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Archive for November 28, 2017

Spotlight On Kindness: Power

From a young age, we are often conditioned to seek external power, a power that seeks to exert control or influence. This power, however, can often mask an underlying internal powerlessness, which for many can lead to unhealthy relationships in life. Imagine how different our world might be if kids were taught the power of kindness, to build up their internal power instead? –Ameeta

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We did not weave the web of life. We are merely a strand in it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. –Chief Seattle
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Editor’s Note: From a young age, we are often conditioned to seek external power, a power that seeks to exert control or influence. This power, however, can often mask an underlying internal powerlessness, which for many can lead to unhealthy relationships in life. Imagine how different our world might be if kids were taught the power of kindness, to build up their internal power instead? –Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A four-year-old sparks new purpose in a lonely senior’s life through an unlikely friendship.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
To celebrate our 25th wedding anniversary, Mary and I bought 5 scratchers [lottery tickets] and 5 Gerber Daisies. Then, we looked for couples out and about.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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The Power of a Cup of Tea
Hugs While Curran, an Iraq war Vet, was patrolling a poor area in the city of Ramadi, he encountered an Iraqi who would change his life and teach him about a different kind of a power.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
A new movie just out, “Wonder”, is re-introducing the power of choosing kindness to the world. It’s a story of simple kindness and how offering even little kindness can make such a big difference. As Julia Roberts, who stars in the movie, states: “Wonder” shows the radical power of kindness.
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Nipun Mehta on What It Means to Serve

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 28, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

Nipun Mehta on What It Means to Serve

As we lose ourselves in the service of others, we discover our own lives and our own happiness.

– Dieter F. Uchtdorf –

Nipun Mehta on What It Means to Serve

In this interview at the Sun Valley Wellness Festival, Nipun Mehta, the founder of ServiceSpace, explores the nuances of what it means to serve. His talk affords a glimpse of various ServiceSpace projects like KarmaTube, DailyGood, Karma Kitchen, and more. Karma Kitchen works on an intriguing pay-it-forward basis. When patrons are done eating, the bill arrives with a total of $0.00, and a brief explanation of how someone beforehand has made a gift of this meal; patrons are trusted to keep the chain of kindness going and continue to pay it forward for future diners. Nipun maintains that in this era rather than putting heroes on pedestals, its vital that everyone become ‘everyday Gandhis.’ Service doesn’t have to be some big, grandiose thing – you can hold open a door, pay someone’s toll, or just be a good listener. All these small, every day activities come from a place of love, and ultimately serve humanity as a whole by breaking down boundaries, and inspiring faith in the goodness of others. { read more }

Be The Change

Pick one act of service you can practice doing this month on a daily basis. Learn more about ServiceSpace’s different projects and initiatives here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: The Messiah Is One Of Us

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Messiah Is One Of Us
by Megan McKenna

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tow5.jpgOnce upon a time there was a wise abbot of a monastery who was the friend of an equally wise rabbi. This was in the old country, long ago, when times were always hard, but just then they were even worse. The abbot’s community was dwindling, and the faith life of his monks was fearful, weak and anxious. He went to his friend and wept. His friend, the Rabbi, comforted him, and said “there is something you need to know, my brother. We have long known in the Jewish community that the Messiah is one of you.”

"What,” exclaimed the abbot, “the Messiah is one of us? How can this be?”

But the Rabbi insisted that it was so, and the abbot went back to his monastery wondering and praying, comforted and excited. Once back in the monastery, he would pass by a monk and wonder if he was the one. Sitting in chapel, praying, he would hear a voice and look intently at a face and wonder, is he the one. The abbot had always been kind, but now began to treat all of his brothers with profound kindness and awe, ever deeper respect, even reverence. Soon everyone noticed. One of the other brothers came to him and asked him what had happened to him.

After some coaxing, the abbot told him what the rabbi had said. Soon the other monk was looking at his brothers differently, with deeper respect and wondering. Word spread quickly: the Messiah is one of us. The monastery was suddenly full of life, worship, love and grace. The prayer life was rich and passionate, devoted, […] and services were alive and vibrant. Soon the surrounding villagers came to the services, listening and watching intently, and many joined the community of monks. After their novitiate, when they took their vows, they were told the mystery, the truth that their life was based upon, the source of their strength, the richness of their life together: The Messiah is one of us.

The monastery grew and expanded into house after house, and the monks grew in wisdom and grace before each other and in the eyes of God. And they say still, that if you stumble across this place where there is life and hope and kindness and graciousness, that the secret is the same: The Messiah is one of us.

About the Author: Excerpted from Mary: Shadow of Grace by Megan McKenna.

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The Messiah Is One Of Us
How do you relate to the notion that spaces of hope and kindness are related to how profoundly we see each other? Can you share a personal story of a time you saw others with profound possibility or were seen that way by someone? What helps you practice seeing the profound in others?
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Jagdish P Dave wrote: I love this story. It is simple and profound. And it is relatively easy to apply in life. There are Messiahs or Prophets in all wisdom traditions giving message of life to awaken. Accordin…
david doane wrote: I like the story that Megan McKenna tells. It’s what happens. Gandhi said, “If you don’t see God in the next person you meet, it’s a waste of time to look further.” If we see God in…
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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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