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Archive for December 4, 2018

Spotlight On Kindness: Celebrating Our Light

Multiple faith traditions celebrate light over darkness. Hindus recently celebrated Diwali by lighting diyas. The Jewish festival of lights, Hanukkah, began this week and is observed by lighting the Menorah. Buddhists focus on insight over the darkness of ignorance. Christians are celebrating the Advent season by lighting candles. Let’s celebrate the light/divine spark within each of us. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Multiple faith traditions celebrate light over darkness. Hindus recently celebrated Diwali by lighting diyas. The Jewish festival of lights, Hanukkah, began this week and is observed by lighting the Menorah. Buddhists focus on insight over the darkness of ignorance. Christians are celebrating the Advent season by lighting candles. Let’s celebrate the light/divine spark within each of us. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
For this author, the story of Hanukkah is a reminder that during our darkest hours of grief, one can find hope by searching for the light with help from loved ones.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A KindSpring couple noted a young man in a truck with a child without a car seat. After finding out the young man’s wife had left them recently, they helped him get much needed supplies.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Diwali – Festival of Lights
Hugs Diwali is a five-day festival of lights, coinciding with the Hindu New Year, celebrating the triumph of good over evil and light over darkness.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
This beautiful Jewish Kabbalah story describes the creation of the world from the Oneness of All and the origin of the divine spark in all of us.
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Garbage Collector’s Gift to a Child With Autism

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 4, 2018

a project of ServiceSpace

Garbage Collector's Gift to a Child With Autism

I’ve seen and met angels wearing the disguise of ordinary people living ordinary lives.

– Tracy Chapman –

Garbage Collector’s Gift to a Child With Autism

Sometimes bonds are created in unexpected ways and can lead to extraordinary acts of giving. This video from the nonprofit “Autism Speaks” documents just such a moment between Daniel Newberger, a young boy with autism and Manuel Sanchez, the trash collector who decided to cross the divide from friendly stranger to friend. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Autism Speaks, which promotes solutions for the needs of individuals with autism and their families. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: The New And Ancient Story Of Interbeing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The New And Ancient Story Of Interbeing
by Charles Eisenstein

[Listen to Audio!]

2341.jpgWhy does the sun shine? A random result of coalescing gases igniting nuclear fusion? Or is it in order to give its light and warmth to Life? Why does the rain fall? Is it the senseless product of blind chemical processes of evaporation and condensation? Or is it to water life? Why do you seek to pour forth your song? Is it to show off your genetic fitness to attract a mate, or is it to contribute to a more beautiful world? We may fear those first answers but it is the second that carries the ring of truth.

Every culture, as far as I know, has something that I call a Story of the World. That story is a weave of myths, meanings, narratives, words, symbols, rituals, and agreements that together define the world. That story tells us who we are, how to be a man or a woman, what is important and valuable, what is real, what is sacred, what humanity’s role and purpose is on earth.

The world’s dominant culture, the one called modern, has a story of the world too. I call it the story of separation. It is the story that holds us as separate individuals and holds humanity separate from nature. Here, giving does not come naturally. In fact, that story says our default nature is selfishness, down to the genetic level. If I’m separate from you, then more for me is less for you.

In the Story of Separation, trust does not come naturally either. The world is our adversary, full of other competing separate individuals, human and otherwise, whom we must overcome to have a good life –weeds, germs, the Russians, whatever. Beyond that, the forces of nature are adversaries too, because they are utterly random, and the whole universe tends toward entropy. There is no intelligence or purpose outside of ourselves. Therefore, to establish a comfortable human habitation in the world, we must dominate and control these forces, insulate ourselves from them, and harness them to our purposes. That’s what the Story of Separation says.

Where in that story is there room for gratitude? Where is there room for gift? In the Story of Separation you basically have to rise above human nature, rise above the way of the world, to be selfless, generous, or altruistic. Becoming a good person, then, involves a sort of conquest, a conquest of self. It is the same domination of nature, this time turned inward.

Now I have to say, this story is quickly becoming obsolete. Even its scientific dimension in genetics, physics, and biology are crumbling. In complexity theory, we understand that order can emerge spontaneously out of chaos, without an external organizing force. In ecology, we understand that the wellbeing of one is inseparable from the wellbeing of all. So let me talk about gift, generosity, and gratitude from the perspective of another story, a new and ancient story I like to call Interbeing.

In the story of Interbeing, life is a gift. The world and everything in it is a gift. We did not earn our lives. We did not earn the sun; it is not thanks to our hard efforts that it shines. We did not earn the ability of plants to grow. We did not earn water. We did not earn our conception nor our breath. Our hearts beat and our livers metabolize all on their own. Life is a gift.

About the Author: Charles Eisenstein is an author who encourages a gift culture. This excerpt was from a blog post.

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The New And Ancient Story Of Interbeing
What do you make of the notion of ‘interbeing’? Can you share a personal story of a time you felt that the world and everything in it is a gift? What helps you to live in gratitude for life?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: As I understand, there are two perspectives of looking at and understanding the world. I would call them scientific and spiritual. In my opinion both have value in understanding the world. As C…
david doane wrote: The sun doesn’t shine in order to give light to life, and rain doesn’t fall to water life. The sun and rain have no intention. The sun lights, rain waters, and life benefits. …
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