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Archive for May, 2018

War Veterans Overcome PTSD with Country Dancing

This week’s inspiring video: War Veterans Overcome PTSD with Country Dancing
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Video of the Week

May 17, 2018
War Veterans Overcome PTSD with Country Dancing

War Veterans Overcome PTSD with Country Dancing

“After about five minutes of dancing, they’re smiling…and they’re smiling and laughing the rest of the night.” People with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) or traumatic brain injuries tend to be judged by those members of society who may not be educated on the subject of mental illness. Those who struggle with the traumas of their past find refuge on the dance floor – a common ground upon which all can exist in an aura of acceptance.“Everybody around me is just grinning, and it’s just a good time.” Remarkably, nearly 100% of veterans who participate in the Dancing Well program report improvement in their mood, memory, health and outlook on life. “This was the beginning of putting myself back out there. I found my smile again, just by coming here.” The therapeutic power of dance seems to heal invisible wounds that often scar people for years to come. Fortunately, for those who can dance, there is light at the end of the tunnel.
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Warriors for the Human Spirit

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 17, 2018

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Warriors for the Human Spirit

We must believe it is darkest before the dawn of a new world. We will see it when we believe it.

– Saul Alinsky –

Warriors for the Human Spirit

Margaret Wheatley is a writer and management consultant who draws upon systems analysis, chaos theory, and other diverse fields of study to inform her work. In this interview from Sounds True, she writes talks about how we are in a time of destructive change that will bring a new way of life along with it. Our best path forward is to be warriors for the human spirit as we create “islands of sanity” in the chaos we see around us. As much as we might feel fear and anger, Margaret says we must avoid engaging in the destructive forces we want to overcome and instead reach out to others in acts of service that bring new life and light to our local communities. { read more }

Be The Change

When you encounter the darkness of someone’s anger today, look instead at how you can allow this moment to open your eyes to see into that person’s deepest need.

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If This Was Your Mom, What Would You Do?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 16, 2018

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If This Was Your Mom, What Would You Do?

Empathy is simply listening, holding space, withholding judgement, emotionally connecting, and communicating that incredibly healing message of “you’re not alone.”

– Unknown –

If This Was Your Mom, What Would You Do?

In this moving piece, gastroenterologist Venu Julapalli shares what it is like for a doctor when a life-threatening condition touches one of their own family members. He shares the devastation of his own family after his mother suffered from a ruptured brain aneurysm and how a doctor simply holding space for them helped them pull through. { read more }

Be The Change

How can you hold space for those in your life who are going through tough times?

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Spotlight On Kindness: Striving For Wholeness

A careful reader helpfully nudged us on last week’s mention of a mother’s “selflessness.” Like caretaking vs. caregiving, self-less-ness (vs.self-full-ness) may subtly privilege another’s needs over one’s own, discouraging self-care. This may set up a victim triangle (see below). We should strive for wholeness and love with every interaction we have, both with ourselves and with others. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: A careful reader helpfully nudged us on last week’s mention of a mother’s “selflessness.” Like caretaking vs. caregiving, self-less-ness (vs.self-full-ness) may subtly privilege another’s needs over one’s own, discouraging self-care. This may set up a victim triangle (see below). We should strive for wholeness and love with every interaction we have, both with ourselves and with others. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A NYC subway dad struggled to re-learn math to help his son who had failed a test. The man sitting next to him turned out to be a former math teacher and their interaction inspired fellow witnesses.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A couple at a vegan restaurant encouraged a woman and her mom looking for a place with meat to sample their meals. The mutual kindness that followed was one for the books.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
Serve all
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What is a divided life?
Hugs Parker Palmer, author of A Hidden Wholeness, discusses what is a divided life and how to bring ourselves back into our true self and wholeness.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Whether we know it or not, many of us react to our divided lives by assuming very different roles which all reflect a victim mindset in various manifestations. We cannot transform ourselves or our relationships unless we are aware of and seek to escape this victim triangle.
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How Urban Agriculture is Transforming Detroit

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 15, 2018

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How Urban Agriculture is Transforming Detroit

Any landscape is a condition of the spirit.

– Henri Frederic Amiel –

How Urban Agriculture is Transforming Detroit

There’s something amazing growing in the city of Detroit: healthy, accessible, delicious, fresh food. In a spirited talk, fearless farmer Devita Davison explains how features of Detroit’s decay actually make it an ideal spot for urban agriculture. Join Davison for a walk through neighborhoods in transformation as she shares stories of opportunity and hope. “These aren’t plots of land where we’re just growing tomatoes and carrots,” Davison says. “We’re building social cohesion as well as providing healthy, fresh food.” { read more }

Be The Change

To learn more about urban farming, how you can get involved, or to find a garden in your area, visit Urban Farming’s website. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Death Connects Us To Life

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Death Connects Us To Life
by Somik Raha

[Listen to Audio!]

tow4.jpgGrowing up with monastic teachings around the impermanence of life, I got the opportunity to apply them when my grandmother passed on, followed by my grandfather in quick succession. I told myself that it was only the body that had died. Their souls were eternal and therefore, there was nothing to grieve for.

Only years later would I realize that I had short-circuited my feelings of love toward my grandparents. That I had to allow those feelings to find their expression in an authentic way. By not giving myself that space, I had numbed myself to my own feelings.

It would take many years of heavy lifting for me to realize that death connects us to life. Our own life. It is an opportunity not just to remember the impermanence of our lives and reflect on our purpose of living. It is also an opportunity to feel the well-spring of love and gratitude in its fullness through the process of grieving.

Perhaps it is for this reason that ancient cultures prescribed a cessation of normal work for a period of time that was proportional to the depth of our relationship with the departed one. In this time, we would receive the full support of our communities in creating a space where we could safely connect to the fullness of our feelings. We were thus allowed an opportunity to get to true acceptance, and not just intellectual acceptance of the transition of our loved one.

A sign of the kind of acceptance we have arrived at is whether we are feeling wholeness or fragmentation by the loss. Wholeness comes from true acceptance of every feeling that emerges within us in relation to the one who is no longer with us. Fragmentation is what results when we are afraid to feel the sadness that has resulted from the departure. Fragmentation traps us into searching for that love in every space except where it can be truly found — in our own hearts.

Wholeness, on the other hand, allows us to absorb the essence of the love we felt for the departed one and make it a permanent part of our being. That absorption frees us from fearing our feelings and roots us in joy and gratitude for having been touched, however briefly, by another life.

About the Author: by Somik Raha.

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Death Connects Us To Life
How do you relate to the notion of grieving as creating a space for safely connecting to one’s feelings? Can you share a story of a time you found wholeness and joy by grieving fully and authentically? What helps you not be wrecked by grief while fully accepting your feelings?
david doane wrote: Yes, the soul is eternal and continues to be present, and death of the body and loss of the physical presence is still a significant death and loss. It is my experience that grieving crea…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: How to live life fully is a challenge for all of us. How to accept fully and trully the departure of someone we love is also a challenge for us. When a child is born, we celebrate the arr…
sheetal wrote: Thank you for the passage. This was need of the hour. We witnessed a very celebrated death of my mother in law very recently. She was diagnosed of sudden cancer and she decided no to treatment….
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Some Good News

The Efficiency of Inefficiency
Etty Hillesum: A Celebrant of Life
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Kindness Stories

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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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Etty Hillesum: A Celebrant of Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 14, 2018

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Etty Hillesum: A Celebrant of Life

We must turn water into air in order to live, which for us means turning our experience into something that can sustain us. It means turning pain into wonder, heartache into joy.

– Mark Nepo –

Etty Hillesum: A Celebrant of Life

While you may know the story of Anne Frank, you may not be aware of the life of Etty Hillesum. She lived in Amsterdam and wrote a diary in which she documented her inner shift from a bourgeois woman plagued by neuroses and self-doubt to someone who, in the midst of the filth and deprivation of a concentration camp, could gaze towards the sky crying “tears of deep emotion and gratitude”. More in this powerful short tribute to her spirit. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you find yourself caught up in pain and suffering, pause a moment to notice the awesome wonder of life going on all around you.

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Uncolonizing the Imagination

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May 13, 2018

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Uncolonizing the Imagination

I have never forgotten the almost mystical power over an audience a storyteller has, when the story is deep and links you.

– -Isobelle Carmody- –

Uncolonizing the Imagination

Listening to a storyteller discuss the art of storytelling is to take a trip into the land of the right brain where imagination, myth, past and present coalesce. The spoken language is exquisitely used in this interview by Charlotte Du Cann with Martin Shaw. He refers to storytelling as opening up to our uncolonized imagination, listening to the thoughts of the world, of our ancestors, of âthe river beneath the river.â Shaw explains that a good storyteller is powerful and while a myth may be a âbeautiful lie,â it also tells a deeper truth that wakes us up and raises us out of the enchantment we fall under from advertising and political engineering. He suggests that each of us figure out what we love, defend it, and develop the artfulness to bring it out into the world as our own personal story. { read more }

Be The Change

Volunteer as a storyteller. Many libraries and organizations for childrenâs activities would welcome you. { more }

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5 Questions for Lynne Twist

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May 12, 2018

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5 Questions for Lynne Twist

When you discard your own pettiness, center yourself in integrity, and reach into your soul for your greatness, it is always there.

– Lynne Twist –

5 Questions for Lynne Twist

Lynne Twist is the founder of The Soul of Money Institute. She has talked to more than 100,000 people across the world about creating a healthy relationship with money. Here she answers the questions: What common obstacles do we all share? How can we align our values with finances? What does changing our relationship with money have to do with spirituality? What are the myths around money that keep us from feeling satisfied? How can the power of taking a stand transform lives? { read more }

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What is one thing you can do this week to help develop a healthy relationship with money?

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Pico Iyer Chooses Stillness

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May 11, 2018

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Pico Iyer Chooses Stillness

My sense is wherever you are, and whatever your religious orientation or lack of it, just to go to silence whether it’s by taking a walk or going into a retreat house is like going into a hospital for the soul.

– Pico Iyer –

Pico Iyer Chooses Stillness

Pico Iyer has spent much of his life traveling. He’s described himself as “something of a global creature”having been born in England to Indian parents and then raised in California, later moving to New York and now living in Japan and sought out places as a travel writer and explorer that piece together, much like his own inner world, disparate cultures and identities “to make a stained-glass whole.” However, an article he wrote published in the New York Times, was about a different kind of travel journey an inner one. Settle in to stillness and savor this interview with Pico Iyer, “to remember that our happiness, our clarity, our ability to be attentive and of benefit to ourselves and the world really is dependent on building that stillness into our days to slow down a little and travel in”. { read more }

Be The Change

During this week, when you catch yourself rushing to keep pace with the in-human pace of technology, stop; then take one hour off to move slowly toward stillness. Give yourself permission to live life at human-speed.

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