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Archive for 2017

Kindness Weekly: The Answer is Within You

KindSpring.org: Small Acts That Change the World

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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

As long as I’m alive, I will continue to try to understand more because the work of the heart is never done. — Muhammad Ali

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November 5, 2017

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space EditorEditor’s note: All of life’s questions and answers are within each of us if we choose to look. Michael Beckwith expresses this profoundly: "Every problem that we have in life is a question that is trying to be asked. Every question is an answer trying to be revealed. Every answer is an action trying to be expressed. Every action is a way of life trying to be born." What questions and answers are trying to be revealed to you? space
space Smile Big space
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Small Acts of Kindness

space CapBlack wrote: “Just did a RAK ( Random Acts of Kindness ) and sent money to a gentleman I assist, so he can have food for the week and keep his cell phone on for the month.”
space pyronik wrote: “My “You Matter” cards arrived today. Just in time to give out in November!”
space RoseBeautyxo wrote: “I was at Starbucks and there was a homeless man who randomly approached me, asking me if I could buy him a coffee and a muffin. I thought about it and said to myself “why not” so I purchased him a coffee and a chocolate chip muffin. I don’t really do that”
space Give Freely space
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Featured Kindness Stories

Story1 Our KindSpring community helped give her the courage to help a man in the subway station.
Story2 A birthday dinner becomes an opportunity to practice patience and kindness.
Story3 A gentleman’s kind gesture helped eased the new university students’ transition.
space Love Unconditionally space
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Idea of the Week

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For more ideas, visit the ideas section of our website.
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10 Young Leaders Building Peace

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 5, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

10 Young Leaders Building Peace

Do your little bit of good where you are; it’s those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.

– Desmond Tutu –

10 Young Leaders Building Peace

When the news is flooded with stories of conflict happening around the world, it can be easy to forget the efforts being made to create peaceful communities, relationships, classrooms, and businesses. Here’s an invitation to take a different view, and focus on the good being done by 10 young peacemakers, from Afghanistan to Australia. You’ll likely recognize a few! { read more }

Be The Change

What are some ways you can bring peace to your own home, school, or community? Find one to try this week!

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It Was About Friendship, Not The Home

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 4, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

It Was About Friendship, Not The Home

A nation’s culture resides in the hearts and in the soul of its people.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

It Was About Friendship, Not The Home

Author Colin Beavan discusses a memoir by Drew Philip called “A $500 House In Detroit” in which the author meets and befriends his new neighbors. The article chronicles Drew’s journey, revealing that in his quest to do the right thing, he focused on friendship and worked to transcend and accept differences between him and others.
{ read more }

Be The Change

Read a book, listen to music, talk to someone. Do something this week that provides access to different ideas and experiences, and allow yourself to transcend differences with others.

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Anne Lamott Writes Down Every Single Thing She Knows

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 3, 2017

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Anne Lamott Writes Down Every Single Thing She Knows

You don’t always have to chop with the sword of truth. You can point with it too.

– Anne Lamott –

Anne Lamott Writes Down Every Single Thing She Knows

If you know Anne Lamott’s writing, nothing more in the way of introduction is necessary. If you do not, this list of life lessons will become the magical touchstone you finger like rosary beads every time the world breaks you open in love or loss. { read more }

Be The Change

Re-read this list once a day and then do the very next thing that comes to mind.

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The Song for Rain

This week’s inspiring video: The Song for Rain
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Nov 02, 2017
The Song for Rain

The Song for Rain

This animated story about a young boy and his unlikely new friend is the graduation work of MFA student Yawen Zheng, who wants to bring peace and positive energy to this world through her animation. This lovely tale, set to the rhythm of the rain, will touch your heart with its sweetness. Enjoy!
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The World’s First Elephant-Friendly Farm

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 2, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

The World's First Elephant-Friendly Farm

If you respect nature, nature will respect you. It is that simple.

– Tenzing Bodosa –

The World’s First Elephant-Friendly Farm

Tenzing dreamed of transforming his family’s paddy and vegetable farm into an organic tea farm, though he was told that growing tea organically was impossible. When Tenzing saw the harmful effects pesticides had on his workers and farm animals, he persisted with his dream. In 2007, after a number of challenges, Tenzing’s tea farm became the first and only farm out of 12,000 others in Assam to grow organic tea. Tenzing has created such an open and welcoming environment that even the elephants stop by to munch on his tea leaves, and he doesn’t mind! Read on to learn more about this heart-warming spirit and the miracle he has created. { read more }

Be The Change

What can you give today to make another person feel happy and free?

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Edmund Benson: A Life of Hard Work and Giving Back

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 1, 2017

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Edmund Benson: A Life of Hard Work and Giving Back

What is the essence of life? To serve others and to do good.

– Aristotle –

Edmund Benson: A Life of Hard Work and Giving Back

In this Awakin Call interview, Edmund Benson discusses his life from his difficult childhood through retirement when he began the ARISE Foundation, a program teaching global skills to at-risk youth. After feeling like the black sheep of the family, Benson joined the military in his teens where he was exposed to people struggling with alcohol, anger, and other problems, teaching him to live in a more positive way. After working hard sixteen-hour days, seven days a week for thirty years, Benson was fortunate to retire early. Using connections he had gained while doing environmental work in the community, Benson and his wife turned to outreach and education for local troubled youth. After creating, educating, and distributing materials across the world for the ARISE Foundation, Benson retired again, only to start a program for the elderly. Part of this program was to help the aging remain relevant to and connected with the youth in their families and communities, coming full circle. Now in his late 80’s, there is no sign of Benson slowing down anytime soon. { read more }

Be The Change

We can all give back in our own ways. Make a list of 3-5 skills you have that can be used to give back to those in your life or community. It could be anything from being a good listener, to helping build homes, and anywhere in between. Choose one of those items and pledge to spend the next month volunteering your time in your own special way.

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Welcome to the Human Race

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October 31, 2017

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Welcome to the Human Race

What hurts you blesses you. Darkness is your candle.

– Rumi –

Welcome to the Human Race

How can one find connection and meaning through an experience as isolating and dark as depression? In “Darkness Before Dawn: Redefining the Journey through Depression,” Parker Palmer is among sixteen teachers who share their insights, perspectives, and even some positives after having experienced depression first hand. Despite that going through depression is difficult and disheartening beyond words, the experience can end up making people more courageous, compassionate, and ultimately more connected to the human race. If you know someone who is suffering, Palmer suggests, “Be present to them in a way that expresses faith and confidence that they have what it takes to make it through.” With rates of depression alarmingly high while people still suffer in silence, it is time for a conversation about depression. Here, Palmer opens up about his own experiences in the hope of helping others. { read more }

Be The Change

Today, tell someone who might be lonely that you care about them.

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Awakin Weekly: Welcoming Fear As A Friend

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Welcoming Fear As A Friend
by Gerald G. May

[Listen to Audio!]

2258.jpgThe basic lesson is this: Fear is not an enemy but a friend. Fear is something good, something alive, alert, and wild in us. Fear may be a response to danger, bur fear itself is not dangerous. On the contrary, It is nothing other than life-spirit standing on its toes right here, right now with clear attention, sharp senses, ready body, flared nostrils, bristled hair, poised muscles, pumping heart, clean breath.

The immense gratitude I experienced when I was most afraid was for feeling so incredibly alive. In untamed fear there is a profound sense of something that is me going through the experience. It is personhood without definition, identity without identification, selfhood without attributes. And it has an immense steadiness to it, an almost eternal quality. Here is this life, this being that is deeply myself, having this experience, being in it as I have been through every moment of the past, as I will be in every moment, to come, no matter what. In this strange way, fear brought me an ultimate reassurance.

I understand how people can become addicted to fear. I have known some who were hooked on their own adrenaline, compelled toward danger, driven to dancing with death at the edges of life. I doubt that will ever happen to me, for I have no desire to seek fear. But neither am I interested in protecting myself from it. When fear does come, I no longer want to cope with it. Let me neither tighten myself against what I’m feeling, nor become paralyzed by it, but let me live into the bright, sane responsiveness that fear makes possible. Let me welcome fear for the friend it is, for what it teaches and how it serves. When I feel the hairs on the back of my neck bristling for no reason, when I sense an unexplainable tremulousness, I never again want to deny it or call it neurotic. Instead, I want to welcome it, go into it, see what it is trying to show me.

People who have been assaulted sometimes say they had a premonition of danger but dismissed it. They judged their fear as unrealistic, denied or coped with it, and forged ahead. They were afraid of being afraid, and they got hurt. I have to disagree with Franklin Roosevelt and so many others who have said that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. I would turn the phrase on its head and maintain that the only thing we have to fear is our fear of fear.

About the Author: Gerald G May from "The Wisdom of Wilderness"

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Welcoming Fear As A Friend
How do you relate to the notion of living into the bright, sane responsiveness that fear makes possible? Can you share a personal experience of a time you leaned into your fear? What helps you stay present to fear without dismissing it?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I love to read such writings which make me pause,”see” with wide open and clear yes and connected with the truth emerging from openness and clarity.The fear of fear is neurotic. It is a co…
david doane wrote: I experience fear when I feel in danger, in regards to whatever that may be. My fear often is of the unknown, even though I know that the unknown is full of opportunity. Feeling fea…
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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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The Science on the Benefits of Nostalgia

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 30, 2017

a project of ServiceSpace

The Science on the Benefits of Nostalgia

For me, nostalgia is an involuntary emotion. I think it’s just a natural human response to loss.

– Michael Chabon –

The Science on the Benefits of Nostalgia

It’s natural to reflect on the past with a sense of longing – a desire to return to the way things used to be. In fact, our memories of positive events tend to be more crystallized in our minds than those of negative or neutral ones. But does nostalgia come at a cost? While some research suggests that nostalgia can interfere with one’s attempts to cope with the present, it has also been found to provide a sense of stability and even promote personal growth during times of adversity. There’s a fine line between perpetual longing to return to a simpler time, and drawing on fond memories or relationships to remind us of who we are and our capacity to navigate uncertainty and change. { read more }

Be The Change

How have fond memories helped you cope during difficult times? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.

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DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 243,852 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

Other ServiceSpace projects include:

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