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Archive for 2018

Spotlight On Kindness: The Extra Mile

Some “simple” acts of kindness aren’t so simple or easy. Featured this week are people going literally the extra mile. After pushing a woman in a wheelchair nearly a mile, Bilal Quintyne said, “I would not go home until she was home. Period.” Kindness can sometimes feel hard, and be inconvenient, but it’s always worth it. Thanks to all kindness angels going the extra mile. It matters. – Jane

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Editor’s Note: Some “simple” acts of kindness aren’t so simple or easy. Featured this week are people going literally the extra mile. After pushing a woman in a wheelchair nearly a mile, Bilal Quintyne said, “I would not go home until she was home. Period.” Kindness can sometimes feel hard, and be inconvenient, but it’s always worth it. Thanks to all kindness angels going the extra mile. It matters. – Jane
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A man pushes a woman stranded in her electric chair on the side of a main road nearly a mile back to her home.
Read More
Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A competitor makes an extraordinary gift to further the dream of this woman’s young late husband after his passing.
Read More
Inspiring Video of the Week
Serve all
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Some Thoughts on Kindness
Hugs Are there different levels of kindness? The writer George Saunders reflects on a personal story that highlights his biggest regret in life — failing to give that extra bit.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
One-third of all food produced is lost or wasted. This restaurant chain in the Netherlands goes the extra mile by having all items on their menu be food that otherwise would have been wasted.
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I Feel You: The Surprising Power of Extreme Empathy

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June 26, 2018

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I Feel You: The Surprising Power of Extreme Empathy

I believe empathy is the most essential quality of civilization.

– Roger Ebert –

I Feel You: The Surprising Power of Extreme Empathy

Sometimes the world seems like a heavy and difficult place. While it’s true that life has its share of challenges, one of the best ways to find the light in every day is to connect to one another. Sharing, listening, and identifying with one another helps us grow those connections through empathy. Empathy is something innate that lives in all of us, but its also something that can be grown and cultivated in schools, offices, homes, and anywhere we connect with one another. In this interview with the University of Pennsylvania, Wharton, author Cris Beam discusses the many roles empathy plays in our every day lives, business, advertising, and politics. { read more }

Be The Change

It’s easy to get wrapped up in daily life and forget to nurture the connections we have with those in our lives. Time Magazine’s, “5 Ways to be More Empathetic” discusses how to cultivate empathy into your day-to-day practices. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Action Without Desire Of Outcomes

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Action Without Desire Of Outcomes
by Vinoba Bhave

[Listen to Audio!]

tow1.jpgTo protect self-interest individuals exploit others, nations go to war, and businesses undercut each other, because people in those situations see a conflict between self-interest and the interest of others. But in reality there is no such conflict. Everyone’s interests are intertwined. Peace, prosperity and happiness are in the interest of all. These are the universal gains, which are accomplished when personal gains are forgotten. When personal gains are pursued, universal gains are lost. If universal gains are lost where are the personal gains?

When performed with love, action becomes its own reward. When action is performed without ulterior motives, when it is spontaneous, joyful and pure, our attention is present in the here and the now. There is no cunning, there is no calculation, there is no speculation, there is no planning, there is no past, there is no future, there is no worry, there is no burden. Our action flows without stress, without strain or pressure.

For example, if one cooks for the joy of cooking, and with full attention and presence of mind, then good cooking will be a natural outcome. Garden for the joy of gardening, without impatience and without anxiety, then fruit, flowers and vegetables will flow from the garden of their own accord. Those who are devoted to cooking or gardening will not feel satisfied if we say to them that they need not cook or garden, we will provide ready-made meals and pre-packed vegetables. A true cook or gardener will not feel happy, because in that way they have been deprived of their creativity and joyful work.

A gardener, while gardening with love, identifies with the vegetable kingdom. Through gardening he or she attains oneness with the whole universe. That way gardening becomes a noble act, a spiritual act, a prayer and a play — all life is a play; a divine drama. A child plays for the joy of playing; we act for the joy of acting. We should perform our actions as naturally as a bird sings. We need not expect recognition for acting according to our own nature. Gardening comes to a gardener as naturally as eating, drinking or sleeping. There is nothing special about it. There is no vanity in it.

["If there is nothing to achieve," I asked, "no goal, no out-come, then why would one act at all?"]

We cannot give up action. Action is in front of us and behind us. Even sitting still is action, and if we sit still for too long we will find even that uncomfortable. So we need not try to give up action. All we can give up is the desire for an outcome.

Through work we express ourselves. Work manifests our imagination. Work is love made visible. Through work we establish relationships with people and material things. Thus work in itself is beautiful. It is the desire to impress others, desire for recognition, for fame and fortune, which makes work ugly. There is no need to desire any gains. All gains are by-products. The main product of work is work itself.

About the Author: Vinoba Bhave in conversation with Satish Kumar, as chronicled in the book, "You Are, Therefore I Am."

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Action Without Desire Of Outcomes
How do you relate to the notion that work itself is beautiful but the desire to impress others is what makes it ugly? Can you share a personal experience of a time you felt that work was love made visible? What helps you avoid attachment to outcomes without giving up work?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: When anything we do is done with love, it is always joyful.The action itself is the reward. Work and love are interwoven. The work could be sweeping the floor, picking up the garbage, cooking, …
david doane wrote: The desire to impress others is a problem and can be ugly because it’s a desire to do something that I don’t have the power to do. I can’t make anyone be impressed or unimpressed. I…
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Some Good News

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Kindness Stories

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The Focus of the Storm

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June 25, 2018

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The Focus of the Storm

I have been circling for thousands of years,
and I still don’t know: am I a falcon,
a storm, or a great song?

– Rainer Maria Rilke –

The Focus of the Storm

Joanna Macy reflects on Rilke’s Book of Hours, which has served as spiritual nourishment for almost fifty years of soul-searching and activism. “Its images lent some pattern, even meaning, to a life I thought had failed in its spiritual vocation… Now those same lines…shed new light on the patchwork my life had become — marriage, motherhood, abandoned government career, assortment of jobs, studies in art and language. Perhaps, after all, some unknowable center held me in orbit.” { read more }

Be The Change

Macy says, “I could almost feel again the sense of belonging and purpose that I thought I had forfeited.” What brings you back to the sense of belonging to something larger, and can you share what helps you with someone else?

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Dare to Be Astonished

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June 24, 2018

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Dare to Be Astonished

Anthropology demands the open-mindedness with which one must look and listen, record in astonishment and wonder that which one would not have been able to guess.

– Margaret Mead –

Dare to Be Astonished

What would it be like to take out the analytical side of our thoughts and approach experiences with a child-like wonder? That’s what Fabiana Fondevila set out to determine. See what she has to say. { read more }

Be The Change

Pick one thing in your life that you can approach with astonishment this week and see how your thoughts change.

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Paolo Soleri: Architecture as Salvation

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June 23, 2018

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Paolo Soleri: Architecture as Salvation

It is only logical that the pauperization of our soul and the soul of society coincide with the pauperization of the environment. One is the cause and the reflection of the other.

– Paolo Soleri –

Paolo Soleri: Architecture as Salvation

Paolo Soleri was a visionary. Over decades, he influenced thousands of young architects. He called his vision arcology (architecture + ecology). The city as city occupied his thought. How could it help us reach our potential as human beings? Decades ago, he realized that we are drowning in a sea of data — information– and we don’t seem to be able to find the time to transform it into knowledge. Our bellies are full in a very abstract way. But to go from our full bellies to nourishment, we have to assimilate and eventually become wiser. We have to find some common element that keeps a certain coherence in what were doing. This in-depth interview shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a walk and find some place to stop and stand for a few minutes without checking a cell phone, without doing anything at all except just being there. Try it for 10 minutes.

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Creating a Compassionate Economy

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June 22, 2018

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Creating a Compassionate Economy

Once we view the economy as supporting a meaningful, comfortable life for everyone in a sustainable world, then we can use economic growth to provide the goods and services we actually want, that actually benefit the people and the planet.

– Clair Brown –

Creating a Compassionate Economy

Clair Brown is a professor of economics and director of the Center for Work, Technology, and Society at the University of California, Berkeley. Her recent book, Buddhist Economics: An Enlightened Approach to the Dismal Science, draws upon simple Buddhist ideas to argue for an economic system based on environmental stewardship, shared prosperity, and care for the human spirit. { read more }

Be The Change

Clair Brown measures economic progress by the well-being of all people, not Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or average national income, but “an economy that supports meaningful lives with shared prosperity for everyone, while simultaneously caring for the environment and the human spirit.” Take a moment to ask yourself how you view progress or success. Does it include the well-being of others and society itself?

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Hibakusha Takashi Tanemori – The World I Want to Live In

This week’s inspiring video: [Hibakusha] Takashi Tanemori – The World I Want to Live In
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Jun 21, 2018
[Hibakusha] Takashi Tanemori - The World I Want to Live In

[Hibakusha] Takashi Tanemori – The World I Want to Live In

"Even though I am now almost completely blind due to the late embers of the naked sky of Hiroshima, when I first saw with the ‘vision of the heart,’ I finally understood that I am at last, truly able to see. When I had an epiphany two decades ago, I was convinced that forgiveness is the first step toward peace…My life story demonstrates how a heart twisted by hatred and revenge can be transformed by forgiveness, evolving to a path of peaceful wisdom and the essential work of healing human hearts." In this sweet video, Takashi Tanemori shares his "vision" for the world after Hiroshima.
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Top 10 Insights from the Science of a Meaningful Life

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June 21, 2018

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Top 10 Insights from the Science of a Meaningful Life

What makes things memorable is that they are meaningful, significant, colorful.

– Joshua Foer –

Top 10 Insights from the Science of a Meaningful Life

Greater Good shared its top 10 insights from their “Science of a Meaningful Life” report. The team created the list from the most provocative and influential findings over the last year. Themes include emotional experience, mindfulness, sense of purpose, and more. { read more }

Be The Change

What is one way you can apply an insight positively in your own life?

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Nicholas Winton: Father of 669

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June 20, 2018

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Nicholas Winton: Father of 669

History is the essence of innumerable biographies.

– Thomas Carlyle –

Nicholas Winton: Father of 669

Greta Winton was surprised and confused when she uncovered a scrapbook containing the names of 669 children. Her husband, Nicholas Winton, had kept this book in their attic for 50 years. Nine months before the Second World War broke out, Nicholas assisted in removing Jewish children from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia and transporting them to Britain. Nicholas wondered what had happened to the children, but didnt realize the full depth of his actions until a reunion on a BBC television program. His courageous acts have inspired charitable programs around the world, and put into action a legacy far beyond the endurance and heroism of one man. His ardor proves that the biggest measures can begin with one individual. Sir Nicholas Winton died on 1 July 2015 at age 106. This BBC report on a memorial service a year after his death shares Winton’s remarkable story. { read more }

Be The Change

Ask your parents or grandparents about their stories. You may discover something you never knew about them.

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