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Archive for September 18, 2018

Spotlight On Kindness: Celebrating Peace!

September 21 is the Annual United Nations International Day of Peace – a day devoted to strengthening the ideals of peace, both within and among all nations and peoples. Let us allow the peace that resides within each of us to shine. Open our hearts to encircle the world in loving kindness. One kind thought, one kind act, one origami peace dove at a time. It all makes a difference. – Mindy

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Editor’s Note: September 21 is the Annual United Nations International Day of Peace – a day devoted to strengthening the ideals of peace, both within and among all nations and peoples. Let us allow the peace that resides within each of us to shine. Open our hearts to encircle the world in loving kindness. One kind thought, one kind act, one origami peace dove at a time. It all makes a difference. – Mindy
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
As college season starts anew, these 9 people recall heartwarming stories of kindness from strangers during their college years that formed lifelong impressions.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
This beautiful poem speaks for a hunger for peace – a hunger that will only be appeased when everyone sits together at the table called peace.
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World Peace and Other 4th Grade Achievements
Hugs The World Peace Game pits teams of elementary school age kids against each other in conflict. But the game is not won until all countries enjoy security and prosperity.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Learn about The May Peace Prevail On Earth movement – a global movement to inspire love, peace and harmony which exists in each of us.
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Betty Peck’s Magic Mirror

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 18, 2018

a project of ServiceSpace

Betty Peck's Magic Mirror

Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror. But you are eternity and you are the mirror.

– Kahlil Gibran –

Betty Peck’s Magic Mirror

Imagine a magic mirror that you look into to discover how truly wonderful you are. That is the kind of mirror that Betty Peck, a kindergarten teacher with more than 50 years experience, had in all of her classrooms. Whenever one of her students felt worried or unsure, Betty would gently guide the student to look into the magic mirror and say, “How could you forget how wonderful you are?!” In this short film created by a former student of Betty’s, this wise woman, now well into her 90’s, encourages us to have just such a magic mirror in every kindergarten, every household and every garden. In that way we can all say, “Thank you for every magic moment that makes it possible for me to stand here and to feel how truly wonderful I am.” { read more }

Be The Change

Give thanks today for all the magic moments in your own life. If you’d like, you can send a note of gratitude to Betty Peck for the countless seeds of goodness she planted in so many hearts. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: The Work Of Love Is To Love

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Work Of Love Is To Love
by Mark Nepo

[Listen to Audio!]

tow2.jpgMy own time on earth has led me to believe in two powerful instruments that turn experience into love: holding and listening. For every time I have held or been held, every time I have listened or been listened to, experience burns like wood in that eternal fire and I find myself in the presence of love. This has always been so. Consider these two old beliefs that carry the wisdom and challenge of holding and listening.

The first is the age-old notion that when holding a shell to your ear, you can hear the ocean. It always seems to work. The scrutiny of medicine has revealed that when you hold that shell to your ear, you actually hear your own pulsations, the ocean of your blood being played back to you. Yet this fact does not diminish this mystery. It only enhances it. For holding a shell to our ear teaches us how to hear the Whole through the part, and how to find the Universe within us. It teaches us that when we dare to hold another being, like a shell, to our ear, we hear both the mystery of all life and the ocean of our own blood.

Amazingly, each being has the story of the Universe encoded within them. Each soul is a shell shaped by the currents of the deep. Even physically, the inner ear — that delicate source of balance — is shaped like a conch. And so, whatever is held and listened to will show us where it lives in the world and in us.

This brings us to the second belief: the folklore that if a horse breaks a leg, it must be put down. I’ve discovered that this isn’t true. Oh it’s true that it happens. Breeders shoot horses with broken legs as if there’s nothing to be done. But now I know they do this for themselves, not wanting to care for a horse that cannot run.

In just this way, fearful and selfish people cut the cord to those who are broken, not wanting to sit with a friend who can’t find tomorrow, not wanting to be saddled with someone who will slow them down, not wanting to face what is broken in themselves. In this lies the challenge of compassion. For when we dare to hold those forced to the ground, dare to hold them close, the truth of holding and listening sings and we are carried into the wisdom of broken bones and how things heal.

These are quiet braveries we all need. The courage to wait and watch with all of who we are. The courage to admit that we are not alone. The courage to hold each other to the ear of our heart. And the courage to care for things that are broken.

The practice ground for these braveries is always the small things at hand. Somehow, through the practice of doing small things with great love, as Mother Teresa puts it, we learn how to be brave. In truth, the work of love is tending to small things completely. Such tending opens the mystery. By the large-heartedness of our smallest attention, we enter the ocean of love that carries us all.

Simply and profoundly, the work of love is to love. For in that act, the Universe comes alive. Such aliveness is the space that opens between us, as Martin Buber says, when two bow and touch in a true way.

About the Author: Mark Nepo from "The Exquisite Risk: Daring to Live an Authentic Life"

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The Work Of Love Is To Love
How do you relate to the notion that the work of love is to love? Can you share a personal story of a time you held another and listened deeply and in that process heard the mystery of all life and the ocean of your own blood? What helps you dare to hold close those forced to the ground?
Vinod Eshwer wrote: All beings big and small, the ones you’ve met through spring and fall, the ones you’re with and hopefully having a ball, the ones you will meet maybe in a mall, the point of this bad poem…
Amy wrote: Promises! I will love you and honor you … In good times and in bad, all the days of my life. My husband has had seven concussions in his medical history (that are recorded). Littl…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: How I relate to others, how I hold them in my hands and listen to them compassinately and mindfully is a work of love. That work itself is love. Most of the time I relate this way to people who…
david doane wrote: I agree that the work of love is to love. Love without action is theoretical and meaningless. Love put into action enhances the other and the person expressing the love. Love …
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