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Archive for July, 2018

How Gratitude Can Transform Your Workplace

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 4, 2018

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How Gratitude Can Transform Your Workplace

If the only prayer you said was thank you, that would be enough.

– Meister Eckhart –

How Gratitude Can Transform Your Workplace

While you may not associate gratitude or expressions of appreciation with the workplace, they’re beginning to have a powerful impact on how employees relate to one another, as well as rates of satisfaction, stress, and even sick days. Many organizations have been developing ways to overcome the barriers that often inhibit expressions of thanks among employees, and finding that the effects extend far beyond the walls of the office. Studies have shown that gratitude can lead to increased feelings of social responsibility, and a genuine desire to give back to those less fortunate. Moreover, the opportunity to serve and help others is one of the major sources of gratitude at work. Read on to learn about how you can reap the benefits of a more grateful workplace. { read more }

Be The Change

Find a way to express thanks to someone you care about today. Share your experience in the comments section below.

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Spotlight On Kindness: The Heart Of Our Union

In celebrating 4th of July, let us recall that democracy is simply a framework for government that is continually brought to life by the inner habits of the heart of citizens of each generation. Freedom is ultimately an inside job. And that job occurs inside our hearts. Let us renew the inner work of self-rule (of ourselves and our communities) to form a more perfect union of hearts. – Preeta

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Editor’s Note: In celebrating 4th of July, let us recall that democracy is simply a framework for government that is continually brought to life by the inner habits of the heart of citizens of each generation. Freedom is ultimately an inside job. And that job occurs inside our hearts. Let us renew the inner work of self-rule (of ourselves and our communities) to form a more perfect union of hearts. – Preeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Just two hours away from Independence Hall in Philadelphia, York County has declared its glue for a more perfect union: Kindness
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
While waiting in a hospital, a member witnesses a beautiful expression of love – an elderly couple singing a song to each other in a whisper.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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We Shall Overcome
Hugs This music video beautifully captures the ongoing challenge for each generation to overcome the forces of fear with love in order to form a more perfect union of mankind.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Parker Palmer reminds us that democracy’s future depends on the continually self-renewing “habits of the heart” of its citizens, and on the health of local communities.
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KindSpring is a 100% volunteer-run platform that allows everyday people around the world to connect and deepen in the spirit of kindness. Current subscribers: 145,244

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Circles of Time

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 3, 2018

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Circles of Time

Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained in time past.

– T. S. Eliot –

Circles of Time

In the Northern (and Southern) hemispheres, time is marked by seasonal changes, but in the forests of Bali the processes of growth and decay proceed at different rates all over the forest, all the time. According to Balinese theory, each living being moves on its own time scheme, and events occur when these touch, when things or creatures interact with one another. This view of time as applied to human life and the process of aging differs enormously from that of the West. Learn more here about the Balinese Middle World. { read more }

Be The Change

What is your subjective experience of time? Does how Westerners see it make sense to you? Experiment with putting away your watch, clock or device for a day to experience time in a different way.

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Awakin Weekly: Where’s Your Umbrella?

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Where’s Your Umbrella?
by Nazeer Ahmed

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2278.jpgThe rains failed again that year. It was the third year in succession when there was no rain. The crops had disappeared and the land was a brown swath of dusty rubble. Trees had lost their leaves years ago and stood out like silhouettes of cactus on the dusty horizon. There was a stream that skirted the village in years bygone. Now the riverbed was dry. Where once flowed clean, fresh water from the nearby mountains, there was now a bed of clay, cracked in a checkerboard pattern with gaps as wide as a foot. No one knew what had happened to the birds except for the vultures that circled the town, looking for a carcass or two of an animal that was left dying.

There was famine in the land. People walked around like sticks, sans flesh, surviving on whatever ration was brought to them by various international charities.

Desperate for help, the people of the village held a meeting under a big banyan tree that was as old as the village. “Let us pray”, said an elderly woman. “Only God can help us now.”

There lived people of many faiths in the village and there ensued a big debate as to where to hold the prayer – in a church, a mosque, a synagogue or a temple. There was no consensus. Exhausted, they decided to hold their prayer in the open, late that night, under the open sky, away from the town. It was a full moon night and the moon shone with its alluring brightness against a background of shimmering stars.

Amongst the people gathering for prayer a little girl holding hands with her young brother came running from a nearby village, holding high an open umbrella over their heads. Huffing for breath, they stood there, looking up, umbrella still unfurled. The gathered crowd could not but help turn around and wonder what was going on. Some were curious; others were annoyed and some others were even furious as they kept being poked by the spokes of the umbrella.

Finally a curious bystander asked, “Why did you bring the umbrella? Can’t you see there is no rain and we have come here to pray for rain? Only a foolish person would stand on a clear night like this with an open umbrella.”

“Yes indeed”, chimed in the two young siblings. “We came to pray too. We are certain that our prayer will be answered and it will rain. That is why we brought this big, colorful umbrella.”

About the Author: Adapted from The Child who Brought an Open Umbrella for Prayer by Nazeer Ahmed.

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Where’s Your Umbrella?
How do you relate to the siblings’ strong commitment to being present to the unknown, or loosely, their faith? Can you share a personal story of your umbrella– an action that emerged from your strong commitment to being present to the unknown (or faith)? What helps you develop such a strong commitment (or faith)?
Ragunath wrote: Oh, well… we are in the middle of facing a smaller degree of the same situation in our region. It is not a full famine yet but we have had very little rains in the last three years. Most farmers ha…
SUSAN wrote: Sad, real life story reflected in comments by Ranuath in 2017 here and still in many places in the world… water is such a precious resource. I can recall living in an area of Japan as a young girl …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Sadly this is the story of many poor countries affected by climate change and man-made devastations. It is an alrm for many countries to tackle this big human problem.The self -centric mi…
david doane wrote: I think the siblings’ strong commitment was to their faith, not to the unknown. Being present to the unknown is being present to not knowing. The siblings were certain that their pr…
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Nature is Medicine — Even in a Prison Cell

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 2, 2018

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Nature is Medicine -- Even in a Prison Cell

Trees are the earth’s endless effort to speak to the listening heaven.

– Rabindranath Tagore –

Nature is Medicine — Even in a Prison Cell

Nalini Nadkarni, a biology professor at the University of Utah who has pioneered techniques for studying tree canopy communities in tropical and temperate forests, started “Moss-in-Prisons,” a project in which prisoners joined a research/conservation effort to counteract the destructive effects of collecting wild-grown moss from old-growth forests for the floral trade. “We learned that the inmates who viewed nature videos committed twenty-six percent fewer violent infractions than those who did not view them, a convincing result for the prison officers and administrators and for ourselves.” { read more }

Be The Change

Professor Nadkarni’s book, Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections to Trees is very worth reading. You might discuss with a few friends the ways in which trees serve your community, and even bring water to any trees in your neighborhood which appear thirsty.

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Grateful Parenting

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 1, 2018

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Grateful Parenting

When your kid walks in the room, does your face light up?

– Toni Morrison –

Grateful Parenting

A parent who lives gratefully will role model gratefulness and infuse the home with grateful practices. Beyond this, grateful parenting also suggests being grateful for one’s particular child, being aware and appreciative of the gifts and qualities that child has. It suggests respecting one’s child as a person, and all that ensues from such an open positive attitude. Gratitude for your child, including calling to mind all the reasons you like your child, can temper your parenting with gentleness and meaning and build a more trusting, accepting home for you both. { read more }

Be The Change

What do you like about your children or others in your life? Keeping those qualities in your mind in interactions, infuses your time together with gratitude for the unique gifts they bring to you and to the world. For a lovely insight, watch Toni Morrison discuss how important it is for children to see your delight rather than criticism when they walk in the door. { more }

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