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Archive for March, 2018

How I Became an Entrepreneur at 66

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 11, 2018

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How I Became an Entrepreneur at 66

It’s never too late to be what you might have been.

– George Eliot –

How I Became an Entrepreneur at 66

When Paul Tasner was laid off at 64, he was not in a position to remain unemployed. For several years after, the engineer pursued a career in consulting but realized he had no passion for it. So, at the age of 66, he took a leap and started his own start-up. In his TED Talk, he tells of this journey, his experiences, and how more seniors are becoming successful entrepreneurs. { read more }

Be The Change

In the US, older entrepreneurs have a 70 percent success rate. What is one way you can celebrate these successes and support the seniors your know?

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Small Graces by Kent Neburn

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 10, 2018

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Small Graces by Kent Neburn

Do we really need much more than this? To honor the dawn. To visit a garden. To talk to a friend. To contemplate a cloud. To cherish a meal. To bow our heads before the mystery of the day. Are these not enough?

– Kent Neburn –

Small Graces by Kent Neburn

Pause just long enough in your busy day to sit in a patch of sunlight. Now breathe deeply. Then, in the small space you just opened, read this profound reflection on the quiet graces that make up a day. They might just lead into the larger grace of your whole life. { read more }

Be The Change

Give your self the gift of listening to this quiet reflection read aloud by clicking the link below. Then rise up and meet the next small grace of your day with wonder and joy. { more }

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The Intelligence of Plants

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 9, 2018

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The Intelligence of Plants

Self-awareness, intelligence, and the search for meaning that have –erroneously– been ascribed as belonging only to human beings, are in fact general conditions for every life-form — and particularly for plants.

– Stephen Harrod Buhner –

The Intelligence of Plants

Plants are intelligent; perform complex mathematical computations; plan for the future; and even interpret meaning. Stephen Harrod Buhner came to this conclusion by opening his understanding up to the many cultures and individuals who have listened to plants in order to learn what they have to say. He learned from the direct stories of indigenous people whose first person accounts all said they learned the medicinal qualities of the plants they used from the plants themselves, or that it came in a vision, or that Creator told them the uses. It was clear then that, in a way that reductive science did not understand, or even acknowledge, there was another way of gathering information about the world, and that in fact, plants were highly intelligent and able to communicate with people. Dive into this mind-opening interview from Moon Magazine to discover the “non-linear intelligence of nature”. { read more }

Be The Change

Try responding with the intelligence of a plant the next situation where you find you must “deal with” rather than run from or avoid whatever is presented.

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Home Turf

This week’s inspiring video: Home Turf
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Mar 08, 2018
Home Turf

Home Turf

The images of a roaring turf fire warm us as we watch this video of a way of life that is swiftly fading. Headed out on his motorbike with a spade and a pitch fork, a man joins others who share with him the difficult but companionable work of cutting turf to heat their homes. Set in County Kerry, in southwestern Ireland, this poignant film documents the vanishing traditional way of cutting turf from the bog, which is quickly being replaced by machines. The men share tea and sandwiches and the camaraderie that comes from joining together in a difficult task, secure in the knowledge that their homes and their families will be warm in the coming winter months. They are aware that the days of the bog and their time in it are numbered, which gives a heightened importance to their work as they are determined to enjoy every minute of it.
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From Mindfulness to Heartfulness

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 8, 2018

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From Mindfulness to Heartfulness

Your vision will become clear only when you look into your heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakens.

– Carl Jung –

From Mindfulness to Heartfulness

“Heartfulness seeks to overcome limitations to the kind of mindfulness that is used for the pursuit of profit and pleasure and doesnt challenge materialistic beliefs, values, or practices. Mindfulness can enable other virtues, but if we remain on the purely cognitive level, or stay narrowly focused on stress reduction, we are missing its true power. While the science focus is extremely convincing as to the reality of the power of mindful practice, we also need to maintain and expand the hearts role in mindfulness.” Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu shares more in this excerpt from his book “From Mindfulness to Heartfulness” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Stephen. RSVP info and more details here. { more }

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What If We Believed No Lives Mattered Less Than Other Lives?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 7, 2018

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What If We Believed No Lives Mattered Less Than Other Lives?

There is no force in the world better able to alter anything from its course than love.

– Father Greg Boyle –

What If We Believed No Lives Mattered Less Than Other Lives?

“Homeboy Industries provides hope, training, and support to formerly gang-involved and previously incarcerated men and women allowing them to redirect their lives and become contributing members of our community. Each year over 10,000 former gang members from across Los Angeles come through Homeboy Industries doors in an effort to make a positive change. They are welcomed into a community of mutual kinship [and] love…Full-time employment is offered for more than 200 men and women at a time through an 18-month program that helps them re-identify who they are in the world, offers job training so they can move on from Homeboy Industries and become contributing members of the community – knowing they count!” { read more }

Be The Change

Next time you are tempted to judge someone based on their past, ask yourself instead how you can support their growth.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness Through Images

What are the effects on our health when we are exposed to positive news, see acts of kindness and learn of human goodness? This was the question that Dr. David Fryburg asked himself after experiencing what he calls a “sort of news-induced depression”. He found that “our visual diet matters – we are what we see”. Learn more about his founding of Envision Kindness in our featured story. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: What are the effects on our health when we are exposed to positive news, see acts of kindness and learn of human goodness? This was the question that Dr. David Fryburg asked himself after experiencing what he calls a “sort of news-induced depression”. He found that “our visual diet matters – we are what we see”. Learn more about his founding of Envision Kindness in our featured story. – Ameeta
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An extraordinary event of kindness happened spontaneously at the airport: many women created a circle around a crying toddler refusing to board to help him and his overwhelmed young mother.
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Peace Pilgrim’s Last Interview

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March 6, 2018

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Peace Pilgrim's Last Interview

It isn’t more light we need, it’s putting into practice what light we already have. When we do that, wonderful things will happen within our lives and within our world.

– Peace Pilgrim –

Peace Pilgrim’s Last Interview

How far would you go to “live” on a daily basis something you believed in? Would you go over 25,000 miles? Would you spend over twenty-five years on the journey? And what would you need to be able to show for it in order to consider your effort a success? Read this remarkable interview with the woman who zig-zagged across the United States more than six times on foot as a way to embody peace and inspire others to “do something for peace, in their own way”. { read more }

Be The Change

This week reflect on one way you can grow peace within yourself; then challenge yourself to express that inner peace in an outward action from a smile, to a hug to something even more courageous.

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Awakin Weekly: Do A Nice Thing For Your Future Self

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Do A Nice Thing For Your Future Self
by Elizabeth Gilbert

[Listen to Audio!]

2288.jpgI grew up on a small family farm, with plants and animals needing care in every direction, so vacations were rare. But one summer my parents convinced a neighboring farmer to tend to our goats and chickens while we got to go to the beach for a whole entire week. On the morning we departed, my mother stripped her bed, washed and dried the linens, and remade the bed perfectly, as if she were preparing it for a guest. I was baffled. Nobody was going to be visiting while we were away; why go to so much time and trouble?
“Oh,” my mother explained, when I asked why she had bothered, “this is just a little present I’m giving my future self. This way, when she comes home all tired and worn-out at the end of her vacation, she’ll have the gift of fresh, clean sheets waiting to welcome her back to her own bed.”

“She,” my mother had said—not “I.” I found it striking that she felt such friendly kindness toward the person she would be. My mother’s current self clearly believed that the stranger she’d become over the next week was deserving of love. This gift of a freshly made bed was not an insignificant act: It was a conscious handshake of affection across time, a way of connecting the woman of this moment to the woman of the future.

I have never forgotten this lesson.

We are told to be kind and generous to ourselves, but it’s not always easy. Often we don’t feel deserving. Often we fail to act in our best interests in the chaos of the present moment, denying ourselves loving tenderness. We look in the mirror and think about every dumb thing we’ve done or said today, and we decide, Well, there stands a lousy piece of human garbage. Then comes the punishment, which can be anything from binge eating to taking other people’s abuse to blowing off our taxes. When you hate yourself this much, why would you evermake your bed? You’re basically a worthless dog who deserves nothing better than to sleep on a pile of damp rags.

But what about the person you will become in a week? Or a month? Or a year? What about that innocent stranger? What did she ever do that was so wrong? What if you were able to regard your future self as a deserving visitor worthy of affection and sympathy? What if every single day you tried to think of one nice gift you could offer her—something that might make her feel welcome and safe and loved when she finally shows up?

It can be as small a gesture as flossing your teeth (a boring task I can never bring myself to execute unless I begin by saying, “This one’s for you, future Liz!”), or as big a gesture as quitting smoking or walking out of a toxic relationship because you don’t want your future self to suffer as much as your present self is.

If you can’t do a nice thing for you, could you possibly do a nice thing for her? That mysterious and blameless stranger will someday have to live in the world you’re creating for her today. In other words, you’re the one making the bed, but she’s the one who’ll be lying in it. So be nice to her today. Be nice to her every day.

Remember: You are the best friend she has.

About the Author: Elizabeth Gilbert is an American author best known for her memoir Eat, Pray, Love. Excerpted from here.

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Do A Nice Thing For Your Future Self
How do you relate to the notion that you are the best friend your future self has? Can you share a personal story of a time you did something out of kindness and regard to your future self? What helps you stay rooted in affection and sympathy toward your future self?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: How sad it is that as we grow up we get put down and self degrading messages from the people who also love us and care about us. Such messages grow like bad roots in our unconscious mind …
david doane wrote: I am the best friend my future self has. To a great extent, I’m a present oriented person with the firm belief that taking good care of my self physically, emotionally, intellectually, an…
Abhishek wrote: This thought evokes a tenderness in me – the idea of a future self I don’t know yet am deeply connected with….playing across time like this has a very humbling effect, also reminding me of th…
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Global call with Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu!
358.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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The Spirit of Restorative Justice

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 5, 2018

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The Spirit of Restorative Justice

Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing
and rightdoing there is a field.
I’ll meet you there.

– Rumi –

The Spirit of Restorative Justice

Sujatha Baliga serves as the Executive Director of the Restorative Justice Project at Impact Justice, in Alameda County, California. Her background as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, criminal law attorney, and meditator inform her critical and revolutionary work in restorative justice today. Following a life-changing encounter with His Holiness the Dalai Lama who advised her to meditate and contemplate how she viewed her enemies, Baliga began a mindfulness meditation practice, which led her eventually to forgive her abuser, and then to become one of the leading voices and practitioners of Restorative Justice. In this interview, Baliga shares insights about her personal journey to forgiveness, the criminal legal system, the role of anger and truth-telling, and what restorative justice offers the world. { read more }

Be The Change

Taking the Dalai Lama’s advice to heart, contemplate on how you view your “enemies.” Can you apply the restorative justice paradigm to your own internal or external enemies?

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