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Archive for December 18, 2018

Spotlight On Kindness: Do Not Lose Heart

The holiday season can trigger varied and shifting emotional responses. For some, the public joyfulness of the season exceeds their private reality of loneliness and isolation, leading to suffering and despair. As Dr. Pinkola reminds us below, “struggling souls catch light from other souls who are fully lit and willing to show it.” Let’s help others by shining brightly this holiday season.- Ameeta

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“One of the most calming and powerful actions you can do to intervene in a stormy world is to stand up and show your soul.” – Clarissa Pinkola Estes
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Editor’s Note: The holiday season can trigger varied and shifting emotional responses. For some, the public joyfulness of the season exceeds their private reality of loneliness and isolation, leading to suffering and despair. As Dr. Pinkola reminds us below, “struggling souls catch light from other souls who are fully lit and willing to show it.” Let’s help others by shining brightly this holiday season.- Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A Houston dad decided to spend quality time with a boy who was bullying his 8 year old son and found that he was being bullied himself. Their positive interaction helped both families.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A man who approached his car asking for money left rejected and upset. After being threatened with violence, the driver decided to go buy the man food instead of calling the police.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Befriending Our Despair
Hugs Joanna Macy advises that pain alerts us to what needs attention. Pain tells us there is suffering. When we face suffering, our hearts and eyes open to beauty.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Clarissa Pinkola Estes reminds us not to lose heart. We were made for these times.
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Native Women Reclaim Land Plot by Plot

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 18, 2018

a project of ServiceSpace

Native Women Reclaim Land Plot by Plot

We are all human beings on this land. We need to learn how to live in reciprocity together.

– Corrina Gould –

Native Women Reclaim Land Plot by Plot

In the San Francisco Bay Area, demand for land seems endless. Property values are sky-high, rents are backbreaking, and people just keep coming. Over 2 million more are expected to settle here by 2040. Today’s land rush is nothing new. For more than 200 years, there has been a run on Bay Area real estate a relentless wave of colonization, then suburbanization and now gentrification that left the Ohlone, the Bay Area’s first people, landless. Corrina Gould, a Chochenyo and Karkin Ohlone leader and her partner in crime Johnella LaRose, who is Shoshone-Bannock and Carrizo; founded the Sogorea Te Land Trust in 2012 to reclaim Ohlone land in the Bay Area. { read more }

Submitted by: Pancho Ramos Sterile

Be The Change

Consider ways you too can “use the master’s tools to disantle the master’s house”. It might be contributing the interest from a bank account to a micro-lending group, “gifting” the use of your private property to someone, or using the income from a retirement or investment account to fund your own private volunteer work.

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Awakin Weekly: How Observation Changes Relationships

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
How Observation Changes Relationships
by Vimala Thakar

[Listen to Audio!]

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When we sit in silence what do we do? We sit and observe the voluntary and involuntary activities of the body and mind. Slowly the voluntary activities come to an end, but the involuntary activities we have inherited from birth, from our family, religion, race, nationality -which fill the mind – go on, and we sit and observe their unfoldment.

Since we are used to working all the time we may find it difficult at first to sit quiet, or the body may fall asleep due to accumulated fatigue. If it happens it is desirable to rest the body for a few days until it is fresh again. While you sit in silence, thoughts will arise, as the mind has been working for 24 hours. The thoughts cannot be suppressed nor can they be thrown away anywhere, you can only watch them, not naming them as good or bad. Then you are free from the roles of an experiencer and an actor, you enter into the state of an observer of non-reactional attention.

As soon as the mind begins moving and says: “I like” or “I dislike” what it sees, there is a disturbance, a burdening of the mind and the role of the observer is lost and you are once more immersed into the roles of an experiencer and actor. If you do not react to the thoughts you are observing, if they no longer have the power to elicit any reaction from you then they will subside of their own accord.

We have to extend this attitude of observation in relationships. Once the observer state is awakened it changes relationships. It is a tremendous energy that is awakened. When observation becomes a continuous state throughout the day, then:

(1) There is no self-deception. We do not hide anything from ourselves. There is nothing left as subconscious or unconscious it being all revealed in observation. There is now only the conscious level.

(2) We stop deceiving others or presenting a different image of ourselves to others. The seeing of what is, without justification or condemnation shatters the image. We now have the courage to live and be what we are.

(3) We become aware of all that is happening within us, of the different emotions arising within us, for example, if we begin to get angry we are aware of it and so the grip of anger loosens its hold over us.

(4) We recognize and admit our mistakes; asking for forgiveness immediately, thus freeing the mind from the burden of residue.

(5) Through observation thoughts subside, hence the strain and pressure they cause on the neurological and chemical systems are also lifted. It is this tension that brings about anti-social behavior.

(6) Pain and pleasure are not taken further than the present moment; thus no grudges or attachments are formed. The art of living is to live completely in the moment, not carrying any residue over to next incident, person or day.

About the Author: by Vimala Thakar, sourced from here.

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How Observation Changes Relationships
How do you relate to the notion of not carrying any residue over into the next experience? Can you share a personal story of a time your commitment to observation changed your relationship? How do you practice observation while staying checked in?
susan schaller wrote: The master doesn’t seek fulfillment. Not seeking, not expecting, she is present, and welcomes all things. – The Tau te Ching. Practice, practice, practice – today I practice being …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I feel deeply connected with what Vimla Thakar writes in her essay. When I sit quetly as a non-ractive observer, I feel myself free from the burden or grip of the pleassant or painful tho…
david doane wrote: It’s not possible to not carry any residue over into the next experience. Our experience becomes partof us and carries over. We may resolve and/or become free of some or even a&nbsp…
me wrote: Amen! …
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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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