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Archive for January, 2018

Love Liberates: Maya Angelou’s Words to Live By

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 24, 2018

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Love Liberates: Maya Angelou's Words to Live By

Have enough courage to trust love one more time and always one more time.

– Maya Angelou –

Love Liberates: Maya Angelou’s Words to Live By

Maya Angelou eloquently describes how her mother taught her through her actions that love liberates, it does not bind. When she had a child at age 17 and moved out of her mother’s home, her mother advised her to always be true to herself and made it abundantly clear that she was always welcome home. By allowing her to go, and to come back whenever she needed to, her mother’s love liberated her to live her own life. Her mother’s recognition that she, Maya, was special and had something extraordinary to offer to the world, helped her to live her gifts. When her mother was dying Maya remembered how she had liberated her and was able to love her mother by letting her go. Her life is a powerful example of how love liberates. { read more }

Be The Change

How can you liberate someone you love, today, insuring that your love is a validation of that person, whoever and wherever he or she needs to be?

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Spotlight On Kindness: Building Non-Judgement

Judgement is both an innate and learned response. We have a natural instinct to judge our surroundings as part of our protective fight or flight mechanism but judging other people just by how they look is now less a survival response, and more a learned response. Can we teach our kids to be less judgmental and increase their empathy and compassion? These stories indicate we surely can. –Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Judgement is both an innate and learned response. We have a natural instinct to judge our surroundings as part of our protective fight or flight mechanism but judging other people just by how they look is now less a survival response, and more a learned response. Can we teach our kids to be less judgmental and increase their empathy and compassion? These stories indicate we surely can. –Ameeta
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Anna Partridge discusses five ways to raise non-judgemental children. She explores ways to educate them about others, so they have a genuine understanding and build on their own innate compassion.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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She was blown away when the young homeless man started cleaning the condiment area while awaiting the sandwich she offered him.
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A High School Kindness Club Flash Mob
Hugs A depressed high school student transformed herself and her school by founding a kindness club, which includes having “flash mobs” of students perform kindness acts together.
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During the fall of 1979, Shuka Kalantari’s entire class turned on her, and she became the victim of bullying. In this DailyGood article, she explores why we should teach empathy to preschoolers.
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Joan Halifax: Buoyancy Rather than Burnout

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January 23, 2018

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Joan Halifax: Buoyancy Rather than Burnout

We’re in an era of great breakdown, environmentally and socially and psychologically, and when systems break down, the ones who have the resilience to actually repair themselves, they move to a higher order of organization.

– Joan Halifax –

Joan Halifax: Buoyancy Rather than Burnout

It’s easy to despair at all the bad news and horrific pictures that come at us daily. But Zen teacher and medical anthropologist Roshi Joan Halifax says this is a form of empathy that works against us. There’s such a thing as pathological altruism. She offers nourishing wisdom to help all of us overwhelmed by the suffering in the world. { read more }

Be The Change

Roshi Halifax has said, “I am not a ‘nice’ Buddhist. I’m much more interested in a kind of plain rice, get-down-in-the-street Buddhism.” Practice a deeper form of kindness this week, less everyday niceness and more open tolerance and helpfulness to those in need. Practice a deeper form of kindness this week, less everyday niceness and more open tolerance and helpfulness to those in need.

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Awakin Weekly: Does Life Have A Purpose?

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Does Life Have A Purpose?
by J. Krishnamurti

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2262.jpgQuestioner:

Why do you maintain that Life has no purpose? If Life has no purpose, the individual life, even in pure being, can have no purpose either; because individual perfection can have a meaning only when there is a purpose in creation.

KRISHNAMURTI:

Life by which I mean, that life which is truth, in which there is no division, in which all things consummate, on which all things depend, in which all things exist that life has no purpose, because it is.

For that which is, there cannot be a purpose, because it is all inclusive. In that exist both time and space, and individual existence; but individual existence, in which totality is not yet realized, has a purpose. That purpose is the realization of this totality.

Individuality is not an end in itself because individuality is imperfection. It is burdened with incompleteness; and so the magnification of that individuality, to however great a degree, will still remain individuality. That which is imperfect cannot by magnification or multiplication be made perfect.

So the true purpose of individual existence is to realize this unity of things, this reality, in which there is no sense of object and subject, “you” and “I”, in which there are no reactions, but only the sense of pure being which is positive, dynamic. (When I use the word “positive”, I do not exclude the negative). This life is in all things in this table, as in the most highly cultured (hu)man.

But the individual in whom there is separation, in whom there is distinction of object and subject, in whom there is division, because of his limitation, his imperfection, must fulfill himself in perfection, in incorruptibility.

Therefore individual existence has a purpose, but life has no purpose.

About the Author: by J. Krishnamurti, from a gathering at Oomen, Holland, 1930

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Does Life Have A Purpose?
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david doane wrote: To fulfill oneself in perfection means to fulfill myself in being all of what I am, being total and whole, being all of me present and manifesting. I think I never felt life in all things…
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Some Good News

Patrick O’Malley: Getting Grief Right
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Video of the Week

A Quest for Meaning – Film Available Free Until 29 January

Kindness Stories

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Between Medicine and Music

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 22, 2018

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Between Medicine and Music

Music washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.

– – Berthold Auerbach – –

Between Medicine and Music

Robert Gupta has played the violin all his life, studying at Juilliard and joining the LA Philharmonic at 19, but he also holds a very special interest in neurobiology and mental health. Throughout his adult life, Robert has walked a bridge between medicine and music, but the journey to get there was a long one. In his TED Talk, Robert talks about the effects music has on the brain, telling stories about his interactions with the homeless and more. He even started a street symphony to offer the homeless, veterans with PTSD, and others musical support to help them heal — even if it’s just for a little bit.
{ read more }

Be The Change

How can you use music to bring light to somebody else’s life this week?
Share one way that music has helped you through a situation in your life.
What is one way you can show compassion for someone else this week?

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A Doctor For Life: Ann Petru

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 21, 2018

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A Doctor For Life: Ann Petru

Wherever the art of Medicine is loved, there is also a love of Humanity.

– Hippocrates –

A Doctor For Life: Ann Petru

Dr. Petru was just starting out as a young doctor when the AIDs epidemic began. She recalls, “As I started seeing a few kids with HIV, my boss and mentor in Infectious Disease at Children’s Oakland said, ‘I take care of the Department. I run the show. You figure out what to do for these kids.'” Petru couldn’t imagine not taking care of these kids, she told me. 35 years later, Co-Director of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Director of the Pediatric HIV AIDS Program, Infection Control Officer and head of the Ethics Committee at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital in Oakland, Dr. Petru is still working a 60 – 70 hour week and trying to raise money on her own time for the children’s HIV program. If it wouldn’t upset her to be called a saint, it’s what I’d call her.
{ read more }

Be The Change

Have you ever been in a spot where something difficult is asked of you and you felt moved to accept the challenge? Or if you passed it by, maybe there’s something similar on a smaller scale not far away you could say “yes” to.

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Community-Led Initiatives that Are Protecting the Natural World

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 20, 2018

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Community-Led Initiatives that Are Protecting the Natural World

Now I see the secret of making the best persons: it is to grow in the open air and to eat and sleep with the earth.

– Walt Whitman –

Community-Led Initiatives that Are Protecting the Natural World

In 2008, Ecuador’s leadership rewrote its constitution to include the rights of nature, effectively awarding legal rights to the environment. Indigenous communities have recognized the rights of nature for thousands of years, but Ecuador was the first country to make it a constitutional right by awarding ecosystems legal rights to protect the environment and its people. It was a seminal moment for the fast-growing environmental movement. The Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF), based in Mercersburg Pennsylvania, has been at the forefront of the rights of nature movement since its inception. In 2006, the group worked with the Pennsylvania community of Tamaqua Borough to pass a rights of nature law to protect against toxic sludge being dumped on local farmland. The group has been involved in dozens of grassroots campaigns till date, including in Ecuador. { read more }

Be The Change

Do one small act in the coming week that acknowledges and respects the rights of a piece of nature where you live, such as collect trash from the roadside during one of your morning walks or leaving a strip of grass in your yard uncut.

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The Myth of the Risk-Taker

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 19, 2018

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The Myth of the Risk-Taker

We don’t struggle with creativity, we struggle with originality.

– Adam Grant –

The Myth of the Risk-Taker

What is the one common attribute that’s consistently found among wildly successful people? Money? High education? Lucky breaks? According to Adam Grant, a psychology professor, best-selling author, and researcher in the realm of originality, a love of learning is the key to finding success. It all starts with curiosity. To challenge what is already the norm. To go against the grain and put our energy toward invention and discovery, requires a fascination with the unknown. It requires trying again and again, until originality in a world full of conformity can be found. What about risk-taking? Should we also teeter on the edge of uncertainty and instability? Some interesting evidence suggests otherwise. Success and creativity don’t have to mean huge risks. For the full conversation on non-conformity, creativity and success, read on. { read more }

Be The Change

Is there something in your life – any system or way of doing things – that you’re only doing because that’s the norm? Have you wondered about another way? And what you may be able to create if you step away from normality, into originality?

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A Quest for Meaning – Film Available for Streaming Free Until 31 January

This week’s inspiring video: A Quest for Meaning – Film Available for Streaming Free Until 31 January
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Video of the Week

Jan 18, 2018
A Quest for Meaning - Film Available for Streaming Free Until 31 January

A Quest for Meaning – Film Available for Streaming Free Until 31 January

Armed with nothing more than a tiny camera and a microphone, childhood friends Nathanaël Coste and Marc de la Menardiere, the duo behind this film, are on a mission to uncover the causes of our current global crisis and discover a way to bring about change. Full of incredible testimonials from activists, philosophers, biologists and indigenous spiritual leaders, the film asks us to consider our rapport with nature and encourages us to regain confidence in our ability to bring about change within ourselves in order to create change within our society.
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Five Limits Your Brain Puts on Generosity

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 18, 2018

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Five Limits Your Brain Puts on Generosity

There is no exercise better for the heart than reaching down and lifting people up.

– John Holmes –

Five Limits Your Brain Puts on Generosity

When we give, we receive. Altruism is something that humans feel the benefit of. We can be incredibly empathetic. But what about the times when we aren’t? Science has the answer. The brain actually puts certain limits – boundaries – on our expressions of good-natured giving. Learn about these 5 heart blocking brain responses. Awareness of these limits may allow us to stretch beyond them, and outside of ourselves, to deepen our capacity for generosity.

{ read more }

Be The Change

Next time you catch yourself pulled between focusing on you or another person, pin point which of these 5 brain mechanisms are at play. Notice whether your awareness helps shift your response.

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