more ideas, visit the ideas section of our website.
You’re receiving this newsletter as a member of the KindSpring community.

Having trouble reading this? View it in your browser. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe instantly.

The Power of Not Knowing

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 21, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

The Power of Not Knowing

All we know is still infinitely less than all that remains unknown.

– William Harvey –

The Power of Not Knowing

Every day, the world we live in and the vast universe around us, offer countless questions waiting to be answered. And despite all of our scientific advances and vast reservoirs of knowledge many times the answers remain elusively just out of our reach. In this thoughtful piece writer Wayne Muller explores the counter-intuitive power of not knowing. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to reflect on your own relationship with the unknown and the hidden gifts of not-knowing.

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

The Girl Who Gets Gifts From Birds

Ten Things Creative People Know

The Science of Forgiveness

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

Stunning Images of the Power of Education

How To Retrain Your Brain With Three Words

Cancelled Wedding Turned Feast for the Homeless

This Is Your Brain On Scarcity

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 164,798 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

Three German Students Surprise a Homeless Guy

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 20, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

Three German Students Surprise a Homeless Guy

The ache for home lives in all of us. The safe place where we can go as we are and not be questioned.

– Maya Angelou –

Three German Students Surprise a Homeless Guy

This sweet film is a heartwarming story of compassion and creativity. By using the universal power of music, walls are brought down to expose a universal issue. It also highlights the ability we all have to bring about change, simply by making a positive difference to someone’s day. { read more }

Be The Change

Check out this video from the producers for insight into the making of this film. { more }

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

10 Creative Rituals To Learn From

16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

6 Habits of Highly Grateful People

18 Things Highly Creative People Do Differently

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

The Power of Story

7 Ways To Change Negative Beliefs About Yourself

How To Retrain Your Brain With Three Words

34 Affirmations For Healthy Living

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 164,719 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

Want to be Happy? Be Grateful!

This week’s inspiring video: Want to be Happy? Be Grateful!
Having trouble reading this mail? View it in your browser. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe
KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Nov 19, 2015
Want to be Happy? Be Grateful!

Want to be Happy? Be Grateful!

We all want to be happy. What is the connection between happiness and gratitude? It seems pretty simple – when you are happy, you are grateful. But think again. We all know people who have everything a person could want, but are not happy – they want more. Â We also know people who have suffered misfortune, and yet are happy. How can that be? It is gratefulness that makes you happy, and not the other way around. We hold the master key to our happiness in our own hands. Watch this TED talk in which Brother David Steindl-Rast teaches us a simple method for living gratefully moment by moment.
Watch Video Now Share: Email Twitter FaceBook

Related KarmaTube Videos

Smile Big
Meditate
Live It Up
Serve All

Eric Whitacre’s Virtual Choir

How To Be Yourself

Landfill Harmonic – Film Trailer

Playing For Change

About KarmaTube:
KarmaTube is a collection of inspiring videos accompanied by simple actions every viewer can take. We invite you to get involved.
Other ServiceSpace Projects:

DailyGood // Conversations // iJourney // HelpOthers

MovedByLove // CF Sites // Karma Kitchen // More

Thank you for helping us spread the good. This newsletter now reaches 66,465 subscribers.

The Little Gardener: A Parable On The Power of Working with Love

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 19, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

The Little Gardener: A Parable On The Power of Working with Love

Whosoever loves much — performs much and can accomplish much; and what is done in love is well done.

– Vincent Van Gogh –

The Little Gardener: A Parable On The Power of Working with Love

“The Little Gardener” is a picture book by Emily Hughes, which is “at heart a parable of purpose — tender assurance for anyone who has ever undertaken a labor of love against seemingly insurmountable odds and persevered through hardship, continuing to nourishing that labor until the love emanates out, becomes contagious, and draws in kindred spirits as a centripetal force of shared purpose and enthusiasm.” Here, we can see Hughes’ vibrant illustrations that capture both human tenderness and attention, as well as the beauty of wilderness. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to reflect on a labor of love in your own life. How has the effort of nourishing with love been a force of transformation?

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

Children Who Shine From Within

The Girl Who Gets Gifts From Birds

Ten Things Creative People Know

7 Ways To Change Negative Beliefs About Yourself

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

Cancelled Wedding Turned Feast for the Homeless

19 Uplifting Photos That Capture The Human Spirit

Because I’m Happy

This Is Your Brain On Scarcity

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 164,599 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

Neil Gaiman on How Stories Last

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 18, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

Neil Gaiman on How Stories Last

Stories are genuinely symbiotic organisms that we live with, that allow human beings to advance.

– Neil Gaiman –

Neil Gaiman on How Stories Last

Why do myths and fairytales continue to enchant the popular imagination generation after generation? Neil Gaiman suggests that such stories give shape to our lives, that they are a life-form obeying the same rules of genesis, reproduction, and propagation that organic matter does. { read more }

Be The Change

Think back to your favorite childhood stories and ask yourself whether they still have a message for you. Tell the story you like best to a child or share it with a friend.

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

Children Who Shine From Within

6 Habits of Highly Grateful People

The Science of Forgiveness

Cancelled Wedding Turned Feast for the Homeless

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

19 Uplifting Photos That Capture The Human Spirit

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

34 Affirmations For Healthy Living

10 Timeframes For Measuring Life

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 164,434 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

10 Ways to Become More Grateful

You’re receiving this email because you are a DailyGood subscriber.
Trouble Viewing? On a mobile? Just click here. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
DailyGood News That Inspires

November 17, 2015

a project of ServiceSpace

10 Ways to Become More Grateful

Piglet noticed that even though he had a Very Small Heart, it could hold a rather large amount of Gratitude.

– A.A. Milne –

10 Ways to Become More Grateful

The consumerist culture of modern life often propogates a self-defeating brand of discontent. A die-hard preoccupation with what we lack, be it in the realm of material things, relationships or status, can often blind us to the profound gifts that we hold in each moment. We sometimes forget that the flip-side of happiness is a grateful heart. When we practice gratefulness, we tap into the richness of our own lives and discover the antidote to the scarcity mindset. And what better time to start than in this season of Thanksgiving? The following article shares ten simple ways to cultivate gratitude. { read more }

Be The Change

Sign up here to join people from all over the world in a 21-Day Gratitude Challenge that kicks off next week! { more }

COMMENT | RATE Email Twitter FaceBook

Related Good News

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

On Navigating Stuckness

The Girl Who Gets Gifts From Birds

6 Habits of Highly Grateful People

The Science of Forgiveness

Smile Big
Love Freely
Meditate
Give Back

How To Retrain Your Brain With Three Words

19 Uplifting Photos That Capture The Human Spirit

This Is Your Brain On Scarcity

7 Keys To A Good Death

DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 164,057 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

Awakin Weekly: Time is a Season

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Time is a Season
by David Whyte

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgMost traditional human cultures have seen the hours of the days in the same way as they have encountered the seasons of the year: not as clear lines drawn across our experience, but as an advancing quality, a presence, a visitation, and an emergence of something growing inside us as much as it is growing in the outer world. A season or an hour of the day is a visitation whose return is not always assured. Every spring following a long winter feels as miraculous as if we are seeing it for the first time. Out of the dead garden rises abundance beyond a winter eye’s comprehension.

The hours and the seasons are sometimes a flowering, sometimes a disappearance, and often an indistinguishable transience between the two, but all the hours of the day and the seasons of the year enunciate some quality in the world that has its own time and place. To make friends with the hours is to come to know all the hidden correspondences inside our own bodies that match the richness and movement of life we see around us. The tragedy of constant scheduling in our work is its mechanical effect on the hours, and subsequently on our bodies, reducing the spectrum of our individual character and color to a gray sameness. Every hour left to itself has its mood and difference, a quality that should change us and re-create us according to its effect upon us.

In many traditional cultures, a particular hour of the day is seen to have a personal, almost angelic presence, something that might be named – though only in hushed tones, and only in ways that reinforce its unknowingness. The Benedictine, Brother David Steindl-Rast, defines an angel as the eternal breaking into time, each particular breakthrough of the numinous utterly extraordinary and utterly itself. Time and each hour of time is a season, almost a personality, with its own annunciation, its own song, its whispering of what is to be born in us. Its appearance like a new conversation in which we are privileged to overhear ourselves participating.

To escape from the prison of time is to grant the hours their own life; to uncurl the iron grip of our hand on any given moment while at the same time finding the ability to be more present, more robust, more open to our own self-evident absurdities, while continuing the conversation.

About the Author: Excerpted from David Whyte’s book, "Crossing the Unknown Sea."

Share the Wisdom:
Email Twitter FaceBook
Latest Community Insights New!
Time is a Season
What does viewing time as we view seasons mean to you? Can you share a personal story when you felt the eternal had broken into time? What practice helps you escape the prison of time and grant the hours their own life?
david doane wrote: There is a scripture passage that there is a time for every season under the sun — a time to reap and a time to sew, a time to laugh and a time to cry, etc, etc. I’ve always liked that passage…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We bind ourselves by closing ourselves to the ever flowing river of time.When my mind is fully present in the moment, I feel the touch of the ever flowing time. I am in the flow of time fully i…
Liz Raphael Helgesen wrote: I struggled to grasp this Reading and had to read several times. But as walked away from the recording studio, I found myself asking, “what is the personality of this hour, this moment?&…
Share/Read Your Reflections
Awakin Circles:
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 rippled out as Awakin Circles in 80+ living rooms around the globe. To join in Santa Clara this week, RSVP online.

RSVP For Wednesday

Some Good News

20 Amazing Pictures from Outer Space
The Cave Digger
One Man’s Journey Back from the Brink

Video of the Week

The 100 Rupee Smile

Kindness Stories

Jackpot of Kindness from an unlikely source
Thankful for the dirty dishes
Helping each other find our way through the day

Global call with Ben Rivers!
223.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

Awakin Weekly delivers weekly inspiration to its 91,602 subscribers. We never spam or host any advertising. And you can unsubscribe anytime, within seconds.

On our website, you can view 17+ year archive of these readings. For broader context, visit our umbrella organization: ServiceSpace.org.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started