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Archive for August 29, 2017

Kindness Weekly: Friendships New and Old

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

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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.

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Practice being kind rather than right. –Wayne Dyer

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August 29, 2017

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space EditorEditor’s note: Relationships are often at the center of our lives. From friends, family, to strangers, they affect the quality of our lives — just as we impact theirs. Every day, most of us have a chance to interact with someone. In the ever-changing national and political landscape, it is becoming ceaselessly important to hold out our hand for others, and co-create a kinder collective narrative. In this article in Greater Good, Hopper discusses "relationships and the meaningful" life. space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space janpaquette wrote: “Helped a friend clean when three apartments she owned became open.”
space alisamom wrote: “Found some kindness rocks at the local park today and it made new so happy!”
space mindyjourney wrote: “Having fun leaving Smile cards and snacks along the journey :)). Left a package on top of the pump at a gas station, a few in travel brochure stands and some in our hotel room complimentary coffee basket :)).”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 When he was ready to avenge for what they did to his friend, he learned a great lesson.
Story2 Her “one-time, one meeting” encounters made her appreciate the gift of friendships.
Story3 Rehmat and his perfume started a series of joyful exchanges.
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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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Finding Joy: The Science of Happiness

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 29, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

Finding Joy: The Science of Happiness

You’re not happier because you turn your brain off. You’re happier because you encourage yourself to think more deeply about what actually matters.

– Charles Duhigg –

Finding Joy: The Science of Happiness

We long to find more joy in our daily pursuits even though life has taught us it’s not so easy. New discoveries in neuroscience offer insight into how we can develop a brighter state of heart and mind. Our choices are more than a temporary glitch in the brain, it turns out. Learn why it’s better to sometimes allow love for the fractured and suffering humanity around and inside us to enter our busy field of action, as we work our way toward happiness. { read more }

Be The Change

This article offers a series of suggestions on how to change your mindset, and learn to see the world with new eyes. Try experimenting with one of them each day this week.

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Awakin Weekly: Loving Your Enemy

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Loving Your Enemy
by Brother David Steindl-Rast

[Listen to Audio!]

tow1.jpgTo love our enemies does not mean that we suddenly become their friends. If it is our enemies we are to love, they must remain enemies. Unless you have enemies, you cannot love them. And if you have no enemies, I wonder if you have any friends. The moment you choose your friends, their enemies become your own enemies. By having convictions, we make ourselves the enemies of those who oppose these convictions. But let’s be sure we agree on what we mean by terms like Friend, Enemy, Hatred, or Love.

The mutual intimacy we share with our best friends is one of the greatest gifts of life, but it is not always given when we call someone a friend. Friendship need not even be mutual. How about organizations like Friends of Our Local Library? Friends of Elephants and of other endangered species? Friendship allows for many degrees of closeness and takes many different forms. What it always implies is active support of those whom we befriend, engagement to help them reach their goals.

With enemies it is the exact opposite. After all, the very word “enemy” comes from the Latin ”inimicus”, and means simply “not a friend”. Of course, not everyone who is not a friend is therefore an enemy. Enemies are opponents – not opponents for play, as in sports or games, but in mutual opposition with us in matters of deep concern. Their goals are opposed to our own highest aspirations. Thus, out of conviction we must actively try to prevent them from reaching their goals. We can do this lovingly, or not – and thus we find ourselves head-on confronted with the possibility to love our enemies.

Love in every one of its forms is a lived “yes” to belonging. I call it a “lived yes”, because the very way loving people live and act says loudly and clearly: “Yes, I affirm and respect you and I wish you well. As members of the cosmic family we belong together, and this belonging goes far deeper than anything that can ever divide us.” In an upside-down way, a “Yes” to belonging is even present in hatred. While love says this yes joyfully and with fondness, hatred says it grudgingly with animosity, gall. Still, even one who hates acknowledges mutual belonging. Have there not been moments in your life when you couldn’t say whether you loved or hated someone close to your heart? This shows that hatred is not the opposite of love. The opposite of love (and of hatred) is indifference.

Loving our enemies is an ideal for human beings of any spiritual tradition. Mahatma Gandhi practiced it no less inspiringly than St. Francis. But it calls to mind the saying of Jesus: “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” (Mt. 3:43f) And this, in turn, calls to mind what G. K. Chesterton said: “The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried.”— Difficult, yes, but eminently worth trying, especially in a world torn by enmity.

About the Author: by Brother David Steindl-Rast from this article.

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Loving Your Enemy
What does loving your enemy mean to you? Can you share an experience where you faced up to the ideal of loving your enemies and praying for those who persecuted you? What helps you practice that ideal while facing a clash of ideology?
xiaoshan wrote: Walk with me Break some bread with me Enemy, why can’t you live with me Who are you What did I do to you Wish I know Why can’t I live with you We are all born the same Then we separate Then the…
susan schaller wrote: Slowly, in life I learned and am learning that everyone – every person – is a mirror. The person who seems most different from me I learn the most from, about me. An enemy is someone whos…
david doane wrote: Loving your enemy means to me that I firmly, honestly, and directly express my disagreement or objection in a way that is kind and compassionate, devoid of anger, hostility, and violence. Deali…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: ” Love in every one of its forms is a lived “yes” to belonging. I call it a “lived yes”, because the very way loving people live and act says loudly and clearly, ” Yes, I affirm and respect you…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Love you enemy to me means seeing that underneath their anger or maltreatment is often fear and under the fear is hurt. Allowing oneself to sift through the anger, fear to get to the hurt often…
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Some Good News

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Video of the Week

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Kindness Stories

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