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Archive for August 8, 2017

Kindness Weekly: 21-Day Inclusion Challenge Coming Up!

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

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August 8, 2017

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space EditorEditor’s note: "The world can be a different place to different people. An opportunity to experience the world from the eyes and ears, body and mind of people with disabilities, the 21-day Inclusion Challenge invites us to reflect on the accessibility of the world around us, and take small, daily steps towards a more inclusive world for everyone! Join us on Aug 15th! space
space Smile Big space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space Pyronik wrote: “The kid from next door brought broccoli stalks for my bunnies, so I took him into the garden to feed them. They even let him stroke them.”
space Mish wrote: “Shared a high-five with a homeless person on the street.”
space nawabata wrote: “Held a baby for someone at church today. She was very thankful for the break.”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 Her literacy packets for children will plant countless seeds.
Story2 During a life-threatening boating disaster, the crew still remained grateful.
Story3 Her reusable water bottles helped not only the homeless but also the environment.
space Love Unconditionally space
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Localization for People & the Earth

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 8, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

Localization for People & the Earth

It is now time to commit to following a new path.

– John Perkins –

Localization for People & the Earth

Localization has become a force around the world, but what is it exactly and why are people disgruntled with globalization? The Economics of Happiness conference in Bangalore, India explored localization and the pressures moving the world from global to local economies and ways of living. The short video introduction provides a succinct overview that leads directly into the full presentations of international experts and links to the documentary, “The Economics of Happiness.” Whether you are interested in or currently participate in the local movement, there is much more to discover. These presentations provide in-depth knowledge of where we are, where we need to go, and how we can move to a more locally based lifestyle. { read more }

Be The Change

Support your local farmers market and businesses. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: To Know Your Mind, Pay Close Attention To It

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
To Know Your Mind, Pay Close Attention To It
by Sam Harris

[Listen to Audio!]

2232.jpgCertain rare and wonderful experiences are possible. But this is all we need, to take “spirituality” (the unavoidable term for this project of self-transcendence) seriously. […]

We spend our lives lost in thought. The feeling that we call “I” — the sense of being a subject inside the body — is what it feels like to be thinking without knowing that you are thinking. The moment that you truly break the spell of thought, you can notice what consciousness is like between thoughts — that is, prior to the arising of the next one. And consciousness does not feel like a self. It does not feel like “I.” In fact, the feeling of being a self is just another appearance in consciousness (how else could you feel it?). […]

I argue that spirituality need not rest on any faith-based assumptions about what exists outside of our own experience. And it arises from the same spirit of honest inquiry that motivates science itself.

Consciousness exists (whatever its relationship to the physical world happens to be), and it is the experiential basis of both the examined and the unexamined life. If you turn consciousness upon itself in this moment, you will discover that your mind tends to wander into thought. If you look closely at thoughts themselves, you will notice that they continually arise and pass away. If you look for the thinker of these thoughts, you will not find one. And the sense that you have — “What the hell is Harris talking about? I’m the thinker!”— is just another thought, arising in consciousness.

If you repeatedly turn consciousness upon itself in this way, you will discover that the feeling of being a self disappears. There is nothing [religious or specifically] Buddhist about such inquiry, and nothing need be believed on insufficient evidence to pursue it. One need only accept the following premise: If you want to know what your mind is really like, it makes sense to pay close attention to it.

About the Author: Excerpted from a NY Times interview with Sam Harris, an American author, philosopher and neuroscientist.

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To Know Your Mind, Pay Close Attention To It
How do you relate to the notion that the feeling of being a self is just another appearance in consciousness? Can you share a personal story of a time you were of consciousness that did not feel like a self? What helps you repeatedly turn consciousness upon itself?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Consciousness is self-transcendental. It is nether subject nor object. It is beyond subject and object.We cannot know it by our mind. And when we try to know it by our mind, it becomes a though…
david doane wrote: My ego is just another transitory appearance in consciousness. My true self, my essence, is eternal consciousness expressed as me. I’ve had some moments in meditation when I felt am…
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Some Good News

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Video of the Week

How Kids See Differences

Kindness Stories

Global call with Maya Breuer!
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