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Archive for August 14, 2018

Spotlight On Kindness: Faith In Kindness

“The bikers story below is sad, but their faith in kindness is very inspiring. A kid asked me once, “what if you are kind to someone and they take advantage of you?” I said, “in face of meanness, should we resort to meanness? Should we leave the situation or step up our love? You have to ask yourself that question and see where your heart leads you. It’s different from moment to moment.” – Nipun

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Editor’s Note: “The bikers story below is sad, but their faith in kindness is very inspiring. A kid asked me once, “what if you are kind to someone and they take advantage of you?” I said, “in face of meanness, should we resort to meanness? Should we leave the situation or step up our love? You have to ask yourself that question and see where your heart leads you. It’s different from moment to moment.” – Nipun
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Seven abandoned Amerasian men from an orphanage in South Korea re-unite at the grave of a US Sergeant to honor the man whose unconditional love forever changed the course of their lives.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
Kindness returns many years later for a KindSpring member responsible for interviewing and hiring, when a former interviewee (who wasn’t hired) becomes the interviewer.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Kindness Scientist
Hugs “Kindness scientist” Dacher Keltner and his team at the Greater Good Science Center are proving that kindness is biological – it is a part of human nature.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Read the inspiring story about a young American couple, with faith in kindness, on a biking journey around the world.
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How to Unhijack Your Mind from Your Phone

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 14, 2018

a project of ServiceSpace

How to Unhijack Your Mind from Your Phone

Living in the moment means letting go of the past and not waiting for the future. It means living your life consciously, aware that each moment you breathe is a gift.

– Oprah Winfrey –

How to Unhijack Your Mind from Your Phone

What if we didn’t unplug, but changed the way we used our phones? Would it increase productivity? Would it improve your mood? See what a former Google employee has to say about mindfulness, and how to avoid unnecessary phone time. { read more }

Be The Change

Take at least one of the tips in the above article and implement them in your daily phone usage this week. How do you feel once the week is over?

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Awakin Weekly: The Practice Of Soft Eyes

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Practice Of Soft Eyes
by Parker Palmer

[Listen to Audio!]

tow1.jpgIn a sacred landscape, with its complexities and convolutions, surprise is a constant companion: it lies just around the bend or hidden in the next valley, and though it sometimes startles us, it often brings delight. But on the flatlands of a desacralized world, where we grow accustomed to seeing things approaching us long before they arrive, surprise is neither expected nor welcomed. When it suddenly arises, apparently out of nowhere, we are stricken with fear and may even respond with violence. […]

It is possible to respond differently to surprises, to allow one new idea to generate yet another in us — a process sometimes called thinking. But in a flattened, desacralized culture thinking is not what happens when we are taken — or threatened — by surprise. Instead, we reflexively defend ourselves by reaching for a weapon that we know how to use, an old idea whose use we mastered long ago. […]

This reflex is rooted in a million years of evolution, so it may seem inexorable. Yet there is some physiological evidence that this need not be the case. Normally when we are taken by surprise, there is a sudden narrowing of our visual periphery that exacerbates the fight or flight response — an intense, fearful, self-defensive focusing of the “gimlet eye” that is associated with both physical and intellectual combat. But in the Japanese self-defense art of aikido, this visual narrowing is countered by a practice called “soft eyes”, in which one learns to widen one’s periphery, to take in more of the world.

If you introduce a sudden stimulus to an unprepared person, the eyes narrow and the fight or flight syndrome kicks in. But if you train a person to practice soft eyes, then introduce that same stimulus, the reflex is often transcended. This person will turn toward the stimulus, take it in, and then make a more authentic response — such as thinking a new thought.

Soft eyes, it seems to me, is an evocative image for what happens when we gaze on sacred reality. Now our eyes are open and receptive, able to take in the greatness of the world and the grace of great things. Eyes wide with wonder, we no longer need to resist or run when taken by surprise. Now we can open ourselves to the great mystery.

About the Author: Parker Palmer from The Courage to Teach.

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The Practice Of Soft Eyes
What does having “soft eyes” mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of a time you countered visual narrowing by widening your periphery? What helps you develop soft eyes?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.What we see depends on how we see. If we see the world with narrow eyes, the world looks narrow to us. If we see the world with hard eyes, the world look…
david doane wrote: For me, having soft eyes means being open to hopefully see what is, not just see my thinking or prejudices or expectations or preconceived judgments. Having soft eyes means being open and…
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