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Archive for September, 2018

To Keep Company With Oneself

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 9, 2018

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To Keep Company With Oneself

Solitude is not something you must hope for in the future. Rather, it is a deepening of the present, and unless you look for it in the present you will never find it.

– Thomas Merton –

To Keep Company With Oneself

Philosophy student Jennifer Stitt writes a thoughtful essay asking whether we would become lonely in solitude or find new depths? Philosophers have long distinguished between solitude and loneliness. Emerson celebrated the former, in which “nature may speak to the imagination, as she never does in company.” Socrates celebrated the soundless dialogue “which the soul holds with herself.” And in the 20th century, Hannah Arendt muses, “Thinking, existentially speaking, is a solitary but not a lonely business,” reminding us that the self “is the only one from whom you can never get away – except by ceasing to think.” { read more }

Be The Change

Take up with a friend the question of solitude. If there is a difference between loneliness and aloneness, can you put words to what it is? What must be shifted in my attitude so that loneliness can become solitude.

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Ms. Liz’s Allies

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 8, 2018

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Ms. Liz's Allies

You can’t be neutral on a moving train.

– Howard Zinn –

Ms. Liz’s Allies

Why might you choose to step in? This is one question that fourth graders in Elizabeth Kleinrocks class are asked as they learn terms like ally, advocate, and bystander and consider them in various historical, social, and cultural contexts. If the complexity of our world, its problems, pains, and difficult questions can feel overwhelming at times, a look inside this classroom goes to show that with the right tools, a little bit of time, and a lot of space for self-expression, our worlds younger generations promise much hope as stewards of humanity. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Elizabeth Kleinrock, her work, and the way in which she hopes it can be a legacy for future generations. { more }

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Opening Your Heart to Bhutan

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September 7, 2018

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Opening Your Heart to Bhutan

Compassion is the basis of morality.

– Arthur Schopenhauer –

Opening Your Heart to Bhutan

How does a jet-setting financial analyst from London end up a Buddhist nun in Bhutan? Emma Slade (ordained as Ani Pema Deki) is a yoga and meditation teacher and author who left a successful career in finance in her thirties to find peace and meaning in the mountains of Bhutan. Unusual for a mother of a now 12-year-old boy, she was ordained a Buddhist nun in Bhutan in 2014 after rigorous training – the first (and in 2018 still the only) Western woman to have achieved this in Bhutan. Her book and memoir, Set Free: A Life-Changing Journey from Banking to Buddhism in Bhutan, captures her life journey. She currently divides her time between Bhutan and England, where she runs a charity, Opening Your Heart to Bhutan, to benefit special needs children in rural Bhutan, and she teaches yoga and meditation. She shares more about her remarkable journey in this talk. { read more }

Be The Change

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

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Ms. Liz’s Allies

This week’s inspiring video: Ms. Liz’s Allies
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Video of the Week

Sep 06, 2018
Ms. Liz's Allies

Ms. Liz’s Allies

“Why might you choose to step in?” This is one question that fourth graders in Elizabeth Kleinrock’s class are asked as they learn terms like “ally,” “advocate,” and “bystander” and consider them in various historical, social, and cultural contexts. If the complexity of our world, its problems, pains, and difficult questions can feel overwhelming at times, a look inside this classroom goes to show that with the right tools, a little bit of time, and a lot of space for self-expression, our world’s younger generations promise much hope as stewards of humanity.
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Welcome to Our Shared Humanity

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 6, 2018

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Welcome to Our Shared Humanity

The wound is the place where the Light enters you.

– Rumi –

Welcome to Our Shared Humanity

In moments of difficulty, we can feel utterly and completely alone in our pain and suffering. Actually, in this very moment, everyone is carrying some burden. It might be physical, like a load of heavy bricks. It might be emotional, like a regret from the past. It might be a burden of basic survival, like finding enough food or a safe place to sleep for the night. We are, in this very moment, part of a great interconnected web of shared struggle. Explore this thoughtful essay to discover simple practices for being a healing strand in this shared web of humanity. Ultimately, that healing will find its way back to you. { read more }

Be The Change

Make time today to offer silent wishes for peace and well-being to every life form you encounter.

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Giang Dang: A Happy Soul Serves Happily

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September 5, 2018

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Giang Dang: A Happy Soul Serves Happily

Start with a small step and don’t give up.

– Giang Dang –

Giang Dang: A Happy Soul Serves Happily

“Who is Giang Dang? She is a grassroots change-maker in Vietnam, who serves the underprivileged communities with small acts, such as transforming the abandoned land in the city into a community garden, who does not take no for an answer because making the seemingly impossible possible gives her extra motivation, and who recognizes the importance of self-care because she knows that a happy soul serves happily.” Learn more about Giang’s inspiring journey here. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment today to ask your heart what it’s true calling is. Take a small step in that direction. And don’t give up.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Transforming With Hope

Is hope naive optimism, or an energy that sustains a new vision? Hope is a precursor to faith. While faith is believing and trusting in something you can’t see, hope is imagining that there is something to believe and trust in. Hope opens the paths to the impossible and invites transformation. As our video reveals, it is not a powerless waiting for, but a powerful welcoming of the future. – Ameeta

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“Hope is like the sun, which, as we journey toward it, casts the shadow of our burden behind us.” – Samuel Smiles
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Editor’s Note: Is hope naive optimism, or an energy that sustains a new vision? Hope is a precursor to faith. While faith is believing and trusting in something you can’t see, hope is imagining that there is something to believe and trust in. Hope opens the paths to the impossible and invites transformation. As our video reveals, it is not a powerless waiting for, but a powerful welcoming of the future. – Ameeta
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Sacred Imperfection

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September 4, 2018

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Sacred Imperfection

Imperfection inspires invention, imagination, creativity. It stimulates. The more I feel imperfect, the more I feel alive.

– Jhumpa Lahiri –

Sacred Imperfection

“It occurred to me that my whole life, particularly as a minister, there’s been a lot of pressure to be a certain way my whole life. I’ve been trying to get it right and finally be perfect enough to be a really good minister. And what I’ve discovered in the last couple of years as I’ve grown more and meditated more deeply — also through a lot of the values that I’ve practiced because of ServiceSpace — that a lot of the secret of my success is failure. Which is odd. It’s a paradox. And actually getting it wrong is as good as getting it right in many ways. Perhaps that theme would be relevant to someone here that might feel like they struggle sometimes with their inadequacy in some way or feel like they’re not enough or that life is not showing up the way that they want. If all goes according to plan, I want to share that there is actually a perfection in every appearance of imperfection.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more joyous inspiration, read these nuggets from Bonnie on “The Power of Sacred Irreverence”. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Sense Of Self Is An Essential Skill Of Mind

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Sense Of Self Is An Essential Skill Of Mind
by Paul Fleischman

[Listen to Audio!]

tow2.jpgMany articles in the Western press have confused the Buddha’s idea of “anatta,” the absence of an eternal soul, with the idea that meditation should rid you of your ordinary sense of self. Then the press has utilized neuropsychology to confirm this point. Psychologists like Bruce Hood, in his book, The Self Illusion, have encouraged people to look upon their sense of self as something to be discredited and abandoned.

All of this is dismaying to a psychiatrist who spent much of his professional life helping disorganized, fragile, and wavering people to develop a firm and coherent sense of self. Let me emphasize it in one clear sentence: our sense of self is a creation, an essential skill of our mind. Our minds collect the information contained in our body sensations to fabricate an integrated and continuous identity. This gives us greater memory, consistency and flexibility – you could say “character” or “personality” – than we would have if we were limited to immediate reactivity.

There is an enormous difference between understanding that our self is created, versus devaluing it. After all, clothes, cars, and houses are created things, and we don’t try to live without them. Our body is a created thing and we can’t imagine trying to live without it. Our sense of self is an integrative, psychological system that we must have to live a focused, directed and self-consistent life. In the psychological sense, the Buddha had a powerful sense of self that gave him continuity and consistency across a lifetime of teaching and leadership.

There are many people who have difficulty creating a consistent, flexible, responsible internal executive. Their problems may be due to many reasons, either neurological and/or environmental. These neighbors and family members of ours suffer excessively, because they are unable to generate around themselves a world of goals,
loves, people, and tasks. We should not weaken the executive function of confused people by implying that their psychologically constructed sense of self, which they need in order to function, should be abandoned, simply because all of their being is ultimately
ephemeral.

When we absorb the wisdom of meditation, we see our selves as chimera, and when we take care of our daily business, we count on ourselves, to be effective, just as the Buddha was. We are the world, using all the laws of science and running on the energy of the
Big Bang. We are a fabrication, created by our brains as they integrate and portray ephemeral body sensations. And we are people, born to eat, meditate, make friends and hold jobs. All of these dimensions co-exist and express aspects of a bigger truth.

About the Author: Paul R. Fleischman is a psychiatrist, a teacher of Vipassana meditation, and an author of eight books, most recently, "Wonder: When and Why the World Appears Radiant". The Above is from his Essay, "A Practical And Spiritual Path"

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Sense Of Self Is An Essential Skill Of Mind
How do you relate to the notion that a sense of self is a creation and an essential skill of our mind? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of your self as an integrative psychological system? What helps you respect your self and not dismiss it simply because it is a creation?
Susan wrote: Wow, this is a thought provoking essay; thank you. True, we, none of us, can abandon or forget our ‘self’. I guess for me, in my continuing to grow up in this life, it is a balance of humility …
Rajesh wrote: This passage brings out very nicely the appropriate role of the “ordinary self”. A coherent sense of identity is necessary to protect the body and allow it to do its thing as well as to functio…
david doane wrote: My sense of self definitely is a creation — however, it is a creation of much more than my mind — it is a creation of consciousness of which I am a part. And my mind is also a creation …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Who Am I or the Quest of Identity has been explored by philosphers, psychologists, scientists and spiritual seekers. The answers come by remaing inquisitive and open. Thoughts about who I am ar…
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384.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 Politics of the Brokenhearted

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 3, 2018

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The Politics of the Brokenhearted

Even when life challenges us, it’s a gift beyond all measure.

– Parker Palmer –

The Politics of the Brokenhearted

In this interview, Michael Lerner talks with Dr. Parker Palmer about education, community, leadership, spirituality and social change. Palmer describes the tension needed today for grappling with the problems around us. He describes it as standing in the tragic gap the necessity of holding the space between that which is and that which we see as what could or should be. We are not to fall into either side, but transform the world to the degree that we are transformed, by making choices after our hearts are broken fully open that are on balance more life giving than death giving. { read more }

Be The Change

Begin a regular heart meditation practice to become centered and heal your heart. { more }

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