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Archive for April 23, 2019

News from The Pema Chödrön Foundation

Pema at Omega Institute via livestream
Join Pema via livestream from Omega Institute – May 17-19

Dear friends,

In just a few weeks, Pema will be offering her one public program of the year again at Omega Institute. The weekend will be live-streamed, so you can take part wherever you are. This is a wonderful opportunity to experience Pema and the teachings that she will share. Omega Institute is offering a special discount of $20 off the cost of the live-stream.

This year, Pema will explore and guide us in practicing Buddhism’s six paramitas, of generosity, ethical conduct, patience, joyful effort, meditation, and wisdom. These transcendent practices are offered as a way to see into the nature of reality, and cultivate the compassionate intention to help all beings awaken.

The live online weekend includes talks, guided meditations, and question-and-answer sessions with Pema Chödrön and Tim Olmsted.

Omega Institute is offering this opportunity to friends of The Pema Chödrön Foundation at a $20 discount, or just $79. Use promo code PEMAFL when you register. You can watch the weekend retreat live online, or it will be available to stream online through August 19. Learn more and register here

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Spotlight On Kindness: Earth Family

On Earth Day, I’m reminded of the stunning beauty of our planet. Where else can towering redwoods, winding rivers, active volcanoes, and the aurora borealis exist under one sky? The diversity of life on the planet leaves me awestruck. There is so much at stake if we don’t make a conscious effect to protect and nurture it. May we all make wiser choices in the years to come. -Guri

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Editor’s Note: On Earth Day, I’m reminded of the stunning beauty of our planet. Where else can towering redwoods, winding rivers, active volcanoes, and the aurora borealis exist under one sky? The diversity of life on the planet leaves me awestruck. There is so much at stake if we don’t make a conscious effect to protect and nurture it. May we all make wiser choices in the years to come. -Guri
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U.S. agriculture produces 650 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually. On Earth Day, the City of Berkeley becomes the first city to launch meat-free Green Mondays.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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Amidst the hustle and bustle of living, this KindSpring member reminds us to take a few minutes to simply just take it all in. Enjoy the most important resource we have – our full presence.
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Hugs Native American leader, Tiokasin, says, “Humanity must shift from living on the Earth to living with her.” Many voices come together to share how we can transform our relationship.
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Each year, Earth Day marks the anniversary of the birth of the modern environmental movement in 1970. Check out this interactive site by Google to see how small changes you make can create a big impact on our planet!
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Coming Back to Being: A Conversation with Alan Wallace

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 23, 2019

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Coming Back to Being: A Conversation with Alan Wallace

I was really on death’s door. It brought very vividly to mind how extremely precious this life is, and what tremendous potential we have in this lifetime for purifying our hearts and our minds our souls–and for knowing reality.

– Alan Wallace –

Coming Back to Being: A Conversation with Alan Wallace

Alan tells how as a young man, he reached a moment where he sent out a message to the universe. I need to meet a wise old man, and I need it now! He was hitchhiking alone in Norway when, as he says, I looked over my shoulder and saw a little black VW bug pulled over. There was a little old man, beckoning to me. Would you like a ride? Thus begins our remarkable interview with one of the preeminent figures in the emerging discussion between contemporary Buddhist thinkers and scientists questioning the materialist axioms of 20th Century science. { read more }

Be The Change

The journey to self-knowledge could begin by stopping for a few minutes and trying to become aware of exactly what my state actually is. What am I thinking, feeling and sensing?

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Awakin Weekly: Feel Free To Set A Better Example

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Feel Free To Set A Better Example
by Ryan Holiday

[Listen to Audio!]

2379.jpgAt the core of legal theory is this idea that there are essentially two forms of liberty—positive and negative. Positive liberty is the freedom to do something, such as the freedom of speech or the freedom of worship. Negative liberty is freedom from something, which is a little more complicated. For instance, in the United States, the Third Amendment to the Constitution stipulates that the government cannot quarter troops in the home of any private individual. The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from unreasonable searches and seizures. As FDR famously pointed out, freedom from want and fear are just as important as speech and worship.

The complicated part of all this, of course, is where somebody else’s freedom to do something intersects with somebody else’s desire to be free from it.

You get to speak your mind…but that may offend or hurt someone else. You should be able to do whatever you want on your own property…but walking around naked blaring music makes it hard for your neighbors to do the same. You should be able to make your own medical decisions for your family…but the decision not to vaccinate affects everyone they meet.

The specifics of these issues are the proper realm of politicians and lawyers, but Epictetus leaves with a tricky and timeless question: What is up to us and what is not up to us?

In a world of snowflakes and outrage porn, it’s easy to get pulled off track and to focus on stopping other people from saying hurtful or offensive things rather than to measure what we say and manage how we respond. We want to get up in other people’s business, when really, at the end of the day, all we control is our own.

Which is ridiculous because there is so much to focus on in our own lives. What kind of person are we going to be? What are we going to do with our freedoms? Are our decisions negatively impacting other people? Are we really as free as we like to think we are?

And here’s the counterintuitive thing about all of this: Marcus Aurelius talked over and over again about the best way to influence and inspire other people. It was not with force, but by example. If you want to be free from the tyranny of other people’s opinions and bad behavior, feel free to set a better example.

About the Author: Excerpted from The Daily Stoic. Ryan Holiday is an American author, marketer and entrepreneur.

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Feel Free To Set A Better Example
How do you relate to the notion of taking personal responsibility for being the change as opposed to critiquing others? Can you share a personal story of a time you shifted the focus back to yourself instead of censuring others for being hurtful? What helps you stay rooted in setting a better example?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I take my personal responsibility for making my choices that are healthy, wise, constructive and helpful only to me but to others.It’s up to me to choose what to eat or not. I may eat junk food an…
David Doane wrote: I very much support the notion of taking personal responsibility for being the change as opposed to critiquing others. Critiquing others, especially unasked for critiquing, doesn’t help. Be the ch…
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