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Archive for January 8, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Craving Kindness

The world seems to be craving a bit more kindness. A poem titled “Kindness” by American poet Naomi Shihab Nye was the most popular work on poets.org this year. This moving poem, featured in the article below, describes how “desolate the landscape can be between the regions of kindness.” We can all help to narrow this desolate landscape with one kind act at a time. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: The world seems to be craving a bit more kindness. A poem titled “Kindness” by American poet Naomi Shihab Nye was the most popular work on poets.org this year. This moving poem, featured in the article below, describes how “desolate the landscape can be between the regions of kindness.” We can all help to narrow this desolate landscape with one kind act at a time. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
This man travels for a living. Each year, he donates hundreds of thousands of frequent flier miles to people in need — those who can’t afford to fly but want to be with loved ones over the holidays.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A reader allowed an angry looking young man to pull in ahead of her at the coffee shop drive thru. When she pulled up to pay, she was surprised to hear that the “angry young man” had paid for her.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Forgiveness After Ultimate Tragedy
Hugs A tragic accident at the end of a 24-hour work shift changed a rookie firefighter’s and pastor’s life forever. One man’s choice to forgive has forged an unimaginable friendship.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Read the moving poem “Kindness” by Naomi Shihab Nye – the most popular poem of 2018 on poets.org.
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Against Self-Righteousness

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 8, 2019

a project of ServiceSpace

Against Self-Righteousness

If you carry joy in your heart, you can heal any moment.

– Carlos Santana –

Against Self-Righteousness

Maria Popova shares insights on Anne Lamott’s latest offering – “Almost Everything” Notes on Hope. How do we see past the illusions of polarity of right and wrong? Can we let go of these tightly held convictions that keep us small and separate and move into more mindfulness of our shared living beingness? It starts by bringing our awareness, curiosity and forgiveness – what we are designed for to the forefront. Let us come to terms with the truth – and be with it all, the irritating and the comforting, the hard, the gentle, our hearts both broken and pure. { read more }

Be The Change

Where could you bring your curiosity, and perhaps for just a moment see the rightness of something you “know” is wrong?

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Awakin Weekly: Two Kinds Of Resistance

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Two Kinds Of Resistance
by Rhonda Fabian

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2360.jpgThe light begins its slow return to places in the North, and today a new year begins.

Some people are saying it is already “too late” – climate chaos, species loss, war, disparity – that we have gone too far, the darkness is too profound. We, however, believe no darkness is so profound that a single candle cannot dispel it.

The Buddha’s teaching on light and darkness is simple: they depend on each other for their existence. Like ‘above and below’, ‘left and right’, ‘birth and death’ – take one away and its partner ceases to be. They do not have a separate self – and neither do we. Each of us is composed of many elements – our ancestors, DNA, what we consume, our relationships, and our actions. Maybe somewhere in the world, our ‘opposite’ also exists.

Anger, outrage, despair, fear – these are common responses to the injustices we see around us. We want to take action, to rebel, to protest and oppose the people on the ‘opposite’ side of the issue or debate. However we must be skillful at transforming these feelings into compassionate and nonviolent action if we want this kind of resistance to be effective. This resistance requires satyagraha, or soul force – the fire of determination in our hearts, and a willingness to see that, like ‘left and right’, we depend on each other, even those with views very different from our own, for collective awakening to happen.

There is another kind of resistance we should also consider. Just as the body builds up resistance to a virus or a cold, we must build up our inner resistance to despair. Zen monk and teacher Thich Nhat Hanh says, ‘In this kind of resistance there is no corporation, no politician and no policy to oppose or to rebel against. It all comes down to our own free conscious choices, without judging others or imposing our views.’ For example, we can choose to consume less, to support our local economy, to reduce or eliminate meat in our diet, to look after our neighbors and the children in our community, to plant trees and care for our watershed and our soil, to be models of peace.

The new year ahead will require both kinds of resistance if it is to be truly ‘new’.

About the Author: Rhonda Fabian is the editor of Kosmos Journal.

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Two Kinds Of Resistance
How do you relate to the notion that we depend even on those whose views are very different from ours in order for collective awakening to happen? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to transform a feeling of anger at injustice into a compassionate nonviolent resistance rooted in satyagraha? What helps you focus on your conscious choices instead of judging others?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: The Buddha’s teaching on light and darkness is simple: they depend on each other for their existance. For collective awakening against injustices that affect us all, we need to learn how to tra…
david doane wrote: What we call opposites like light and darkness, are different expressions of one whole. I think the Buddha’s teaching is not that light and darkness depend on each other for their existen…
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