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Archive for October, 2017

The Wisdom of the Animals

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 24, 2017

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The Wisdom of the Animals

Keep close to Nature’s heart…and break clear away, once in a while, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash your spirit clean.

– John Muir –

The Wisdom of the Animals

Animals hold a special place in every child’s life, but for Steve Karlin, his childhood experiences with animals later formed his resolve to help animals and people in the process of healing. In 1980, he founded Wildlife Associates in northern California. Wildlife Associates still operates today to provide a safe haven for injured animals and to teach children in the San Francisco Bay Area, many of whom also carry trauma. ‘Teach Me To Be Wild’ is a recent documentary about Steve’s work at the sanctuary. In this interview learn more about how nature can create avenues for healing. { read more }

Be The Change

Today, notice how an animal in your life is teaching you about healing. Even if you don’t have a pet, what do wild birds or animals around you have to tell you about living a life of healing?

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Awakin Weekly: Seeing Is Not Thinking

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Seeing Is Not Thinking
by Jeanne de Salzmann

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgThe question is not what to do but how to see. Seeing is the most important thing—the act of seeing. I need to realize that it is truly an act, an action that brings something entirely new, a new possibility of vision, certainty and knowledge. This possibility appears during the act itself and disappears as soon as the seeing stops. It is only in this act of seeing that I will find a certain freedom.

So long as I have not seen the nature and movement of the mind, there is little sense in believing that I could be free of it. I am a slave to my mechanical thoughts. This is a fact. It is not the thoughts ­themselves that enslave me but my ­attachment to them. In order to ­understand this, I must not seek to free myself before having known what the ­slavery is. I need to see the illusion of words and ideas, and the fear of my thinking mind to be alone and empty without the support of anything known. It is necessary to live this slavery as a fact, moment after moment, without escaping from it. Then I will begin to ­perceive a new way of seeing. Can I accept not knowing who I am, being hidden behind an imposter? Can I accept not knowing my name? Seeing does not come from thinking.

It comes from the shock at the moment when, feeling an urgency to know what is true, I suddenly realize that my thinking mind cannot perceive reality. To understand what I really am at this moment, I need sincerity and humility, and an unmasked exposure that I do not know. This would mean to refuse nothing, exclude nothing, and enter into the experience of discovering what I think, what I sense, what I wish, all at this very moment.

Our conditioned thought always wants an answer. What is important is to develop another thinking, a vision. For this we have to liberate a certain energy that is beyond our usual thought. I need to ­experience “I do not know” without seeking an answer, to abandon everything to enter the unknown. Then it is no longer the same mind. My mind engages in a new way. I see without any preconceived idea, without choice. In relaxing, for example, I no longer choose to relax before knowing why. I learn to purify my power of vision, not by turning away from the undesirable or toward what is agreeable. I learn to stay in front and see clearly. All things have the same importance, and I become fixed on nothing. Everything depends on this vision, on a look that comes not from any command of my thought but from a feeling of urgency to know.

Perception, real vision, comes in the interval between the old response and the new response to the reception of an impression. The old response is based on material inscribed in our memory. With the new response, free from the past, the brain remains open, receptive, in an ­attitude of respect. It is a new brain which functions, that is, different cells and a new intelligence. When I see that my thought is incapable of understanding, that its movement brings nothing, I am open to the sense of the cosmic, beyond the realm of human perception.

About the Author: by Jeanne de Salzmann, excerpted from Parabola.

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Seeing Is Not Thinking
What does finding a certain freedom in the act of seeing mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced “I do not know” without seeking an answer? What helps you stay in front and see clearly?
david doane wrote: Freedom in the act of seeing means to me the freedom that comes from seeing what is, free of judgments, preconceptions, and expectations, free of simply seeing my thinking, which happens so easily.&n…
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Some Good News

People Helped You Whether You Knew It Or Not
How Trauma Lodges in the Body
Bowing in Service: A Short Film with Unlikely Stars

Video of the Week

Welcome to the Forest

Kindness Stories

Global call with Two Trees (Kaylynn Sullivan)!
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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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Grandmother Power

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 23, 2017

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Grandmother Power

My generation is now the door to memory. That is why I am remembering.

– Joy Harjo –

Grandmother Power

Across the world, grandmothers are keepers of tradition and leaders of change. In families and communities battling discrimination, poverty, disease and death, grandmothers stand and rise as providers, healers, insurgents. They are storytellers who bridge the past and the future with wisdom and bold, creative action. This is why photojournalist Paola Gianturco has dedicated her life to documenting and advocating for women around the globe. This inspiring story tells of Gianturco’s work that celebrates the life-saving activism and strength of female elders, fueled by witnessing a world that is not good enough for their grandchildren. These are the stories that we need to hear. { read more }

Be The Change

Reach out to an elderly woman today. Ask her to share a story from her life. Seek her guidance. Listen and be present. Share some joy. Let her know that you appreciate her.

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Choosing Authentic Conversations

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 22, 2017

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Choosing Authentic Conversations

The only way to change other people’s minds is with affection, and not anger.

– Dalai Lama –

Choosing Authentic Conversations

Despite being published almost 10 years ago, “Authentic Conversations: Moving from Manipulation to Truth and Commitment” by Jamie and Maren Showkeir is still relevant. It’s message is a timely reminder that changing the culture requires changing our conversations. While they are addressing workplace conversations specifically, their strategies can be applied to any situation. An excerpt from the Introduction provides an example of their work through case histories, their analysis of situations, and their strategies for dealing with problems in a more responsible, constructive way. From the beginning of the book, we are challenged to “create a more mature, resilient organization with a capacity for creativity, innovation, and transformation in the face of unyielding marketplace demands.” One could easily substitute the word ‘family’ for ‘organization’ and ‘parenting’ or ‘marriage’ for ‘marketplace’ and apply their strategies with little or no modification. For example, their suggestions for accomplishing the first case history are: acknowledge the problem and name the issue, own your contribution to the problem, state the risks and acknowledge the possibility of things not working out, and present others with a choice. Quite simply, they recommend telling the truth, fostering adult-to-adult relationships, and consciously changing the workplace (or home place) environment by choosing to have authentic conversations. { read more }

Be The Change

Engaging in authentic conversations requires having emotional intelligence. Do you know what your emotional intelligence is? { more }

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People Helped You Whether You Knew It Or Not

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 21, 2017

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People Helped You Whether You Knew It Or Not

Kindness is the golden chain by which society is bound together.

– Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe –

People Helped You Whether You Knew It Or Not

William Weaver, currently the chief of surgery at the Fayetteville VA Medical Center in North Carolina, doesn’t remember a single day in high school “that a teacher didn’t tell him that he didn’t belong.” This was in Knoxville, Tennessee, where in 1964, he was one of 14 black students integrating the all-white West High School. He remembers his test papers being unfairly snatched from him so he got poor grades initially, never being acknowledged for his accomplishments by his school, and eventually, starting to think, something was wrong with him. How, then, in the face of racism and adversity, did Weaver stay motivated, graduate from college, and go on to become a successful doctor? This article shines light on Weaver’s journey, and the mentor who cheered him on, visibly and invisibly, from the sidelines. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on how you have been the beneficiary of someone else’s act of kindness. If you are inspired, do something kind for someone anonymously.

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How Trauma Lodges in the Body

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 20, 2017

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How Trauma Lodges in the Body

Neuroscience research shows that the only way we can change the way we feel is by becoming aware of our inner experience and learning to befriend what is going on inside ourselves.

– Bessel van der Kolk –

How Trauma Lodges in the Body

Human memory is a sensory experience, says psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk. Through his longtime research and innovation in trauma treatment, he shares what he’s learning about how bodywork like yoga or eye movement therapy can restore a sense of goodness and safety. What he’s learning speaks to a resilience we can all cultivate in the face of overwhelming events — which, after all, make up the drama of culture, of news, and of life. { read more }

Be The Change

Tune into your inner experience today. Particularly in moments of unpleasantness or difficulty. Notice what happens when you simply observe your experience instead of pushing it away.

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Welcome to the Forest

This week’s inspiring video: Welcome to the Forest
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Oct 19, 2017
Welcome to the Forest

Welcome to the Forest

When we think of early education, we often default to visions of desks and rote memorization. We don’t think of schooling as an outdoor activity. Enter the Forest School, which takes children outside to learn through experience, enabling children to develop physical skills, self-confidence, self-esteem and a love for the environment they may otherwise never gain. Forest Schools’ early roots are based in Scandinavia, but now there are practitioners across the world. This video shows the benefits of independent, child-led activities in the richness of an outdoor environment, rain or shine.
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Bowing in Service: A Short Film with Unlikely Stars

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 19, 2017

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Bowing in Service: A Short Film with Unlikely Stars

Be like the bamboo. The higher you grow, the deeper you bow.

– Chinese Proverb –

Bowing in Service: A Short Film with Unlikely Stars

Over two million women bow down countless times each night as they pick up waste and refuse in Indian cities, working through unhygienic conditions to keep India clean, earning a meager pay while their efforts go unnoticed. In this short film by actor and filmmaker Divyang Thakkar, we follow the story of children living in the slums in Ahmedabad, India and their acts of kindness and service as they recognize the selfless work done by these women. The film explores the thread linking the virtue of bowing in humility and the routine of bowing which these women undergo countless times while rag-picking. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on folks in your daily life who perform invisible selfless acts of service that usually go unrecognized — the custodian who cleans your office bathrooms, the person who drives the truck to collect trash, the postman, etc. How can you honor their service? For more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Shamash Alidina, a mindfulness teacher and co-founder of The Museum of Happiness. RSVP and more details here.
{ more }

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Spotlight on Peacemakers

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October 18, 2017

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Spotlight on Peacemakers

There is no path to peace. Peace is the path.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

Spotlight on Peacemakers

It is so easy to stir the stew, to add your own spice and heat to it until it boils over rendering anything inside charred and devoid of nutrition. How much more difficult it is to soothe an angry temper, to see from another’s point of view, to broker peace? In this Spotlight on Peacemakers, we take a look back at DailyGood features on remarkable people who have brought peace to tense situations and made peace a priority both in their own lives and in the world around them. { read more }

Be The Change

What is something you can do today to further peace?

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

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DailyGood News That Inspires

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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