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Archive for October 17, 2017

What We Measure. What We Value. And Why the Difference Matters.

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October 17, 2017

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What We Measure. What We Value. And Why the Difference Matters.

Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.

– William Bruce Cameron –

What We Measure. What We Value. And Why the Difference Matters.

This thought-provoking piece highlights the problems that can occur when we let what we measure tell us what to value. “Whether you are in business, government, non-profit or academics, the metrics that surround you drive your action. The purpose of all these metrics is to drive productive action, and if you instead interpret these metrics as a measure of value, a very different set of counter-productive actions can emanate. This realization is an invitation to make an audacious attempt to first understand what productive action is in your context: that action which helps your work come alive and connects you to the rest of humanity through your unique contribution.” { read more }

Be The Change

Think of something you wish to accomplish by the end of the year. Now, come up with one small productive action you can take every day from now until then to help you achieve it.

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Awakin Weekly: Planting Twin Trees

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Planting Twin Trees
by Robin Wall Kimmerer

[Listen to Audio!]

tow4.jpgThere was a custom in the mid-eighteen hundreds of planting twin trees to celebrate a marriage and the starting of a home. The stance of these two, just ten feet apart, recalls a couple standing together on the porch steps, holding hands. The reach of their shade links the front porch with the barn across the road, creating a shady path of back and forth for that young family.

I realize that those first homesteaders were not the beneficiaries of that shade, at least not as a young couple. They must have meant for their people to stay here. Surely those two were sleeping up on Cemetery Road long before the shade arched across the road. I am living today in the shady future they imagined, drinking sap from trees planted with their wedding vows. They could not have imagined me, many generations later, and yet I live in the gift of their care. Could they have imagined that when my daughter Linden was married, she would choose leaves of maple sugar for the wedding giveaway?

Such a responsibility I have to these people and these trees, left to me, an unknown come to live under the guardianship of the twins, with a bond physical, emotional, and spiritual. I have no way to pay them back. Their gift to me is far greater than I have ability to reciprocate. They’re so huge as to be nearly beyond my care, although I could scatter granules of fertilizer at their feet and turn the hose on them in summer drought. Perhaps all I can do is love them. All I know to do is to leave another gift, for them and for the future, those next unknowns who will live here.

About the Author: Excerpted from Braided Sweetgrass byRobin Wall Kimmerer.

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Planting Twin Trees
How do you relate to leaving gifts behind far beyond your own lifetime? Can you share a story of a thoughtful action someone long before you took that has benefited you directly? What inspires you to pay your gifts forward?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I love the metaphor of planting the Twin Trees. Two hearts, minds and bodies bonding together , nourishing and taking care of each other and all connected with them. We have received gifts of l…
david doane wrote: All life is connected — as a river of life that has been flowing on earth for a couple billion years. We are the leading edge of all life that has come before us, and we will be part of …
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Beautiful. Leaving gifts behind far beyond one’s lifetime to me means leaving a legacy of kindness, of being shelter, being shade to others, however you might define that for yourself. It is ab…
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