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Archive for May, 2017

Robert Bengston: Inspiration Campaign

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 3, 2017

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Robert Bengston: Inspiration Campaign

A drop of ink may make a million think.

– George Gordon Byron –

Robert Bengston: Inspiration Campaign

In 2012 artist Robert Bengston started a new participatory, people-powered project, Inspiration Campaign, that involves beautiful, empowering, nothing-for-sale advertising. The aim was to inspire the human spirit, and to transform mainstream media into a source of inspiration. The campaign uses crowd-funding to run uplifting, crowd-sourced messages on traditional physical advertising spaces. Messages like, “Humankind. Be both.” “You belong.” “Love first.” Over the last four years the campaign has led to more than 14 million media impressions. Read more about Bengston’s journey and creative vision. { read more }

Be The Change

Do something big or small today to bring a note of positivity to someone’s day. For more inspiration join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Robert Bengston. You can RSVP here. { more }

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Hello Hijab: Mom Hopes To Create A Better World For Daughter

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 2, 2017

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Hello Hijab: Mom Hopes To Create A Better World For Daughter

We have the ability to achieve, if we master the necessary goodwill, a common global society.

– Mahnaz Afkhami –

Hello Hijab: Mom Hopes To Create A Better World For Daughter

Safaa Bokhari, a mom living in Oakland, Pennsylvania, has experienced difficulty practicing her Muslim faith, especially while wearing her headscarf. Her goal is to foster a safer environment for her daughter when she becomes old enough to choose whether to wear a headscarf. To do that, she teamed up with a community organization in Pittsburgh to launch Hello Hijab, which creates tiny headscarves that can be used on children’s toys. Bokhari hopes that in doing so she can educate others on how the hijab is a spiritual concept and create a world where seeing women wearing one is more normal and accepted. { read more }

Be The Change

What can you do today to learn about what is important in other cultures?

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Awakin Weekly: The Sacred Art of Pausing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Sacred Art of Pausing
by Tara Brach

[Listen to Audio!]

2231.jpgIn our lives we often find ourselves in situations we can’t control, circumstances in which none of our strategies work. Helpless and distraught, we frantically try to manage what is happening. Our child takes a downward turn in academics and we issue one threat after another to get him in line. Someone says something hurtful to us and we strike back quickly or retreat. We make a mistake at work and we scramble to cover it up or go out of our way to make up for it. We head into emotionally charged confrontations nervously rehearsing and strategizing.

The more we fear failure the more frenetically our bodies and minds work. We fill our days with continual movement: mental planning and worrying, habitual talking, fixing, scratching, adjusting, phoning, snacking, discarding, buying, looking in the mirror.

What would it be like if, right in the midst of this busyness, we were to consciously take our hands off the controls? What if we were to intentionally stop our mental computations and our rushing around and, for a minute or two, simply pause and notice our inner experience?

Learning to pause is the first step in the practice of Radical Acceptance. A pause is a suspension of activity, a time of temporary disengagement when we are no longer moving towards any goal. The pause can occur in the midst of almost any activity and can last for an instant, for hours or for seasons of our life.

We may take a pause from our ongoing responsibilities by sitting down to meditate. We may pause in the midst of meditation to let go of thoughts and reawaken our attention to the breath. We may pause by stepping out of daily life to go on a retreat or to spend time in nature or to take a sabbatical. We may pause in a conversation, letting go of what we’re about to say, in order to genuinely listen and be with the other person. We may pause when we feel suddenly moved or delighted or saddened, allowing the feelings to play through our heart. In a pause we simply discontinue whatever we are doing—thinking, talking, walking, writing, planning, worrying, eating—and become wholeheartedly present, attentive and, often, physically still.

A pause is, by nature, time limited. We resume our activities, but we do so with increased presence and more ability to make choices. In the pause before sinking our teeth into a chocolate bar, for instance, we might recognize the excited tingle of anticipation, and perhaps a background cloud of guilt and self-judgment. We may then choose to eat the chocolate, fully savoring the taste sensations, or we might decide to skip the chocolate and instead go out for a run. When we pause, we don’t know what will happen next. But by disrupting our habitual behaviors, we open to the possibility of new and creative ways of responding to our wants and fears.

Of course there are times when it is not appropriate to pause. If our child is running towards a busy street, we don’t pause. If someone is about to strike us, we don’t just stand there, resting in the moment—rather, we quickly find a way to defend ourselves. If we are about to miss a flight, we race toward the gate. But much of our driven pace and habitual controlling in daily life does not serve surviving, and certainly not thriving. It arises from a free-floating anxiety about something being wrong or not enough. Even when our fear arises in the face of actual failure, loss or even death, our instinctive tensing and striving are often ineffectual and unwise.

Taking our hands off the controls and pausing is an opportunity to clearly see the wants and fears that are driving us. During the moments of a pause, we become conscious of how the feeling that something is missing or wrong keeps us leaning into the future, on our way somewhere else. This gives us a fundamental choice in how we respond: We can continue our futile attempts at managing our experience, or we can meet our vulnerability with the wisdom of Radical Acceptance.

Often the moment when we most need to pause is exactly when it feels most intolerable to do so. Pausing in a fit of anger, or when overwhelmed by sorrow or filled with desire, may be the last thing we want to do. Pausing can feel like falling helplessly through space—we have no idea of what will happen. We fear we might be engulfed by the rawness of our rage or grief or desire. Yet without opening to the actual experience of the moment, Radical Acceptance is not possible.

Through the sacred art of pausing, we develop the capacity to stop hiding, to stop running away from our experience. We begin to trust in our natural intelligence, in our naturally wise heart, in our capacity to open to whatever arises. Like awakening from a dream, in the moment of pausing our trance recedes and Radical Acceptance becomes possible.

About the Author: Excerpted from here. Tara Brach’s teachings blend Western psychology and Eastern spiritual practices, mindful attention to our inner life, and a full, compassionate engagement with our world.

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The Sacred Art of Pausing
How do you relate to the suggestion to consciously take our hands off the controls and notice our inner experience? Can you share a personal story of a time you did this? What helps you remember to take a sacred pause?
susan schaller wrote: Yesterday, I was telling someone of a great gift given me. Many years ago, a “pause button” popped in my head. When someone says or does something ridiculous, abusive, crazy and self serv…
xiaoshan wrote: An intentional pause is the first step to get us out of almost any dreadful situation, to see the bigger picture, to realize what actually is happening, and more importantly, to communicate wi…
david doane wrote: In fact, we have so little control. I very much value letting go of trying to control and taking hold of trusting my inner experience. In general, we do far too much trying to contr…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We go where our mind goes. Our mind takes a ride in the past or a flight in the future, hardly staying in the present. Wandering mind becomes our default mode of functioning. Such a wandering m…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Thank you. I needed this reminder. I have experienced a challenging week with memories of past childhood sexual molestation surfacing. This weekend I went on a retreat with someone dear to me. …
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Global call with Robert Bengston!
307.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.

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Teen Activist Works to Save the Earth

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May 1, 2017

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Teen Activist Works to Save the Earth

The biggest challenge we face is shifting human consciousness, not saving the planet. Because the planet doesn’t need saving; we do.

– Xiuhtezcatl Roske-Martinez –

Teen Activist Works to Save the Earth

Kelsey Juliana is proof that you’re never too young or too busy to save the planet. Since the tender age of 15, when most of her peers were busy with soccer practice and reading the Hunger Games, Kelsey has been delving into legal briefs as a co-plaintiff for Oregon TRUST (a nonprofit fighting climate change for future generations), which is suing the state of Oregon “to take a more aggressive stance against the carbon emissions warming the earth and destroying the environment.” In 2014, the then 18-year-old environmentalist activist walked across America to bring awareness to global warming. In this interview, Kelsey’s wisdom shines through, as she pleads to those of us inhabiting the earth, and those inheriting it – to take action and not stand idle. { read more }

Be The Change

What can you do today to make a small shift towards benefitting the environment?

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DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 243,661 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

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

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