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Archive for 2017

Ken Cloke: There Is No Them. There Is Just Us.

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 27, 2017

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Ken Cloke: There Is No Them. There Is Just Us.

Our lives are formed not just by the conflicts that we’ve experienced, but by the ones we’ve not resolved

– Ken Cloke –

Ken Cloke: There Is No Them. There Is Just Us.

“If chickens are playing on a playground and they’re fighting, the very first thing that we tend to do is separate them. Separation works to stop the fighting, but it doesn’t work to settle the issues that they’re fighting over. So there are relatively primitive and relatively advanced methods for handling any particular type of conflict. And those are endless — throughout our lives, we have nothing but opportunities for transcendence and transformation! To change the form of the thing, and by changing it, we learn from it and discover some higher order of capacity, to come to terms with this thing that was giving us the most trouble.” Ken Cloke is Director of the Center for Dispute Resolution in Southern California. He specializes in mediation, negotiation and resolution of complex organizational, interpersonal, and public policy disputes. What follows is an interview with Ken Cloke in which he shares fascinating stories of his approach, and stresses the benefits of dialog in our lives and in the world. { read more }

Be The Change

Ken Cloke says that “it is our inability to recognize that truth is complex, multi-dimensional and nuanced that gets us into conflict.” See if you can sit with this thought for a while. Share what comes up for you in our forum. Other ways to support dialogue work in the world include supporting the work of organizations like ‘Mediators beyond Borders’. { more }

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Guy Standing on an Economy that Works for Everyone

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 26, 2017

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Guy Standing on an Economy that Works for Everyone

A sustainable world means working together to create prosperity for all.

– Jacqueline Novogratz –

Guy Standing on an Economy that Works for Everyone

Through research and advocacy, economist Guy Standing has been fighting for an economy that works for everyone and for the environment for years. In his books and other publications, he argues that our current economic ideology has created an antagonistic world in which a small percent are “winners” and a large percent are “losers,” resulting in an environment of insecurity and tension. In this interview, Guy shares a set of policies “which each taken in turn are not radical or impossible or utopian. They’re all feasible. Taken as a package they would radically transform the economic system and reduce the inequalities and insecurities [of our current system].” Read on to learn more about Guy’s intriguing propositions. { read more }

Be The Change

Unpaid work can often be highly valuable work, like taking care of your parents, engaging in sustainable behavior, or giving back to your community. Which area can you work on this week, delighting in the unmeasurable rewards?

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The Art of Cleaning

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 25, 2017

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The Art of Cleaning

Every aspect of your life is anchored energetically in your living space, so clearing clutter can completely transform your entire existence.

– Karen Kingston –

The Art of Cleaning

Cleaning and doing chores aren’t activities that our culture appreciates much these days, yet Sufi mystic Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee understands housework as being essential for a healthy spiritual life. “As within, so without. As above, so below,” he seems to be saying in this article about ‘The Art of Cleaning’. Sweeping becomes a metaphor for clearing away the debris that is blocking our progress. Discarding old, unwanted things becomes a way of letting go of attachments that no longer serve our spiritual journey. The very process of cleaning becomes a humbling act of taking responsibility for creating open, empty spaciousness, for new life to enter in. It is a way to be kind to all beings – including ourselves – who may enter into the spaces we have inhabited. With new appreciation, may we pick up our brooms and clear our drawers as living prayers of mindfulness. { read more }

Be The Change

Rather than clean as a chore in the coming week, try to think of it as a prayer for yourself and the world, to bring clarity and kindness to our home on planet Earth.

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Training Our Trains of Thought

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 24, 2017

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Training Our Trains of Thought

Gratitude for the present moment and the fullness of life now is true prosperity.

– Eckhart Tolle –

Training Our Trains of Thought

When negative thinking becomes habit, take heart. With compassion, mindfulness, and gratitude, it’s possible to retrain our neural pathways for the better. To start, we become mindful of what’s going on inside our heads. Thoughts and feelings come and go — they don’t stick with or own us. Realizing this gives us the space we need to observe them without letting them carry us away. By treating them with compassion and without judgment, they eventually lose their power. However, like a muscle, the mind still wants to work to fill in the space where the negativity resided. This is where gratitude comes in. Instead of looking for evidence and ideas to support our negative thoughts, we use our minds to look for things that are going right, to be grateful for. In this article, Kristi Nelson describes how she transformed her own negative thinking patterns into a healthy habit of gratitude. { read more }

Be The Change

Catch yourself in a pattern of negative thinking today and replace it with feelings of gratitude.

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“We Real Cool”

This week’s inspiring video: “We Real Cool”
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Video of the Week

Nov 23, 2017

“We Real Cool”

John Ulrich, a student at the Massachusets College of Art and Design, reads Gwendolyn Brooks’ poem, ”We Real Cool," which speaks to him and his generation in the depressed neighborhood of South Boston where so many young friends and neighbors have taken their own lives. In four verses of two rhyming lines each, the poem evokes rebelliousness, youth, the seven deadly sins, and mortality. "We Real Cool" was written in 1959 and published in Brooks’ third collection of poetry, "The Bean Eaters," in 1960. Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks (June 7, 1917 – December 3, 2000) was an American poet, author, and teacher who won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1950 for a volume titled "Annie Allen." Watch and listen as Ulrich recites the poem that tells his story.
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Brother David Steindl Rast: A Deep Bow

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November 23, 2017

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Brother David Steindl Rast: A Deep Bow

Who can distinguish giver and receiver in the final kiss of gratitude?

– Brother David Steindl Rast –

Brother David Steindl Rast: A Deep Bow

What exactly is gratitude and what does it mean to be grateful? Does gratitude require an exchange between people or can one be grateful to something more amorphous like nature? Can an anonymous gift be received with the same gratitude as one where the giver is known and acknowledged? While many of us believe we understand gratitude, Brother David Steindl Rast challenges us to consider its complexity. Read this article from the website of the organization he co-founded to learn more. { read more }

Be The Change

This Thanksgiving, take one of the thought-provoking ideas from Brother Steindl Rast’s essay and explore with someone you know. Or explore the art of living with gratitude by visiting gratefulness.org. { more }

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Holly Near’s Planetary Anthem Dares Us to Be Magical

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 22, 2017

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Holly Near's Planetary Anthem Dares Us to Be Magical

Can you call on your imagination. As if telling a myth to a child. Put in the fantastical, wonderful, magical. Add the romantic, the brave and the wild.

– Holly Near –

Holly Near’s Planetary Anthem Dares Us to Be Magical

“I do not separate my music from my heart nor do I separate my ideas from my daily life. I open myself up to learning as much as I can about humanity and this mysterious life experience… Moment by moment, I integrate what I learn into my personal life, personalizing my politics. It is from this personal place that I write my songs.” Holly Near is an activist, singer-song writer who uses her voice to remind us that we are truly one. In “Souls are Coming Back,” a gorgeous anthem to our planet and those working to save it, Holly leads us on the journey of millenniums – our journey. With each small act, word, touch and thought – she reminds us we co-create our world and lyrically invites us to,”Put in the fantastical, wonderful, magical, add the romantic, the brave and the wild.” { read more }

Be The Change

Inspired by Holly’s soul-stirring invitation? Commit to doing something brave and magical today.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Giving Thanks

As Thanksgiving day approaches across America, the hustle and bustle of the holiday season seem to have arrived at our doorstep faster than we anticipated. Amidst the flurry of guests, food, and the start of the holiday shopping, let us gently remind ourselves to actually take the time to — give thanks, for the blessings in our lives all year round.

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Editor’s Note: As Thanksgiving day approaches across America, the hustle and bustle of the holiday season seem to have arrived at our doorstep faster than we anticipated. Amidst the flurry of guests, food, and the start of the holiday shopping, let us gently remind ourselves to actually take the time to — give thanks, for the blessings in our lives all year round.
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Kindness In the News
Penn State students deliver Thanksgiving meals to families in need. They filled their baskets with goodies and headed out to deliver them.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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I’ve been busy this morning organizing more donations for the fire relief efforts. By complete chance, I saw a crowd funder which mentioned that a small community school had been destroyed.
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Grateful: A Love Song to the World
Hugs This soul-stirring music video, created within a week by a team of volunteers, shines the light on all the small things that make up the beautiful fabric of our lives.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
The key to a happy life? Gratitude that goes beyond Thanksgiving. Our friends over at gratefulness.org share 10 reasons to cultivate gratitude year round. Read the full article on the LA Times.
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Overcoming Stress By Seeing Other People’s Joy

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 21, 2017

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Overcoming Stress By Seeing Other People's Joy

If you carry joy in your heart, you can heal every moment.

– Carlos Santana –

Overcoming Stress By Seeing Other People’s Joy

Often, empathetic people build up emotional barriers to prevent stress and burnout from their interactions from others. However, Kelly McGonigal believes in the opposite. In the article, Kelly discusses the reasons to double down on positive empathy and provides ways for you to foster joy to combat stress.
{ read more }

Be The Change

Think about what makes you smile, and experience that at least once this week.

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Awakin Weekly: Laziness As Our Personal Teacher

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Laziness As Our Personal Teacher
by Pema Chodron

[Listen to Audio!]

2272.jpgThe path of awakening is a process. It’s a process of gradually learning to become intimate with our so-called obstacles. So rather than feeling discouraged by laziness, we could look into our laziness, become curious about laziness. We could get to know laziness profoundly.

We can unite with laziness, be our laziness, know its smell and taste, feel it fully in our bodies. The spiritual path is a process of relaxing into this very moment of being. We touch in with this moment of lethargy or loss of heart, this moment of pain, of avoidance, of couldn’t care less. We touch in and then we go forward. This is the training. Whether in formal meditation or throughout our days and nights, we can train in letting go of our commentary and contacting the felt quality of our experience. We can touch our experience without getting hooked by the story line. We can touch this very moment of being and then move on.

We are sitting in meditation or going about our usual routine, and it occurs to us to listen to what we’re saying. What we hear is, Oy vey, oy vey! Woe is me. I’m a failure. There’s no hope. We look at what we do to ourselves, what we say to ourselves, how we lose heart or try to distract ourselves. Then we let those words go and touch the heart of this moment. We touch the very center of this moment of being and then we let go. This is how we train. Again and again, this is our practice.

We join our loss of heart with honesty and kindness. Instead of pulling back from the pain of laziness, we move closer. We lean into the wave. We swim into the wave.

Somewhere in the process of staying with the moment, it might occur to us that there are a lot of unhappy brothers and sisters out there, suffering as we are suffering. In becoming intimate with our own pain, with our own laziness, we are touching in with all of them, understanding them, knowing our kinship with all of them.

[…]Instead of continuing to zone out and shut down and close off, we lean in and relax. This is how we practice.

So maybe we open the window or go out for a walk, or maybe we sit silently, but whatever we do, it occurs to us to stay with ourselves, to go behind the words, behind the ignoring, and to feel the quality of this moment of being, in our hearts, in our stomachs, for ourselves, and for all of the millions of others in the same boat. We start to train in openness and compassion toward this very moment. This very moment of laziness becomes our personal teacher. This precious moment becomes our profound and healing practice.

About the Author: Pema Chodron is a renowned Buddhist teacher. Excerpt above is from an online article.

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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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