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Archive for February, 2019

The Challenges of Raising a Digital Native

This week’s inspiring video: The Challenges of Raising a Digital Native
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Video of the Week

Feb 07, 2019
The Challenges of Raising a Digital Native

The Challenges of Raising a Digital Native

Dr. Devorah Heitner’s research into the challenges of raising children in the digital age is a tremendous resource for parents and teachers. She has gone right to the source, learning about children’s experiences with technology, and listening to their creative solutions to challenges they face. We can all learn through her from the children themselves. First and foremost, they want the people in their lives to be accessible to them when they need them, not to be texting someone else. Rather than monitoring children’s use of technology she puts the emphasis on mentoring them, modeling for them how to navigate the digital world. She suggests co-creating solutions with children, based on their creativity and the wisdom of the adults in their lives.
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Nathan Oliveira: Fundamentals

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 7, 2019

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Nathan Oliveira: Fundamentals

Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time.

– Thomas Merton –

Nathan Oliveira: Fundamentals

In this beautiful interview, renowned painter Nathan Oliveira muses about a lifetime of art making, “Something comes to life that doesn’t normally come to life, but it’s something rather rare because you can paint, and keep putting material on and on and on, and nothing can happen. It’s something you simply have to find –and at a given moment, there is something there: it’s extraordinary! A sort of signal occurs, a living signal, a signal of life.” { read more }

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What are the “signals of life” you’ve encountered on your own path?

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The New and Ancient Story of Interbeing

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February 6, 2019

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The New and Ancient Story of Interbeing

In the Light of interbeing, peace and happiness in your daily life means peace and happiness in the world.

– Thich Nhat Hanh –

The New and Ancient Story of Interbeing

“Why does the sun shine? A random result of coalescing gases igniting nuclear fusion? Or is it in order to give its light and warmth to Life? Why does the rain fall? Is it the senseless product of blind chemical processes of evaporation and condensation? Or is it to water life? Why do you seek to pour forth your song? Is it to show off your genetic fitness to attract a mate, or is it to contribute to a more beautiful world? We may fear those first answers but it is the second that carries the ring of truth.” Charles Eisenstein shares more in this piece. { read more }

Be The Change

Tune into the story of interbeing that is playing out in your own life at this moment in time.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness Is A Skill

As David Brooks states in his article linked below, most disagreements are not about the subject purportedly at hand. They are over issues that make people feel their sense of self is disrespected and under threat. Skillfully discovering why someone feels disrespected goes a long way towards mutual understanding, as Patton Oswalt also found after responding to a disgruntled tweet. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: As David Brooks states in his article linked below, most disagreements are not about the subject purportedly at hand. They are over issues that make people feel their sense of self is disrespected and under threat. Skillfully discovering why someone feels disrespected goes a long way towards mutual understanding, as Patton Oswalt also found after responding to a disgruntled tweet. – Ameeta
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Kindness In the News
An Alabama veteran’s twitter fued with comedian Patton Oswalt led to a surprise understanding between the two, with the comedian helping to generate much needed medical funds for the veteran.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
Even though these rural neighbors don’t particularly get along with one couple, they all came together to help and do chores for the disagreeable couple when the husband had major surgery.
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Creating Safety Bonds in Schools
Hugs A pilot program in New York City aims to change the vertical relationship between students and school officers. It’s replacing distrust with strong bonds and trust.
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In other news …
David Brooks offers some advice on how to have skillful conversations with people with different viewpoints.
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The Urgency of Slowing Down

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February 5, 2019

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The Urgency of Slowing Down

Seek out a tree and let it teach you stillness.

– Ekhart Tolle –

The Urgency of Slowing Down

Join Krista Tippett from On Being in this intimate interview with Pico Iyer, author of over a dozen books and chronicler of the “global soul”. Based in Japan, he’s traveled across our blue planet paying special attention to the mapping and modern rediscovery of our inner world. But he also experiences a remote Benedictine hermitage as his second home, retreating there many times each year. In this intimate conversation, we explore the discoveries he’s making and his practice of “the art of stillness.” { read more }

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What conscious measure can you take to step into stillness and silence today?

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Awakin Weekly: We Contain Multitudes

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
We Contain Multitudes
by Chad Dickerson

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2362.jpgWalt Whitman once wrote, "Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself, (I am large, I contain multitudes.)"

It’s possible to be a person with all of a multitude of experiences all at the same time. You can be a kid barely removed from a trailer park with an illiterate grandfather and disruptive mental illness in your family and go to Duke and study Shakespeare and build a successful career and eventually go to New York City and take a company public as a CEO. I actually think we would be better served if we had more people in leadership positions in public and private life who have known what it’s like to be broke, to see the tragedy of a grandfather reaching the end of his life not knowing how to read, to win admission to a fancy school and feel like you shouldn’t be there at first but then dig deep and carve out your place there and in the world beyond. Any leader of any organization of sufficient size will work with a diverse group of people and having a diverse set of experiences can only help build empathy.

In my personal life, I get invited to fancy dinners and such. Sometimes when introducing themselves, people lay out their professional accomplishments and I find myself wanting to know the real person, not the LinkedIn profile. I’m wondering: what were your struggles? What were your parents like? When did you feel uncertain and how did you overcome it? How did you get here? I realize that no one is obligated to share those things with me and I never press. But some of my best conversations at those kinds of events have come when I’ve let my guard down and told the person beside me a little about my real not-LinkedIn-profile self. Quite often, that person opens up in some way. We laugh about the first time we went to a dinner like this and had to figure out how the place settings worked, or about how we felt when we interviewed for our first big job in a strange city. Or the person beside me might have grown up wealthy but suffered difficult challenges in life that wealth can’t address and overcame them. Some of these conversations have become the basis for deep loving friendships that I treasure.

Maybe if we all gave each other the space to be complex people — not reduced to public perception, our professional bios, our LinkedIn profiles, others’ narratives of who we are — we might understand each other better and give ourselves the room to be messy but wondrous human beings.

As Whitman wrote: I am large, I contain multitudes. We all contain multitudes. Or as George and Tammy sang together on “Two Story House”: I’ve got my story, and I’ve got mine, too."

And so do you. We should all tell them proudly and in their full complexity.

About the Author: Chad Dickerson was formerly the co-founder and CEO of Etsy. This post was excerpted from here.

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We Contain Multitudes
How do you relate to the notion that we contain multitudes? Can you share a personal story from a time you were able to share your non-LinkedIn-profile self with someone? What helps you offer space (to yourself and others) to be complex people?
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Every one of us is more than one descriptor and so much more than our jobs. I relate to this on so many levels: as a survivor of childhood abuse and trauma, as the daughter of a father who had multipl…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: My life is not a straght line. It has many turns and twists. My life is not monociolor. It is muticolor. Some light, some bright, some dark, some pleasesent and some unpleasa.It a mixture of colors..M…
David Doane wrote: We do contain multitudes, in more ways than one. We are part of one another. We share our atoms, and the atoms that are part of my body have been part of the body of every other being. Further, whatev…
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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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On Defining Spirit

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February 4, 2019

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On Defining Spirit

Deep inside, our integrity sings to us whether we are listening or not. It is a note that only we can hear.

– Rachel Naomi Remen –

On Defining Spirit

“What then is the spiritual? I find it difficult to define directly. It’s much easier to say what it isn’t that what it is. For example — the spiritual is often confused with the moral, but it’s not the moral. Morality is concerned with issues of right and wrong. Although often attributed to the “godhead”, it actually has a social basis and reflects a social tradition or consensus. What is considered moral varies from culture to culture and from time to time within the same culture. Furthermore, morality often serves as the basis for judgment, for one group of people separating themselves form other groups, or one individual separating from others. Yet the spiritual is profoundly non-judgmental and non-separative. ” In this thought-provoking piece, celebrated physician and author Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen approaches a definition of the spiritual. { read more }

Be The Change

Listen for the sound of your integrity singing to you this week. For more inspiration, read “The Recovery of the Sacred” — another beautiful piece from Dr. Remen. { more }

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Grief as Deep Activism

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February 3, 2019

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Grief as Deep Activism

If sequestered pain made a sound, the atmosphere would be humming all the time.

– Stephen Levine –

Grief as Deep Activism

No one escapes suffering in this life. Yet we live in a collective denial, deprived of meaningful ways to speak of sorrows and collective practices of releasing grief. Francis Weller walks us to the shore of sorrows and shows us how this ocean ripples through our individual lives, through community, and into the Earth herself. He invites us to see the illusion of private pain that imprisons us. He encourages us to welcome grief as a powerful, sacred practice of opening the heart, of healing and of returning to kinship. He offers us musical notation for the song of a soul alive, drawn with compassion and caring. { read more }

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Because our fates are bound together, grief is at the heart of making peace. Think about a grudge or a hurt you may hold within. How could acknowledgement and acceptance of grief help you release it?

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Ask Where I’m Local

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February 2, 2019

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Ask Where I'm Local

This is part of being human, this knowing that we are all part of one another, inextricably involved; and at the same time alone, irrevocably alone.

– Madeleine L’Englue –

Ask Where I’m Local

So many times when we introduce ourselves others, or are introduced by someone else, we place a lot of importance on naming where we are from. Often, this where is explained with the name of a country or state or city. But these are not naturally occurring phenomena. Countries, states, and cities are concepts; explaining almost nothing about us. The experiences of our daily lives and the actual physical and cultural locations where those experiences happen…those are the rich threads creating the warp and woof of who we are. Watch this incredible TED talk by Taiye Selasi and explore the question “Where are you local?” { read more }

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Reflect on your rituals, relationships and restrictions. Weave a rich tapestry of your experiential identity, how you are local. Use this frame to introduce yourself and and use it to meet others.

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How to Be Yourself

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February 1, 2019

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How to Be Yourself

Owning our story and loving ourselves through that process is the bravest thing we’ll ever do.

– Brene Brown –

How to Be Yourself

Some days, you need to remind yourself about what’s truly important in life. So sit back with a cup of your favorite beverage and give yourself a few minutes to savor this sweet video, which gives you a prescription for happiness in two minutes, starting with “show up.” { read more }

Be The Change

Rejoice in the blessings of your life. Start a gratitude list today.

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