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Archive for November 6, 2018

Spotlight On Kindness: Unlimited Possibilities

One of our KindSpring members shares an inspiring story about what turned out to be his first day of conscious battle with addiction and reclamation of his true self. His kind interaction with a downtrodden woman on a bus gave him much more than what he gave her, leading him on a journey towards recovery, unlimited possibilities and helping many others via the power of kindness. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: One of our KindSpring members shares an inspiring story about what turned out to be his first day of conscious battle with addiction and reclamation of his true self. His kind interaction with a downtrodden woman on a bus gave him much more than what he gave her, leading him on a journey towards recovery, unlimited possibilities and helping many others via the power of kindness. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Mexicans shower the caravan from Central America with kindness.The small Mexican towns along the route have embraced the responsibility of sheltering, feeding and clothing several thousand migrants.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
After working a factory shift as a temp, a former addict meets a homeless woman on the bus home. His act of kindness shifted her anger, left others in tears, and transformed his own life.
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Many Voices, One Spirit
Hugs This inspiring video beautifully shows how we are all channels of the universe – especially when we are open to it.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
These seem to be bleak times but many things are improving. Here are some optimistic facts about the world.
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Losing His Voice Led Him to Helping Others Strengthen Theirs

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 6, 2018

a project of ServiceSpace

Losing His Voice Led Him to Helping Others Strengthen Theirs

The soul might be silent but the servant of the soul has always got a voice and it has got one for a reason.

– Cormac McCarthy –

Losing His Voice Led Him to Helping Others Strengthen Theirs

“There are lots of ways to lose your voice in this world.” These words were spoken by Kevin Hancock, an award-winning author, public speaker, and CEO of Hancock Lumber, one of Americas oldest and most prestigious family businesses. In 2010, Kevin developed a voice disorder called spasmodic dysphonia. As his speaking voice became quiet, the voice of his soul became louder. This new voice urged him to connect with the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, where he became intimately acquainted with the Native American inhabitants. What happened next, was a deep relationship with a community silenced by injustice. This caused Kevin to evolve a new voice that changed his life and his style of leadership forever. “Strengthen the voices of others; practice restraint; learn the ways of shared leadership through nature; take care of your employees; work should enhance the evolution of the soul.” Kevin shares these principles and more in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

What relationship do you have with your own voice? This week take notice of how you use your voice, and ways in which you strengthen the voices of others. For more inspiration join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with former CIA officer turned peace builder, Janessa Gans Wilder. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Attention Is Inseparable From Interrogation

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Attention Is Inseparable From Interrogation
by Michel de Salzmann

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2329.jpgOur attention is much more than we generally think. It is much more than a simple mental or cerebral mechanism. It concerns our whole being. If its potentialities are far from being fully actualized in our usual life, maybe it is precisely because it is not recognized as a multidimensional keyboard and as the unifying principle of our being.

Paradoxically this basic act of knowing, which is attention, is only actualized when we don’t know — that is, when there is a question. Its level and, so to say, its degree of “totalization” are proportional to our questioning. You have surely noticed that when a question is vital — when it takes us in the guts, as you say — it suspends all unnecessary movements, emotional and physical as well as mental. It clears the way for real awareness and sensitivity, which are components of my total power of attention. It is only between my not knowing and my urge to know that I find myself present, mobilized, open, new — that is to say, attentive.

Attention in its active form is therefore inseparable from interrogation; it is essentially, in its purity, an act of questioning. This act is the privilege of our human existence. An animal contents itself with being. The responsibility of man is to question himself on the meaning of his being.

In our society, mainly concerned with production and efficiency, the drama is that our capacity for questioning, still so vivid in early childhood, is very quickly eradicated or pushed aside for the benefit of our capacity for answering. When a child has a real question, most of the time he is immediately given a stupid answer. In the best cases the educator goes to the dictionary to he sure his answer is accurate, but anyhow unconsciously, if not proudly; he closes the question. From school to the end of our life it is always necessary to answer. We are compelled to learn how to answer, If we don’t know how to answer, we are just no good. So little by little we become some kind of model machine able to all answer to all situations with the necessary blindness as regards its own contradictions. […]

Is it possible to keep alive in ourselves our most authentic and precious capacity, which is questioning? This is the whole problem confronting us, actually. But are we strong enough, free enough, concerned enough to really question ourselves while answering? […] Can we at the same time neither affirm nor deny, neither resist nor follow, assume that we neither know nor don’t know, that we are able or unable? Can we be acutely present to what is, without judgment or indifference, without any solution or escape? It would mean being aware on all fronts, renouncing the known for the unknown, withstanding the inevitable principle of repetition, staying still within our movement.

About the Author: From, "Two Essays," by Michel de Salzmann, a psychiatrist and a spiritual teacher revered within the Gurdjieff tradition.

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Attention Is Inseparable From Interrogation
How do you relate to the notion that our responsibility is to inquire into the meaning of our being? Can you share a personal story of a time when you felt free enough to question yourself while answering? How has questioning helped you in your life?
david doane wrote: We have the ability, not obligation, to respond to our being by inquiring into its meaning. Though I don’t agree with Socrates that the unexamined life is not worth living, I definitely think it’s wo…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: What is the meaning of life? What is the purpose of my being here in this world? What hppens to me after I die? These questions often have come to me at different stages of my relatively long l…
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