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Archive for April 30, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Kinder Than Necessary

It’s human nature to try to reciprocate the kindness we receive from others. Naturally, no one wants to be the “bad guy.” However, there are those among us that go above and beyond what society expects of them. They often make us pause and consider, “Why didn’t I think of that?” These are the trailblazers of kindness. By being kinder than necessary, they raise the bar for all of us. -Guri

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Editor’s Note: It’s human nature to try to reciprocate the kindness we receive from others. Naturally, no one wants to be the “bad guy.” However, there are those among us that go above and beyond what society expects of them. They often make us pause and consider, “Why didn’t I think of that?” These are the trailblazers of kindness. By being kinder than necessary, they raise the bar for all of us. -Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Bus driver leads with kindness. Jenkins says he just hopes that when these kids look back on there early school days, they will say, “Remember that bus driver – he put a lot into us.”
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Kindness is Contagious.
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She loves to do random acts of kindness for others, but this time her co-worker turned the tables on her with this sweet surprise.
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A Heart of Gold
Hugs When this mom needed the money, she and her two kids went to the jewelry store to sell her precious ring. However, this jeweler with a heart of gold had a different idea.
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All My Best Words Were Hers: A Tribute to Ursula Le Guin

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April 30, 2019

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All My Best Words Were Hers: A Tribute to Ursula Le Guin

It is good to have an end to journey toward, but it is the journey that matters in the end.

– Ursula K. Le Guin –

All My Best Words Were Hers: A Tribute to Ursula Le Guin

The impact of literature and specifically, an author, on a person can be “unfathomable.” In this tender tribute, Isaac Yuen recounts the many ways Ursula K. Le Guin influenced his life and his writing. He admits he is “only a fan.” He confesses his inadequacy in expressing how her work guides his: “I write about how reading her words transported me to strange worlds and into new souls, how that sparked my own journeys as a reader and a writer. The sentiment is trite. I steal her own words to say what she already knows. I cannot say what I mean. I cannot find the way.” And yet, he does. With profound love, he shares the legacy she leaves for him and the world. { read more }

Be The Change

What author has had an impact on your life? Write a brief essay on the ways that person has influenced your ideas, values, even choices and decisions through their work. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: The Poisoned Tree

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The Poisoned Tree
by Jack Kornfield

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2276.jpgThe maturity we can develop in approaching our difficulties is illustrated by the traditional story of a poisoned tree. On first discovering a poisoned tree, some people see only its danger. Their immediate reaction is, "Let’s cut this down before we are hurt. Let’s cut it down before anyone else eats the poisoned fruit." This resembles our initial response to the difficulties that arise in our lives, when we encounter aggression, depression, or sorrow in ourselves and others. Our initial response is to avoid them, saying, "These poisons afflict us. Let us uproot them; let us be rid of them. Let us cut them down."

Other people, who have journeyed further along the spiritual path, discover this poisoned tree and do not meet it with aversion. They have realized that to open to life requires a deep and heartfelt compassion for all that is around us. Knowing the poisoned tree is somehow a part of us, they say, "Let us not cut it down. Instead, let’s have compassion for the tree as well." So out of kindness they build a fence around the tree so that others may not be poisoned and the tree may also have its life. This second approach shows a profound shift of relationship from judgment and fear to compassion.

A third type of person, who has traveled yet deeper in spiritual life, sees this same tree. This person, who has gained much vision, looks and says, "Oh, a poisoned tree. Perfect! Just what I was looking for." This individual picks the poisoned fruit, investigates its properties, mixes with other ingredients, and uses the poison as a great medicine to heal the sick and transform the ills of the world. Through respect and understanding, this person sees in a way opposite to most people and finds value in the most difficult circumstances.

[…]
In each and every aspect of life, the chance to turn the straw we find into gold is there in our hearts. All that is asked is our respectful attention, our willingness to learn from difficulty. Instead of fighting, when we see with eyes of wisdom, difficulties can become our good fortune.

When our body is sick, instead of fighting the disease, we can listen to the information it has to tell us and use it to heal. When our children whine or complain, instead of shutting them out, we can listen to what is their deeper need. When we have difficulty with some aspect of our lover or partner, we might inquire how we treat that part in ourselves. Difficulties or weaknesses often lead us to the very thing we need to learn.

About the Author: Excerpted from A Path with Heart by Jack Kornfield.

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The Poisoned Tree
How do you relate to finding value in the most difficult circumstances through respect and understanding? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to turn the straw you found into gold? What helps you learn from difficulties?
David Doane wrote: We have too much of a get rid of difficulties mentality and would benefit from having more of an attitude of what’s this difficult circumstance about and what can I learn from it. In our druggized…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: It is not easy to accept difficultchanges and adverse circumstances happening in life. Instead of grumbling and complaining or avoiding and averting or denying I need to understand them and accept the…
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