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Archive for January 29, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness To Strangers

Albert Einstein spoke about widening our circles of compassion to include not just those nearest to us, but the whole of humanity. He felt by restricting our affection to those nearest to us, we imprison ourselves and succumb to a delusion that we are separate from each other. Our task is to free ourselves from this delusion and to love and embrace everyone, including strangers. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Albert Einstein spoke about widening our circles of compassion to include not just those nearest to us, but the whole of humanity. He felt by restricting our affection to those nearest to us, we imprison ourselves and succumb to a delusion that we are separate from each other. Our task is to free ourselves from this delusion and to love and embrace everyone, including strangers. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
People share moving stories of the nicest things strangers have done for them – from changing a diaper for a distraught young father to saving a life. These kind acts led to life-long ripples.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
An elderly woman found a way to help others while remaining in her car. She keeps a large basket filled with warm clothing in her passenger seat and hands them out to people as needed.
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Simple acts of Kindness
Hugs We all benefit from the kindness of strangers – one way or another.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Maria Popova discusses compassion and Einstein’s view on widening circles of compassion.
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We Teach Who We Area

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January 29, 2019

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We Teach Who We Area

At times our own light goes out and is rekindled by a spark from another person. Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude of those who have lighted the flame within us.

– Albert Schweitzer –

We Teach Who We Area

If you ask a child what they want to be when they grow up the answer is never “loved” or “happy” or “peaceful.” We put a lot of weight on success, on setting goals and reaching them. And we quantify those accomplishments. How much did you get done today? What is your salary? How big is your house? Even our connections today are quantifiable. You have 500 friends on social media. You scroll through their posts, briefly acknowledging some with a click. How often do we consider the impact of the singular things in our life? It takes more than a moment to truly appreciate the special people around us. { read more }

Be The Change

Take some time today to appreciate the blessings in your life and enjoy the many benefits of gratitude. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Generosity Helps Us Accept Change

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Generosity Helps Us Accept Change
by Sharon Salzberg

[Listen to Audio!]

2355.jpgThe aim of practicing generosity is twofold, or else it’s an incomplete experience.

The first aim is to free our minds from the conditioned forces that bind and limit us. Craving, clinging and attachment bring confinement and lack of self-esteem. If we’re always looking for some person or thing to complete us, we miss the degree to which we are complete in every moment. It’s a bit like leaning on a mirage only to find that it can’t hold us; there’s nothing there.

When we are continually moved by looking for the next experience and the next pleasure, it’s like going from one mirage to another. We have no security. Nothing is holding us up. We practice generosity to free the mind from that delusion, to weaken the forces of craving and clinging so we can find essential happiness.

We also practice generosity to free others, to extend welfare and happiness to all beings, to somehow, as much as each one of us can, lessen the suffering in this world. When our practice of generosity is genuine, when it’s complete, we realize inner spaciousness and peace, and we also learn to extend boundless caring to all living beings.

The movement of the heart in practicing generosity mirrors the movement of the heart that lets go inside. So the external training of giving deeply influences the internal feeling-tone of the meditation practice, and vice versa. If we cultivate a generous heart, then more and more we can unconditionally allow things to be the way they are. We can accept the truth of the present moment, rather than continually impose conditions on what’s going on: it must be this way or that way or you can’t be happy. Your sitting must be perfect or you won’t be happy. You must have no restlessness or you won’t feel good about yourself. Reality moves along outside of our control, and yet we impose all of these conditions on it. Generosity allows that whole project to start to fall away.

The strength of our generosity is a primary factor in our ability to accept change.

About the Author: Sharon Salzberg is a long-time meditation teacher; excerpt above from this article.

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Generosity Helps Us Accept Change
How do you relate to the notion that the strength of our generosity is a primary factor in our ability to accept change? Can you share a personal story of a time when you could see the movement of your heart in practicing generosity mirroring the movement of your heart letting go inside? What helps you cultivate a generous heart?
David Doane wrote: Only true generosity frees the mind Generosity that is goal-directed, such as generosity done in order to complete me or done to make me feel good about myself or done to please the other or get what …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: True or genuine generosity is unconditional with no expectation in return. It is pure and not contiminated by my agenda such as what am I goung to get by my generous act. In this sense it is free from…
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