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Archive for May 7, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Real Life Superheroes

This week’s newsletter sheds light on the spirit of kindness that is so present in many young children. From 5th graders who come together to do blanket drive for babies in need in Ridgefield, to a boy who decides to make a sacrifice for his classmates, to children from the extremely underprivileged communities in India who travel the globe sharing a message of peace with the world. –Guri

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“If we are to teach real peace in this world, we shall have to begin with the children.” — Mahatma Gandhi
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Editor’s Note: This week’s newsletter sheds light on the spirit of kindness that is so present in many young children. From 5th graders who come together to do blanket drive for babies in need in Ridgefield, to a boy who decides to make a sacrifice for his classmates, to children from the extremely underprivileged communities in India who travel the globe sharing a message of peace with the world. –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
After these 5th graders read the book, “Real Life Superheroes”, by Alison Hawes, they wanted to take action themselves and came together to brainstorm on how they could demonstrate acts of kindness.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
On a really hot day, when given the choice, this student agreed to do a tough workout in his PE class — with the agreement that the rest of his fellow classmates will not need to run in the heat.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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The Jai Jagat Journey
Hugs This month, 17 children from six slums in India have embarked on a one-of-a-kind journey to share a message of love and oneness with the world. Here’s a glimpse into their world.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Spanning all major cities across the U.S. and U.K. the Jai Jagat Show will present a 90-minute musical production in honor of Gandhi’s 150th anniversary. The troupe has spent 18 months in training and through the remarkable process they’ve undergone, the children have come to embody the values they portray in the Jai Jagat journey – the whole earth is one family. For more info about show times in your city, CLICK HERE!
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Searching for Meaning Purpose and Patterns

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 7, 2019

a project of ServiceSpace

Searching for Meaning Purpose and Patterns

In every moment the Universe is whispering to you

– Denise Linn –

Searching for Meaning Purpose and Patterns

Underneath many of the problems facing us today lie personal choices. Many of us are not only dissatisfied with the immense global problems we face but also with the quality of our own lives. One way to address these global challenges by connecting their solutions to smaller choices we already want to make in our personal lives. Sky Nelson-Isaacs lucidly explains how we can move into rhythm with the flow of life so that Life can move into harmony with our highest goals. Read this excerpt from the book, “Living In Flow: The Science of Synchronicity and How Your Choices Shape Your World” to discover how we can even enjoy the dance. { read more }

Be The Change

Call to mind a world challenge you deeply wish to see improve. Consider the small personal choices you can make with love and authenticity that can move you into alignment with Life so that Life can move in harmony with you.

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Awakin Weekly: Everything Human Is Natural

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Everything Human Is Natural
by Alan Watts

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2328.jpgMan is as much attached to nature as a tree, and though he walks freely on two legs and is not rooted in the soil, he is by no means a self-sufficient, self-moving, and self-directing entity. For his life he depends absolutely on the same factors as the tree, the worm, and the fly, on the universal powers of nature, life, God, or whatever it may be. From some mysterious source life flows through him unceasingly; it does not just go in at birth and come out at death—he is the channel for an ever moving stream, a stream that carries the blood through his veins, that moves his lungs and brings him air to breathe, that raises his food from the earth and bears the light of the sun to his face. If we look into a single cell of his body we find the universe, for sun, moon, and stars are ceaselessly maintaining it; we find it again if we plumb into the depths of his mind, for there are all the archaic urges of primeval life, both human and animal, and could we look deeper we might find kinship with the plants and rocks. […]

The isolation of the human soul from nature is, generally speaking, a phenomenon of civilization. This isolation is more apparent than real, because the more nature is held back by brick, concrete, and machines, the more it reasserts itself in the human mind, usually as an unwanted, violent, and troublesome visitor. But actually the creations of man, his art, his literature, his buildings, differ only in quality, not in kind, from such creations of nature as birds’ nests and honeycombs. Man’s creations are infinitely more numerous and ingenious, but this very ingenuity, together with his fear, aggravates his feeling of isolation, persuading him that he is a creator in his own right, separate from nature. For once again it would go against his self-esteem to have to admit that his superb faculty of reason and all its works do not make him the master of nature rather than its servant. Bewitched by his power of reason and urged on through fright of his fear, man seeks his freedom in isolation from and not in union with nature—“whose service is perfect freedom.” […]

Man’s struggle for mastery is magnificent and tragic; but it does not work. And the difficulty is not so much in what he does as in what he thinks. If he were to seek union instead of isolation this would not involve what is generally called “getting back to nature”; he would not have to give up his machines and cities and retire to the forests and live in wigwams. He would only have to change his attitude, for the penalties he pays for his isolation are only indirectly on the physical plane. They originate from and are most severe in his mind.

About the Author: From "The Meaning of Happiness: The Quest for Freedom of the Spirit in Modern Psychology and the Wisdom of the East."

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Everything Human Is Natural
What do you make of the notion that nature’s service is perfect freedom? Can you share a personal story of a time you sought union with nature instead of isolation? What helps you resist the trap of isolation and go toward union with nature?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We are relational beings. We have relationships with human beings as well as with nature. We are a part of nature, not apart from nature. We are composed of five fundamental natural elements: earth, w…
david Doane wrote: I very much like this essay by Alan Watts. He was a wise man. By living in harmony with nature, we are in service to it and it serves us. We are in no way it’s master. Imagine being in a stream –…
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