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Archive for 2018

Teach Me To Be WILD

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 21, 2018

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Teach Me To Be WILD

An animal’s eyes have the power to speak a great language.

– Martin Buber –

Teach Me To Be WILD

Teach Me to Be WILD is a film that explores the work of Wildlife Associates, a sanctuary in Northern California, where injured, non-releasable wild animals become Wild Teachers and are helping heal generations of hurt children. The traumatic histories of the creatures, who range from an Andean condor to a two-toed sloth, often parallel those of the at-risk youth who visit. Unexpected connections are forged that ripple into stories of transformation. Founded by Steve Karlin, a former park ranger whose greatest mentors were a 330-pound American black bear and a pair of robins, the sanctuary’s work recalls us to our true place in Nature’s web. With intimate access to the animals, their caregivers, workshop facilitators and their spirited students, this film captures the magic that transpires where wounded children and their Wild Teachers meet. { read more }

Be The Change

Listen to the filmmakers share more from the journey on an upcoming Awakin Call this Saturday. RSVP and more details here! { more }

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Editor’s Introdcution – Five Artists

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Interviews with Social Artists, Uncommon Heroes

March 20, 2018

From the Editor

richard.jpgRichard Whittaker

Five artists, and each with stories bring very different worlds to life in the mind’s eye. [more]

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Scuptor Ann Weber – Enough, Not Enough

Scuptor Ann Weber - Enough, Not Enough“I’m 65. I have 20 years left. What do I want to do with my last 20 years?” A life-changing moment led Weber to pulling up roots in the Bay Area and heading for LA, landing in San Pedro, “the kind of place that makes a sculptor drop to her knees and her heart pound in her chest. Now every day is a holiday.” read more…

John Wehrle – First Do No Harm

John Wehrle - First Do No HarmEarly on Wehrle found himself serving as an artist in the US Army in the Vietnam War. He and his team had a degree of freedom. As he said, “I had the rank, but we were all equal as artists. It helped with the brass. Lt. Colonels would come into our studio and take me aside and ask, ‘Lt. how are they doing?'” “Sir. I never worked with a finer group of soldiers in my life!” They’d go away satisfied.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Mending Disconnections

Giving and receiving kindness is where human connection truly comes alive, and it can be as simple as sharing our smile with a stranger. By extending acts of compassion and kindness to ourselves, as well as to others, we can all help heal our beleaguered world and mend the disconnection. Now, more than ever, our world needs us to love one another. – Mish Rosen

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Editor’s Note: Giving and receiving kindness is where human connection truly comes alive, and it can be as simple as sharing our smile with a stranger. By extending acts of compassion and kindness to ourselves, as well as to others, we can all help heal our beleaguered world and mend the disconnection. Now, more than ever, our world needs us to love one another. – Mish Rosen
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A psychiatrist’s research finds that gratitude – toward loved ones, health-care providers and even for being alive – can be an important part of recovery from a heart attack.
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The Sacred Ordinary in Healthcare

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 20, 2018

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The Sacred Ordinary in Healthcare

If you make time for silence, the sacred will unfold.

– Rod Stryker –

The Sacred Ordinary in Healthcare

Sacred acts. This is how Dr. Venu Julapalli would describe the seemingly mundane, at times unglamorous, services performed by a team of caregivers looking after his mother who, after the sudden rupture of an aneurysm in her brain, was largely unable to care for herself. These caregivers saw the human behind the hospital gown, and treated their patient with the tenderness and compassion a loving family member would. In this heartwarming letter of gratitude, Dr. Julapalli reflects on the humanity he witnessed, and the often overlooked acts that bear as much importance as those which save lives. { read more }

Be The Change

Find a small way to show someone you care for them today, be it a stranger, family member, or close friend. Perform your act without the expectation of receiving anything in return.

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Awakin Weekly: The Difficult People In Your Life

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The Difficult People In Your Life
by Sally Kempton

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2290.jpgWe don’t always know why difficult people show up in our lives. There are some good theories about it, of course. Jungians, along with most contemporary spiritual teachers, tell us that ALL the people in our lives are mirroring what’s inside us, and that once we clear our minds and clarify our hearts; we’ll stop attracting angry girl friends, prickly co-workers and tyrannical bosses. Then there’s the view—not necessarily inconsistent with the first– that life is a school, and that difficult people are our teachers. (In fact, when someone tells you that you’re a teacher for him, it’s often a good idea to ask yourself exactly what it is about you that he finds abrasive!) One thing is clear, though: at some point in our lives, most of us will have someone around us who is show-stoppingly hard to take. Sometimes, it seems as if everyone we know is giving us trouble.

So, one of the great on-going questions for anyone who wants to live an authentic spiritual life without going into a cave is this: how do you deal with difficult people without being harsh, wimpy, or putting them out of your heart? How can you explain to your friend who keeps trying to enlist you in service of her own dramas, that you don’t want to be part of her latest scenario of mistrust and betrayal — and still remain friends? How do you handle the boss whose tantrums terrorize the whole office, or the co-worker who bursts into tears several times a week and accuses you of being abrupt when all you’re trying to do is get down to business?

More to the point, what can you do when the same sorts of difficult people and situations keep showing up again and again in your life? Should you chalk it up to karma? Should you find ways to resolve it through discussion or even pre-emptive action? Or should you take the truly challenging view that the people in your life who seem harsh or clingy or annoying are actually reflections of your own disowned, or shadow tendencies? In other words, is it really true that we project onto other people the qualities in ourselves that we dislike or disallow, and then condemn in someone else the traits we reject in ourselves? Does dealing with difficult people have to begin with finding out what you might need to work on in yourself?

The short yogic answer here is "Yes." Obviously, that doesn’t mean you should overlook other people’s anti-social behavior. (Owning your own part in a difficult relationship is not the same thing as wimping out of a confrontation!) Moreover, some relationships are so difficult that the best way to change them is to leave. But here’s the bottom line: Try as we will, we can’t control other people’s personality and behavior. Our real power lies in our ability to work on ourselves.

This, of course, is Yoga 101. We all ‘know’ it, yet when we’re in the crunch of relational malfunction, it’s often the first thing we forget. So, here it is again: your own inner state is your only platform for dealing successfully with other people. Not even the best interpersonal technique will work if you do it from a fearful, judgmental, or angry state of mind. Your own open and empowered state is the fulcrum, the power point, from which we can begin to move the world. […]

After all, what makes someone difficult? Essentially, it’s their energy. We don’t have to be students of quantum field theory or Buddhist metaphysics to sense how much the energies around us affect our moods and feelings. What makes someone tough for you to take? Basically, it has to do with how your energies interact with theirs. Every one of us is at our core an energetic bundle. What we call our personality is actually made up of many layers of energy — soft, tender, vulnerable energies as well as powerful, controlling or prickly energies. We have our wild and gnarly energies, our kindly energies, our free energies and our constricted, contracted ones.

These energies, expressing themselves through our bodies, thoughts, and emotions, and minds, manifest as our specific personality signature at any given moment. What we see on the surface, in someone’s body language and facial expressions, is the sum of the energies that are operating in them. As we speak, its the energy behind our words that most deeply impacts others.

The beginning of change, then, is learning how to recognize and modulate our own energy patterns. The more awareness we have — that is, the more we are able to stand aside and witness our personal energies of thought and feeling and (rather than identifying with them) "the easier it is to work with our own energies. This takes practice. Most people don’t start out with a highly developed awareness of their own energy or the way it impacts others — and even fewer of us know how to change the way our energies work together.

About the Author: Sally Kempton is a student of Swami Muktananda, an author and a spiritual teacher. Excerpt above is from this article.

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Some Good News

When Things Fall Apart
Seneca on the Antidote to Anxiety
The Butterfly Child

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Global call with Anne Veh & Rajesh Krishnan!
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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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A Winter Walk: An Excerpt

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 19, 2018

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A Winter Walk: An Excerpt

In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer.

– Albert Camus –

A Winter Walk: An Excerpt

Henry David Thoreau sings praises of winter, “the wonderful purity of nature …(when) the dead leaves of autumn, are concealed by a clean napkin of snow… A cold and searching wind drives away all contagion, and nothing can withstand it but what has a virtue in it.” In spite of the cold we recognize in this early springtime that “There is a slumbering subterranean fire in nature which never goes out, and which no cold can chill.” Delve into his essay on nature in winter,and feel the hope of spring.
{ read more }

Be The Change

When in the deepest winter, we know spring will come. Yet sometimes we need to remind ourselves and others when we are feeling cold and desperate that there is a fire in us that no winter can put out.

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Seneca on the Antidote to Anxiety

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 18, 2018

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Seneca on the Antidote to Anxiety

The greatest peril of misplaced worry is that in keeping us constantly tensed against an imagined catastrophe, it prevents us from fully living.

– Seneca –

Seneca on the Antidote to Anxiety

With elegant rhetoric the great first-century Roman philosopher Seneca examines worry, both real and imaginary, and the mental discipline of overcoming fear. In Letters from a Stoic, he points out to a young friend that, “Some things torment us more than they ought; some torment us before they ought; and some torment us when they ought not to torment us at all. We are in the habit of exaggerating, or imagining, or anticipating, sorrow.” { read more }

Be The Change

How often do you foresee and fear darker outcomes when a more positive attitude could possibly influence the future event? Seneca reminds us of the self-defeating and wearying human habit of bracing ourselves for an imaginary disaster that may never happen.

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The Butterfly Child

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 17, 2018

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The Butterfly Child

Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one’s courage.

– Anais Nin –

The Butterfly Child

At 14 years old, Jonathan Pitre appears to have a superhuman ability to deal with the constant pain of epidermolysis bullosa, the rare disease that has been a part of his life from infancy. In this moving and inspiring video we get a glimpse of his life and that of his devoted mother, as they face daunting challenges with love, strength, courage and the heroic ability to reach out and inspire others in the process. Jonathan’s skin may be extremely fragile like the wings of a butterfly, but his spirit knows no bounds. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time something you have to do seems too difficult, think of Jonathan and let his example help you to move forward.

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How Do We Respond? A Question to Artists

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March 16, 2018

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How Do We Respond? A Question to Artists

Art is not what you see, but what you make others see.

– Edgar Degas –

How Do We Respond? A Question to Artists

To some, the creative process needs no justification or rationale; yet there are times of upheaval in history that seem to ask the artist: Why are you creating this? What is your purpose? What social change do you hope to achieve with your art? Mirka Knaster is one such artist who has explored the question of how artists use their work to address political concerns. In this post Knaster discusses several artists “who do choose to give public voice to their concerns and resist the wrongs they perceive.” Included in the wide array of visual examples is the work of Photographer Henryk Ross and Columbian artist Doris Salcedo, who used art to evoke the horrors of living through genocide and political turmoil. This piece illustrates how diverse artists across the ages have used their gifts to bring attention to oppression and injustice in powerful ways. { read more }

Be The Change

Recall an iconic image that changed your understanding of a political or social situation. Were you somehow empowered to act in response to this work of art? Consider how you can be an artist in your own world by making a “studio of your life.” Can you enter into the creative process everyday so as to create a new and better world?

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10 Ways to Have a Better Conversation

This week’s inspiring video: 10 Ways to Have a Better Conversation
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Video of the Week

Mar 15, 2018
10 Ways to Have a Better Conversation

10 Ways to Have a Better Conversation

When having a conversation, how much are we truly listening? Often, we listen with the intent to reply, not to understand, says Celeste Headlee, writer and radio host. Wisdom abounds on how to appear engaged, but little of it focuses on how to actually take in what the other person is saying. In this insightful TED talk, Headlee shares 10 practical tips on how to have better conversations, from keeping it brief to going with the flow. According to Headlee, even if you just pick one to master, your conversations will begin to improve dramatically.
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