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Archive for March, 2017

Marjorie Maddox: Writing Across Genres

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March 18, 2017

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Marjorie Maddox: Writing Across Genres

For what is a poem but a hazardous attempt at self-understanding: it is the deepest part of autobiography.

– Robert Penn Warren –

Marjorie Maddox: Writing Across Genres

“One of my favorite lines is from the modern poet Marianne Moore. She defines poetry as both a poet being a literalist of the imagination, but a poem being something that “has imaginary gardens with real toads in them.” I have to make that so believable, even though it is imaginary. It becomes a whole world in itself and it has that element of truth in it.” Marjorie Maddox is a poet, author and professor of English and creative writing at Lock Haven University, whose subjects range from baseball and current affairs to environmentalism and the tongue-in-cheek woes of an English Teacher. In this engaging interview she shares a glimpse of her poetry, her history, writing process and more. { read more }

Be The Change

Is there a poem that holds a special place in your own mind and heart? What doors of insight did it open for you?

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She Lost A Daughter. Today She Shelters 800 Girls

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 17, 2017

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She Lost A Daughter. Today She Shelters 800 Girls

I have found the paradox, that if you love until it hurts, there can be no more hurt, only more love.

– Mother Teresa –

She Lost A Daughter. Today She Shelters 800 Girls

Outside of one home in Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh, India), sits a baby’s cradle, awaiting another child to be left it its bed to be given a new life. This cradle has taken in hundreds of abandoned and orphaned girls who would otherwise be left on the streets and Sarojini Agarwal, now 80 years old, is the mother to all of them. As a caregiver, educator, companion and mother, Dr Sarojini Agarwal is an inspiring woman with a big mission and even bigger heart. Losing her daughter 30 years ago, her grief led her to her dharma of creating a safe haven in her own home to save these motherless daughters. For years she has fostered a studied life for these women, being a caregiver and teacher, allowing them to be equipped with everything they need to live an independent life. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider a loss that you have endured in your own life. How might you reach out to serve others who might be experiencing similar losses?

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Meredith’s Joy Jars

This week’s inspiring video: Meredith’s Joy Jars
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Video of the Week

Mar 16, 2017
Meredith's Joy Jars

Meredith’s Joy Jars

How do you help a teen get over a broken heart? Pam found a way and Meredith found a calling. A simple solution which has reached thousands around the world. Learn more and get ready for International Day of Happiness on March 20!
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Designing Companies that Are Loved

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 16, 2017

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Designing Companies that Are Loved

A business that makes nothing but money is a poor business.

– Henry Ford –

Designing Companies that Are Loved

“When Scott Elias lost 80% of his hearing in kindergarten, his emotional and intuitive connection to the world went into overdrive like a sixth sense. When his hearing was surgically restored two years later, the medical miracle ignited his passion for music and science which he channeled into his wildly successful 30+ year career as the CEO of the worlds largest and most-awarded audio communications agency, Elias Arts. It’s from this uniquely intuitive and empirical place that he stands against the conventional economic thinking that businesses exist simply to make a profit. Scott’s work is a force for bringing out the very heart and soul of business. By designing for love in some of the world’s biggest companies, he’s a leading voice for the idea that business success is not the goal, but rather a by-product of offerings that fuel people to express who they are and all they yearn to become.” { read more }

Be The Change

Interested in learning how business can make the leap to an interconnected, and interdependent world to foster mutually rewarding relationships? Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Scott Elias. RSVP here. { more }

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How Behavioral Science Helps Tackle Big Issues

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March 15, 2017

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How Behavioral Science Helps Tackle Big Issues

The art and science of asking questions is the source of all knowledge

– Thomas Berger –

How Behavioral Science Helps Tackle Big Issues

Over the past several decades, behavioral science researchers have uncovered a wealth of fascinating insights into the human mind. But much of this study has been confined to laboratories and academia. Alissa Fishbane is bucking that trend by applying the lessons from behavioral science to the social sector. As managing director of ideas24, her team advises governments and nonprofits about how to better structure their programs in education, healthcare, criminal justice, finance and energy based on what we know about human psychology. In this interview, NationSwell speaks to Fishbane about how behavioral science can help solve social problems. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment today to reflect on some of your own behavior patterns and see what insights arise. For inspiration here’s a fascinating behavioral science article that weaves together 5 Perspectives on the Psychology of Choice. { more }

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When Kids Say Thanks

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March 14, 2017

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When Kids Say Thanks

It is not happiness that makes us grateful, but gratefulness that makes us happy.

– Brother David Steindl-Rast –

When Kids Say Thanks

When a child shows or feels gratitude, how does it affect other areas of his or her life over time? How best could we bring this practice into schools? What techniques in which settings produce the best results? Inspired by an act of kindness received while recovering from a childhood illness, Giacomo Bono has been studying the answers to these questions and more, adding to a growing body of research on the science of gratitude. While they’re a few years away from definitive conclusions, one study linked expressions of gratitude with an increase in prosocial behavior, satisfaction with life, hope, and search for purpose, and less antisocial behavior and depression. Another study suggested gratitude was responsible for an increase in achievement, grit, positive social conduct, relationships with peers and teachers, and school satisfaction. In this interesting article, a closer look at the studies so far. { read more }

Be The Change

Today, remember a time when someone did something for you for which you are grateful. Reflect on the effort they put forth and why they might have done it. If you have children, ask them to do the same.

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Awakin Weekly: I-It and I-Thou

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I-It and I-Thou
by David Brooks

[Listen to Audio!]

2217.jpg(Reflections on "I-Thou" by Martin Buber)

I-It relationships come in two varieties.

Some are strictly utilitarian. You’re exchanging information in order to do some practical thing, like getting your taxes done.

But other I-It relationships are truncated versions of what should be deep relationships. You’re with a friend, colleague, spouse or neighbor, but you’re not really bringing your whole self to that encounter. You’re fearful, closed or withdrawn — objectifying her, talking at her, offering only a shallow piece of yourself and seeing only the shallow piece of her.

I-Thou relationships, on the other hand, are personal, direct, dialogical — nothing is held back. A Thou relationship exists when two or more people are totally immersed in their situation, when deep calls to deep, when they are offering up themselves and embracing the other in some total, unselfconscious way, when they are involved in “mutual animated describing.”

A doctor has an I-It relationship with a patient when he treats him as a machine in need of repair. But Peter DeMarco described an I-Thou relationship in a letter to the doctors and nurses who cared for his dying wife, which was published in The Times:

“How many times did you hug me and console me when I fell to pieces, or ask about Laura’s life and the person she was, taking the time to look at her photos or read the things I’d written about her? How many times did you deliver bad news with compassionate words, and sadness in your eyes?”

In our culture we use phrases like finding oneself, finding your passion, loving yourself so you can love others. But Buber argued that it’s nonsensical to think of the self in isolation. The I only exists in relation to some other.

“The development of the soul in the child is inextricably bound up with that of the longing for the Thou,” he wrote. All through life, the self is emerging out of some dialogue, either a cold stifling one or a rich complete one: “All real living is meeting.”

You can’t intentionally command I-Thou moments into being. You can only be open to them and provide fertile soil…

Buber described genuine dialogue as a sort of social flow. Teachers and students are learning with each other. An audience and an artist are lost in a performance.

These moments don’t last. It is the “exalted melancholy of our fate” that Thou moments always fade back into It moments. But a world has been built during such intense moments. A binding cord has been strengthened. The person who has experienced the Thou has been thickened and comes closer to wholeness.

About the Author: Excerpted from the NY Times article: http://nyti.ms/2e8y2x1

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I-It and I-Thou
How do you relate to the distinction between I-It and I-Thou moments? Can you share a personal story of an I-Thou moment in your life? What helps you become aware of whether you are in an I-Thou moment or an I-It moment?
david doane wrote: I-it moments are utilitarian, goal- and future-directed. I-thou moments are purposeless or goal-less and present. Both kinds of moments are part of life. In I-thou moments there are…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Life is a web of relationships. Some are I-It relationships. They are utilitarian,pragmatic and self-serving. Such relationships are shallow leaving no nourishing deep roots of memo…
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Some Good News

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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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Do Not Lose Heart: We Were Made For These Times

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March 13, 2017

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Do Not Lose Heart: We Were Made For These Times

When a great ship is in harbor and moored, it is safe, there can be no doubt. But…that is not what great ships are built for.

– Clarissa Pinkola Estes –

Do Not Lose Heart: We Were Made For These Times

There are times when living for today is exactly what we need to do, and there other times when we will only prevail if we take the long view of life on this Earth and stop measuring our success by the problems we solve each day. For this reason, Clarissa Pinkola Estes exhorts us to embrace the moment we are in with all of its fear, uncertainty, and turmoil. She says, “I too have felt despair many times in my life, but I do not keep a chair for it…In any dark time, there is a tendency to veer toward fainting over how much is wrong or unmended in the world. Do not focus on that. Do not make yourself ill with overwhelm.” Let us be a light for each other and not lose heart. Remember, we were made for these times. { read more }

Be The Change

Make a decision today to trust your ability, your power within, to make a difference in your small corner of the world.

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Kindness Weekly: Connecting for Health

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

Most of the shadows of this life are caused by our standing in our own sunshine. –Ralph Waldo Emerson

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36.jpgDEBLOPEZ4U! Thank you for your frequent acts of kindness that add light to our world. Glad you are part of our community. Send DEBLOPEZ4U some KarmaBucks and say hello.

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March 12, 2017

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space EditorEditor’s note: Our physical and psychological health are biologically tied to our sense of social connection. Research shows that lack of social connections can place us at a higher risk of earlier death than even obesity, smoking, and high blood pressure, whereas strong social connections can lead up to a 50% increased chance of longevity. We are literally wired to love! –Ameeta space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space Awake1 wrote: “I put a sign in my front yard that says “No matter where you are from we’re glad you’re our neighbor.” in English, Spanish and Arabic.”
space Alisamom wrote: “Today I paid a compliment to the cashier and her face lit up; My husband returned the shopping cart to the other side of the store rather than leaving it at the exit door. Sometimes kindness can be so simple.”
space ramiller wrote: “I put a dollar in the pop machine for someone to enjoy a treat on me!”
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 A small gift of flowers shifted both her and her supervisor’s outlook.
Story2 Eating baklava at the same time across oceans created a special connection with her mom.
Story3 Just a smile brought out the light from the strained doctor’s receptionist.
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Idea of the Week

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Should You Live for Your Eulogy or Your Resume?

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March 12, 2017

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Should You Live for Your Eulogy or Your Resume?

Highly educated young people are tutored, taught and monitored in all aspects of their lives, except the most important, which is character building. When it comes to this, most universities leave them alone.

– David Brooks –

Should You Live for Your Eulogy or Your Resume?

Within each of us are two selves, suggests David Brooks in this meditative short talk: the self who craves success, who builds a resume; and the self who seeks connection, community, and love — the values that make for a great eulogy. In this short talk, Brooks asks: Can we balance these two selves? { read more }

Be The Change

Carve some time out this week to think about what you want your life to stand for. Make a plan to save a little bit of time in each day to work toward that vision.

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