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Archive for 2017

Let Them Be: Reclaiming Childhood for Our Children

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March 4, 2017

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Let Them Be: Reclaiming Childhood for Our Children

It is a happy talent to know how to play.

– Ralph Waldo Emerson –

Let Them Be: Reclaiming Childhood for Our Children

“Play used to be the way we discovered ourselves and explored the world around us. Perhaps it was at a sandlot, where — glove in hand –we argued with friends, drew lots, and fanned out to immerse ourselves in a pickup baseball game. Or maybe it was flashlight tag: we chased each other at dusk, laughing and tumbling, bumping and bumbling around. But we connected with each other: with parents, siblings, and friends. Life was physical and immediate. Interaction was direct. We talked, fought, and resolved our conflicts face-to-face. Modern technology changed all that. We Facebook and text. Watch Vimeo and videos gone viral. Life experiences and learning filter through to us via digital devices. Nowadays, kids are plugged in, often before they can even walk.” Author Luis Fernando Llosa explores how today’s climate of technology immersion, competitive youth sports, and little time for unstructured play may be sabotaging today’s youth. { read more }

Be The Change

Give your child the gift of unstructured time–to play, to explore, to be.

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Esther the Wonder Pig

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 3, 2017

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Esther the Wonder Pig

An animal’s eyes have the power to speak a great language.

– Martin Buber –

Esther the Wonder Pig

“She has a popularity rating most teenagers can only dream of. Her main Facebook page has more than 160,000 likes. Her musings about life with her two dads in Ontario, Canada, draw thousands of comments. And while she can’t take selfies, her photos get forwarded around the world. Meet Esther the Wonder Pig who does more than make people laugh: evidence of what her human guardians call the “Esther Effect” appears throughout her social media sites.” This is the story of a 625 pound pig who stole the hearts of the couple who adopted her and is now an endearing accidental activist, raising the world’s consciousness around factory farming and inspiring dietary shifts. { read more }

Submitted by: Brenda Robson

Be The Change

Take a moment today to appreciate one of the non-human life forms around you. Is there a special animal you know who has helped shift your perspective on the world in any way?

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WE CARE Solar

This week’s inspiring video: WE CARE Solar
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Mar 02, 2017
WE CARE Solar

WE CARE Solar

Dr. Laura Stachel never meant to be a social innovator, and she never imagined working in developing countries. When Dr. Stachel was invited to visit Nigeria in 2008 to find out why so many women were dying there during childbirth, she was flabbergasted to discover that in many areas, women were giving birth without electricity — sometimes in near total darkness. With her husband, a solar expert, she devised a way to bring light to clinics in Nigeria and other countries with poor infrastructure. Find out how their innovation has had instant and powerful results in clinics around the world.
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This Woman’s Novel Approach to Poverty Is A Game Changer

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March 2, 2017

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This Woman's Novel Approach to Poverty Is A Game Changer

If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.

– John F. Kennedy –

This Woman’s Novel Approach to Poverty Is A Game Changer

“Compass Working Capital’s mission is to help struggling families build the savings and the skills they need to climb out of poverty. Compasss programs combine financial education and coaching, with incentives for saving. The asset-based approach works: 60 percent of families in the flagship program have increased their incomes by an average of $11,000 a year, and 81 percent have seen their savings rise to an average of $2,500. In a country where 62 percent of people count less than $1,000 in savings, thats an impressive achievement.” { read more }

Be The Change

Consider the abundance in your own life today. Find a way to share that “wealth” in whatever form you experience it, with someone else today.

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Where Dance, Design & Inner Transformation Meet

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 1, 2017

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Where Dance, Design & Inner Transformation Meet

Dancing is poetry with arms and legs.

– Charles Baudelaire –

Where Dance, Design & Inner Transformation Meet

At the end of her first day at her first job at a prestigious design firm in Mumbai, 20-year-old Miti Desai came home and wept for five hours straight. Questioned by her concerned parents, the explanation that instinctively rose to her lips was this: “Every aspect of what happens there ultimately comes down to a financial transaction. I can’t live my life that way.” Twelve days later she quit. A few months later she flew to Atlanta, Georgia, a freshly enrolled graduate student of the Portfolio Center. A week after classes began she turned up at the dean’s office with an announcement: “I think I need to leave the school.” Why? “Everything were being asked to create here is commercial.” Read on to learn how this disenchanted design student went on to become a renowned classical Indian dancer — who now designs from the inside out. { read more }

Be The Change

Is there a practice in your own life that helps you connect to your highest truths? This Saturday join an Awakin Call with Miti Desai and learn more about her unique journey and relationship to dance and design. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Reclaiming the Lost Art of Walking

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The Human Library: Talking to Books

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February 28, 2017

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The Human Library: Talking to Books

I think there is just one kind of folks. Folks.

– Scout Finch, To Kill a Mockingbird –

The Human Library: Talking to Books

Instead of borrowing a book at this library, you can borrow a person! The intention behind the Human Library is to connect people to members of communities who are not well understood by the general public. In this video, Rachel Bergen shares, “Before today, I had never even met a medium, a transgender person, or someone with EB, but here I had the chance to even ask them personal questions and really see a glimpse of life through their eyes.”Designed to create space for positive conversations that defy stereotypes and prejudices, the Human Library is changing the world, one interaction at a time. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you catch yourself having a judgmental thought about another person, can you imagine yourself in their shoes?

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Awakin Weekly: A Scheme to Change the World?

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
A Scheme to Change the World?
by Hazrat Inayat Khan

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgThe other day I lectured in Paris and after my lecture a very able man came to me and said, ‘Have you got a scheme?’ I said, ‘What scheme?’ ‘Of bettering conditions.’

I replied that I had not made such a scheme, and he said, ‘I have a scheme, I will show it to you’. He opened his box and brought out a very large paper with mathematics on it and showed it to me saying, ‘This is the economic scheme that will make the condition of the world better: everyone will have the same share’.

I said, ‘We should practice that economic scheme first on tuning our piano: instead of saying D, E, F, we should tune them all to one note and play that music and see how interesting that would be — all sounding the same, no individuality, no distinction, nothing.’ And I added, ‘Economy is not a plan for construction, but it is a plan for destruction. It is economics which have brought us to destruction. It is the heart quality, it is the spiritual outlook which will change the world’.

Very often people coming to hear me say afterwards, ‘Yes, all you say is very interesting, very beautiful, and I wish too that the world was changed. But how many think like you? How can you do it? How can it be done?’.

They come with that pessimistic remark, and I tell them, ‘One person comes into a country with a little cold or influenza and it spreads. If such a bad thing can spread, can not an elevated thought of love, kindness and goodwill towards all men spread? See then that there are finer germs, germs of goodwill, of love, kindness, and feeling, germs of brotherhood, of the desire for spiritual evolution, which can have greater results than the other ones. If we all have that optimistic view, if we all work in our little way, we can accomplish a great deal’.

Many have been cross with God for having sent any misery in their lives — but we always get such experiences! Becoming cross one says, ‘Why, this is not just’, or ‘This is not right’, and ‘How could God who is just and good allow unjust things to happen?’ But our sight is so limited that our conception of right and wrong and good and evil is only for us — not according to God’s plan. It is true that, as long as we see it as such, it is so for us and for those who look at it from our point of view, but when it comes to God the whole dimension is changed, the whole point of view is changed.

The Sufi therefore, finds the only way out of the distress of life … He rises above it, taking all things as they come, patiently. He does not mind how he is treated. His principle is to do his best, and in that is his satisfaction. Instead of depending on another person to be kind to him, the Sufi thinks if he were kind to another person, that is sufficient. Every wise man in the long run through life will find in this principle the solution of happiness. For we cannot change the world, but we can change ourselves.

About the Author: Excerpted from "Sangatha II, Path To Perfection" (more here and here).

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A Scheme to Change the World?
How do you relate to the example of applying economics to music? Can you share a personal story around infectious goodwill? What helps you to keep doing your best regardless of how you are treated?
susan schaller wrote: Yes, yes, and yes. When I let go of any fear (insecurity, worry – all the many forms of fear), life, people, circumstances, health improve. I experimented with practicing living in …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: There are two worlds I (and we) live in: The world which has more darkness than light and also the world which has more light than darkness. I can talk about my world more authentically than th…
david doane wrote: I don’t equate everyone having the same share economically to tuning a piano such that it has only one note. I equate everyone having the same share economically to everyone having a piano, tha…
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303.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

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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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Getting Unstuck: The Art of Possibility

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February 27, 2017

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Getting Unstuck: The Art of Possibility

Fear is the glue that keeps you stuck. Faith is the solvent that sets you free.

– Shannon L. Alder –

Getting Unstuck: The Art of Possibility

We begin with grand plans for accomplishing a task, and too often end in frustration with having nothing done. What if we changed our view and looked at a rut as an opportunity instead of a problem? Rosamund Stone Zander, the author of “Getting Unstuck,” helps us see the inner wisdom we all have. On her journey as a writer, slowing down is the key that opened a surge in creativity. She suggests that it is our fear of not being productive that actually gets us stuck. Having faith in the authentic voice inside of ourselves is the key to getting unstuck. She shares her own experience of relaxing the definitions given to “problems” and invites us to open up to problems as they teach us what we need so that we can move into a more creative way of living. { read more }

Be The Change

Have you ever been stuck in trying to accomplish a task? Share a story about your own experience in being set free from a “problem” when you looked at the situation differently.

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Kindness Weekly: Widening Our Circles of Compassion

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

About KindSpring

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.

Inspiring Quote

Kindness is the golden chain by which society is bound together –Johann Wolfgand van Goethe

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21.jpgCABBAGE! From volunteering at the soup kitchen, to inspiring your students — thank you for making our world a kinder place. Send CABBAGE some KarmaBucks and say hello.

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February 26, 2017

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space EditorEditor’s note: Albert Einstein once said, "Our task must be to free ourselves by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and it’s beauty." The passing Random Acts of Kindness week, reminds us that small acts of kindness provide an extraordinary opportunity for each of us to widen our circles of compassion, and to show kindness to those whom we might not ordinarily see. –Ameeta space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space mdaffenberg wrote: “I assisted a man in a nursing home with a writing/art project on which he is working.”
space malatikalmadi wrote: “Filled water for the birds in my garden.”
space mforresterdavis wrote: “I practiced kindness today by taking care of a person with a development and intellectual disability.”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 What the two ladies reflected on about Random Acts of Kindness Day.
Story2 The little girl with the “tummy ache” helped the school nurse feel better.
Story3 She realized the importance of just asking how she can help people in need.
space Love Unconditionally space
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Idea of the Week

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How to Listen with Compassion in the Classroom

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February 26, 2017

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How to Listen with Compassion in the Classroom

Listening has the quality of the wizard’s alchemy. It has the power to melt armor and produce beauty in the midst of hatred.

– Brian Muldoon –

How to Listen with Compassion in the Classroom

In classroom environments where the need to belong is thwarted, young people may grasp for power and prestige rather than learn how to form authentic connections. Students may try to fit in in negative ways like bullying, buying in to peer pressure, or conforming to negative stereotype, because, often they lack the necessary social-emotional skills to form healthy, supportive relationships — which leads to a fear-based classroom atmosphere that impedes learning. Martha Caldwell, a teacher and teaching consultant, shares how we can intentionally design classroom communities that challenge this dynamic by teaching and modeling compassionate listening to “foster belonging, inclusion, and learning in the classroom.” She lists practical tips in the form of seven principles to help cultivate compassionate listening skills — applicable to children and adults alike. { read more }

Be The Change

Try applying one or more of the principles in this article to listen compassionately today. Does it shift the charge in the atmosphere of your conversation? Does it make room for authentic connection? For more inspiration on Martha Caldwell’s work on mindfulness in education, see here: { more }

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