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Archive for May, 2019

Kitbull: A Moving Story of Friendship Between Dog and Cat

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 24, 2019

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Kitbull: A Moving Story of Friendship Between Dog and Cat

Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born.

– Anais Nin –

Kitbull: A Moving Story of Friendship Between Dog and Cat

In this heartwarming Pixar short, an unlikely friendship forms when a stray cat encounters an abused pit bull. Together, the pair discovers that trust and companionship can mend even the most painful of wounds. Watch their journey unfold here. { read more }

Be The Change

Enjoy this complementary video about a real life friendship between two very different species. { more }

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Kitbull: A Loving Kindness Story Between a Dog and a Cat

This week’s inspiring video: Kitbull: A Loving Kindness Story Between a Dog and a Cat
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Video of the Week

May 23, 2019
Kitbull: A Loving Kindness Story Between a Dog and a Cat

Kitbull: A Loving Kindness Story Between a Dog and a Cat

In this heartwarming Pixar short, an unlikely friendship forms when a stray cat encounters an abused Pit Bull. Together, the pair discovers that trust and companionship can mend even the most painful of wounds. Click play to watch their journey unfold!
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How the Creative Spirit Transforms the World

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 23, 2019

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How the Creative Spirit Transforms the World

When the gift moves in a circle its motion is beyond the control of the personal ego, and so each bearer must be a part of the group and each donation is an act of social faith.

– Lewis Hyde –

How the Creative Spirit Transforms the World

“Margaret Atwood describes The Gift, by Lewis Hyde, as ‘a book about the core nature of what it is that artists do, and also about the relation of these activities to our overwhelmingly commercial society.’ Bill Viola has called it ‘the best book I have read on what it means to be an artist in todays economic world.’ Robin McKenna is the writer, director and producer of a feature-length documentary inspired by Hyde’s bestseller. Her film, GIFT, takes us to settings as varied as the Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert, a potlatch ceremony in British Columbia, and an art museum in Melbourne, to explore some contemporary ways of being where artistic expression and generosity of spirit have primacy.” This interview with McKenna shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the documentary ‘GIFT’ here. { more }

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Solar Sister

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 22, 2019

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Solar Sister

The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well

– Ralph Waldo Emerson –

Solar Sister

Solar Sister is an organization that believes women are an important solution to the problems of economic equity and environmental change. Women in rural Africa are provided with opportunities to access solar powered products to help them run small family businesses, to cook without using harmful fuels, and to educate children. Solar Sister’s Communications Director Fid Thompson shares in this upbeat article how gratefulness echoes through this multi-faceted approach to endowing women, eliminating poverty, and attaining sustainable energy solutions. Change that helps others become self-supporting can happen in sustainable ways, and we can provide backing even from across the ocean. Read on to learn more about this empowering organization. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider how you can simplify your energy use. In so doing, feel your connection to others who have much less than you, but still have lives of hope and meaning.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Undercovering The Good

A good mindfulness technique is to “pay attention to what we are paying attention to”. We amplify what we give space to. If our focus is always on what is wrong, then we amplify the negative. While the media tries to focus us on what is wrong in the world to grab our attentions, we must not lose focus on all that is right and good in our communities. Let’s pay attention to the good. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: A good mindfulness technique is to “pay attention to what we are paying attention to”. We amplify what we give space to. If our focus is always on what is wrong, then we amplify the negative. While the media tries to focus us on what is wrong in the world to grab our attentions, we must not lose focus on all that is right and good in our communities. Let’s pay attention to the good. – Ameeta
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David Brooks explains why the media focuses on where we go wrong and barely covers the most important social change events happening – the 90% of our lives influenced by relationship and community.
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Remembering Jean Vanier: The Living Saint

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May 21, 2019

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Remembering Jean Vanier: The Living Saint

Somewhere the deepest desire for a soul is to be appreciated, to be loved.

– Jean Vanier –

Remembering Jean Vanier: The Living Saint

Canadian Catholic philosopher, theologian and humanitarian Jean Vanier, a man who dedicated his life to helping those less fortunate, passed away in Paris this May at the age of 90. Founder of L’Arche, a federation of communities spread over 37 countries for people with disabilities, as well as of Faith and Light, with similar works in more than 80 countries, he has written 30 books on religion, disability, normality, success and tolerance. { read more }

Be The Change

What can you do to help someone from a suffering a disability today? For more inspiration, here’s an On Being interview with Jean Vanier. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Uncomfortable Place Of Uncertainty

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Uncomfortable Place Of Uncertainty
by Margaret Wheatley

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgWe weren’t trained to admit we don’t know. Most of us were taught to sound certain and confident, to state our opinion as if it were true. We haven’t been rewarded for being confused. Or for asking more questions rather than giving quick answers. We’ve also spent many years listening to others mainly to determine whether we agree with them or not. We don’t have time or interest to sit and listen to those who think differently than we do.

It is very difficult to give up our certainties — our positions, our beliefs, our explanations. These help define us; they lie at the heart of our personal identity. Yet I believe we will succeed in changing this world only if we can think and work together in new ways.

Curiosity is what we need. We don’t have to let go of what we believe, but we do need to be curious about what someone else believes. We do need to acknowledge that their way of interpreting the world might be essential to our survival. To be curious about how someone else interprets things, we have to be willing to admit that we’re not capable of figuring things out alone.

Lately, I’ve been listening for what surprises me. What did I just hear that startled me? This isn’t easy — I’m accustomed to sitting there nodding my head to those saying things I agree with. But when I notice what surprises me, I’m able to see my own views more dearly, including my beliefs and assumptions.

Noticing what surprises and disturbs me has been a very useful way to see invisible beliefs. If what you say surprises me, I must have been assuming something else was true. If what you say disturbs me, I must believe something contrary to you. My shock at your position exposes my own position. When I hear myself saying, "How could anyone believe something like that?" a light comes on for me to see my own beliefs. These moments are great gifts. If I can see my beliefs and assumptions, I can decide whether I still value them.

Sometimes we hesitate to listen for differences because we don’t want to change. We’re comfortable with our lives, and if we listened to anyone who raised questions, we’d have to get engaged in changing things. If we don’t listen, things can stay as they are and we won’t have to expend any energy. But most of us do see things in our life or in the world that we would like to be different. If that’s true, we have to listen more, not less. And we have to be willing to move into the very uncomfortable place of uncertainty.

About the Author: Margaret Wheatley is a celebrated author of many books. Excerpt above is from ‘Willing To be Disturbed.’

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Uncomfortable Place Of Uncertainty
How do you relate to uncertainty? Can you share a personal experience of a time you moved into the ‘very uncomfortable place of uncertainty’? What helps you stay open to changing yourself?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I like this thought-provoking and very helpful essay by Margaret Wheatley. Mind-set like" Black or White" or "Either Or" or "My way is the only way and no other way" sadl…
Rajesh wrote: Fantastic passage. And some really good pointers for uncovering our own beliefs and assumptions, that drive our lives. The first paragraph is striking, especially this snippet – "We haven’t…
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Welcome to Fearless Dialogues. Are You Ready for Change?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 20, 2019

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Welcome to Fearless Dialogues. Are You Ready for Change?

You change your life by changing your heart.

– -Max Lucado- –

Welcome to Fearless Dialogues. Are You Ready for Change?

Gregory Ellison II founded the non-profit organization Fearless Dialogues in 2013. In just 6 years they have worked with over 50,000 people worldwide. Fearless Dialogues provides safe space for seeing and hearing those who have been overlooked, forming unlikely alliances and engaging in hard conversations about difficult subjects like racism, classism, and community violence. Ellison is an associate professor of pastoral care and counseling at the Candler School of Theology. His research focuses on caring with marginalized populations, seeing pastoral care as social activism, and 20th and 21st century mysticism. { read more }

Be The Change

Who is someone you see often, that perhaps you have never really seen? How could you create a connection and start a conversation, or see their gift?

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Scott Fry is a Loving Earthling

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 19, 2019

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Scott Fry is a Loving Earthling

Looking at the Earth and the universe from the stand point of awe, wonder and radical amazement at the grandeur and magnificent mystery of all being. That’s what the new bottom line is about.

– Rabbi Michael Lerner –

Scott Fry is a Loving Earthling

What would business look like if instead of the bottom line being bigger is better, or how can we make more money – different questions were asked that are based on relationships to the people, to families, community, that are looking at how we can heal the land, and honor the sacred? Join Nathan Scolero from Dumbo Feather magazine in this phenomenal story of Scott Fry and his journey to creating his business Loving Earth. { read more }

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How could you bring more mindfulness into your business relations? What businesses do you know that bring more to life and the world – than what they take out to make their products?

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Skateboard Parks and the Power of Relationship

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May 18, 2019

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Skateboard Parks and the Power of Relationship

There is no power for change greater than a community discovering what it cares about.

– Margaret J. Wheatley –

Skateboard Parks and the Power of Relationship

Eight years ago, Ulrike Reinhard flew to India for on a business trip. Instead of flying back home, however, she “got stuck” and decided to make India her home. In this interview, Ulrike describes how she was driven to build a skateboard park in the middle of a poverty-ridden village in Madhya Pradesh. Many projects are built with fences and “Do Not Enter” signs surrounding it; in contrast, this skateboard park welcomes anyone who wishes to enjoy it. This surreal space has attracted media attention and many visitors to the village, helping to spur economic growth and giving children of the area something that empowers them. Ulrike describes her inspiration for the project, her other fascinating experiments in community building, and the power of relationships to make change. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Ulrike’s work. { more }

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