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Archive for October, 2018

Why Activism Must Be More Generous

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 24, 2018

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Why Activism Must Be More Generous

As I get older, the more I stay focused on the acceptance of myself and others, and choose compassion over judgment and curiosity over fear.

– Tracee Ellis Ross –

Why Activism Must Be More Generous

Frances Lee, activist, writer, designer and public scholar in Seattle, Washington, believes that social justice movements have a narrow framework of morality, which is counterproductive. Movements need a critical mass of people, but now activists are expected to follow specific standards to be trusted and heard by the larger group. She argues that social justice activists must be as committed to rooting out unhealthy behaviors inside themselves as they are in society. She advises prioritizing building healthy relationships within and with others and accepting people wherever they are on the journey of activism. One internal quality to cultivate is compassion. In addition to rage and critique, nurture humility and gentleness. In this way, we honor our full humanity and that of others, including our enemies and oppressors. { read more }

Be The Change

Include a loving kindness meditation to your practice to boost compassion. { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Falling To Shed And Renew

Nature’s seasons offer many quiet lessons. Nature sheds and seeds in autumn, reflects while dormant in winter and bursts forth anew in spring. Similarly, as we fall, a new version of us rises. As one layer of us peels off, a deeper layer is revealed. What feels like falling is often the seed for growth of something new – something deeper and more connected to our authentic nature. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Nature’s seasons offer many quiet lessons. Nature sheds and seeds in autumn, reflects while dormant in winter and bursts forth anew in spring. Similarly, as we fall, a new version of us rises. As one layer of us peels off, a deeper layer is revealed. What feels like falling is often the seed for growth of something new – something deeper and more connected to our authentic nature. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
With her engagement ending, a Texas bride finds peace in shedding her past. As part of her journey, she gifts her wedding venue to another couple – contributing to the flow of the emergence of new.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A couple with limited means bought a coat and backpack of supplies for a homeless man as their holiday gift to each other. Their selfless gift led to a regenerative cycle of giving each year.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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The Beauty of Autumn
Hugs This beautiful video shows autumn in all its glory. Reflect on the magnificence of Nature’s transition to shed, rest and rejuvenate. What is wanting to be shed in your life?
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Parker Palmer reminds us that autumn is a time when seeds are planted, not only a time of seeming decay of the old.
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The Monk, the Butcher & the Origins of Deep Counting

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October 23, 2018

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The Monk, the Butcher & the Origins of Deep Counting

Wisdom is knowing I am nothing,
Love is knowing I am everything,
And between the two my life moves.

– Nisargadatta Maharaj –

The Monk, the Butcher & the Origins of Deep Counting

Our lives are based on what we count and how we count it. Somik Raha asks what would be different in our lives if we changed how we engage with counting. Raha takes us through stories of what is meritorious, which leads us into deep counting– counting which facilitates meaningful experiences. He then brings us into the understanding of how making distinctions is an act of creation and is juxtaposed against perceiving ourselves as nothing. This is the transcendent loop of infinity and seen in the scientific dance of making finer distinctions within a community, which has revealed a picture of larger, more meaningful truth. This truth is shared through stories that lead us to reflect on what counts and helps us transcend division and touch the reality of integration. { read more }

Be The Change

Take an hour or a day for reflecting on what counts in your life and how changing that might change your experience.

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Awakin Weekly: Love Is Not An Emotion

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Love Is Not An Emotion
by Barbara Frederickson

[Listen to Audio!]

tow5.jpgLove, defined as micro moments of positivity resonance, may thus be the most generative and consequential of all positive emotions. By virtue of being a single state, distributed across and reverberating between two or more brains and bodies at once, love’s ability to broaden mind-sets and build resources may have substantially greater reach.

Love, then, is not simply another positive emotion. Rather, it is the momentary phenomenon through which we feel and become part of something larger than ourselves. Meaning in life may thus emerge not from the grand and unrealistic utopian ideals of “happily-ever-after” love, but from what art historian Nicholas Bourriaud calls the “day-today micro-utopias” of shared positivity. Seeing love as positivity resonance also blurs the boundaries that surround the concept of emotion.

Many, if not most, scientific descriptions of emotions locate these affective phenomena within individuals, confined within one person’s mind and skin. By contrast, the concept of positivity resonance aligns with perspectives offered within cultural psychology that position emotions as unfolding between and among people as they interact. Seeing emotions as properties of individuals may indeed be a myopic by-product of the Western tendency to perceptually extract focal objects from their contextual surround. By contrast, positioning love as a dynamic process that unfurls across and unifies two or more interacting individuals offers parsimony to accounts of the social and societal functions of positive emotions.

Seeing love as positivity resonance also holds practical implications for how people might strengthen their relationships, families, and communities. Striving to improve these directly can be like telling a complete stranger “trust me” in the absence of any trustworthy actions. By contrast, knowing that relationships, families, and communities grow stronger to the extent that positivity resonates between and among people reveals the value of planning for and prioritizing positivity. Creating activities and safe contexts that allow real-time sensory connection and support the emergence of shared positive emotions becomes the pathway to build social bonds and community. This guidance may be especially valuable within contemporary urban cultures that propel people toward multitasking and technology-mediated social connections. As novelist Ursula Le Guin put it, “Love doesn’t just sit there, like a stone; it has to be made, like bread; remade all the time, made new.”

About the Author: Excerpted from here.

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Love Is Not An Emotion
How do you relate to the notion of love as a momentary phenomenon through which we feel and become part of something larger than ourselves? Can you share a personal story of a time you felt love in this way? What helps you create a space for positivity resonance in your life?
david doane wrote: We don’t become part of something larger than ourselves, we are always part of something larger than ourselves, and the moments we become aware of that are special moments, typically aha moment…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Meditating daily is my topmost prority. In a meditative state I feel and experience the divine presence – Love – the realization of the integral oneness with life. It creates positive resonance in me…
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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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The Nun Who Has Saved Thousands of Lives From Violence

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 22, 2018

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The Nun Who Has Saved Thousands of Lives From Violence

I am not afraid. I was born to do this.

– Joan of Arc –

The Nun Who Has Saved Thousands of Lives From Violence

The very same night that Sister Lucy Kurien turned away a pregnant and frightened woman from an overnight visit to her convent in India, the woman was immolated by her husband. Sister Lucy held her in her arms as she died. That night she vowed to do something for the women of her country. So she founded Maher, “a refuge for women whose poverty prevents them from being able to leave abusive homes on their own. In the short-term, Maher provides immediate shelter, interventions, and even reconciliation. But in the long-term, the community focuses on the slow, meticulous work of transformation: upending India’s systemic violence, exploitation, and segregationof men and women, but also of rich and poor.” Sr. Lucy tells her story in this interview with YES! { read more }

Be The Change

Help a woman in need today. For more inspiration from Sister Lucy, read: The Mother Teresa of Pune. { more }

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How to Save Creative Culture from the Syphoning of Substance

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October 21, 2018

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How to Save Creative Culture from the Syphoning of Substance

When there is communication without need for communication, merely so that someone may earn the social and intellectual prestige of becoming a priest of communication, the quality and communicative value of the message drop like a plummet.

– Norbert Wiener –

How to Save Creative Culture from the Syphoning of Substance

Maria Popova reflects on the thoughts of mathematician, philosopher, and cybernetics pioneer Norbert Wiener in his book The Human Use of Human Beings: Cybernetics and Society. She reminds us of the danger when “creative culture is reduced to mere ‘content’ as the life of the mind and world of substantive ideas collapse into an abyss of marketable sensationalism and cynicism, (flattening) life’s nuance, complexity, and dimensionality.” { read more }

Be The Change

Find the way to carry out a few truly creative acts today, bringing your passion and authentic talent into play to make the world a better place.

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How Silence Leads Us To Awe

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 20, 2018

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How Silence Leads Us To Awe

I like to see art as humanity’s capacity to increase awe in the universe.

– Matthew Fox –

How Silence Leads Us To Awe

When life leaves us “dumb-struck”, awed into silence, we are jolted into living and understanding with our right brains. These moments are universally understood as deep spiritual experiences. In this excerpt from the book “The Lotus and the Rose”, Matthew Fox and Lama Tsomo explore this essential spiritual principle using the lenses of Christianity and Buddhism. { read more }

Be The Change

Take five whole minutes to experience something; a piece of music, a piece of art or the wonder of bee. Be in the experience using your right brain, in silence, without the internal narrator.

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Stephen Jenkinson Reimagines Dying

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 19, 2018

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Stephen Jenkinson Reimagines Dying

Grief is not a feeling, it is a capacity. It is not something that disables you, we are not on the receiving end of grief we are on the practicing end of grief.

– Stephen Jenkinson –

Stephen Jenkinson Reimagines Dying

Stephen Jenkinson brings a stark new attitude to work with people who are dying. When asked why in this interview, he explains that this is an ambivalent time. “And the culture that I know well…believes in knowing. It rewards knowing.” So in speaking with with the dying, who are in a not-knowing situation, even consternation, he wants to “subvert knowledge and certainty…so that learning gets a chance to appear.” He sees ambivalence as a skill to be developed in the face of consternation. Because “your consternation is the place where your eloquence is most relied upon and traded upon and practiced,” he encourages “the capacity to nurse several often contending things at the same time without collapsing into a decision in favour of one and banishing the others.” { read more }

Be The Change

Stephen calls this preparation “an exercise in discerning not judging.” Try practicing that today with whatever you have to doseparating what’s important from what’s not important by discerning rather than judging.

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How a Troop of Elementary School Girls Are Fighting for Justice

This week’s inspiring video: How a Troop of Elementary School Girls Are Fighting for Justice
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Video of the Week

Oct 18, 2018
How a Troop of Elementary School Girls Are Fighting for Justice

How a Troop of Elementary School Girls Are Fighting for Justice

When she was in fourth grade, Lupita Martinez wanted to join her local scouting troop. Her mom, Anayvette, worried the group wouldn’t speak to Lupita’s lived experience, so she started one that would. Radical Monarchs is a progressive scouting troop for young girls of color in Oakland, California. A social justice-oriented alternative to the Girl Scouts, the Monarchs still earn badges but not for sewing or selling cookies. Instead their badges are for units on Black Lives Matter, Radical Beauty, being an LGBTQ Ally and environmental justice issues. The group promotes opportunities to form sisterhood and supports social causes that affect the girls and their communities.
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Jewels in the Dirt: In Conversation with Lobsang Phuntsok

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 18, 2018

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Jewels in the Dirt: In Conversation with Lobsang Phuntsok

Compassion is the keen awareness of the interdependence of all things.

– Thomas Merton –

Jewels in the Dirt: In Conversation with Lobsang Phuntsok

Lobsang Phuntsok is a former Tibetan monk who trained with His Holiness the Dalai Lama and spent years teaching Buddhism and meditation in the West. In 2006, he disrobed and moved back to his native India, establishing a community in the Himalayan foothills for orphans and impoverished children. The community originally started with 34 children, and over the last decade has grown to house 85 children who are cared for by four housemothers and 13 teachers. Jhamtse Gatsal hopes to keep expanding so that 200 children can eventually live there. Learn more through this powerful interview (that includes a link to an Emmy award winning film on Lobsang Phuntsok’s work). { read more }

Be The Change

Tune into this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Lobsang Phuntsok. Details and RSVP info here. { more }

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