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Archive for June 25, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness Disrupts

Performing daily random kind acts can disrupt our lives and businesses positively through human engagement. A KindSpringer (who also happens to be a CEO) below writes that “in today’s zero-sum-game mentality, where somebody wins and somebody loses, kindness acts remind me that there can be another way, even in business. With kindness, everyone profits!” – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Performing daily random kind acts can disrupt our lives and businesses positively through human engagement. A KindSpringer (who also happens to be a CEO) below writes that “in today’s zero-sum-game mentality, where somebody wins and somebody loses, kindness acts remind me that there can be another way, even in business. With kindness, everyone profits!” – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A CEO uncovered a happiness secret for herself and her business – helping someone else! After visiting the KindSpring website, she started performing daily kind acts, leading to a profound change.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
While visiting her grandmother in a nursing home, another KindSpringer came upon an elderly Sikh resident whose sacred turban was in disarray. She helped him fix it to help restore his dignity.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Smile Decks
Hugs A 9-year-old kindness hero shows how she uses her kindness smile deck of cards to perform unique random kind acts. Decks can be requested online on the KindSpring website.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Here’s another scientific study that shows how kindness, including kindness to yourself, improves your health by helping to turn off your threat response.
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Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the US-Mexico Border

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 25, 2019

a project of ServiceSpace

Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the US-Mexico Border

In the dark times, will there also be singing? Yes, there will be singing About the dark times.

– Bertolt Brecht –

Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the US-Mexico Border

With powerful words, performing music by Bach, renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma reminds us of music’s unique power to connect and unite everyone. At the border between sister cities Laredo, Texas and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, he quotes from the poem by Emma Lazarus on the base of the Statue of Liberty: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free…”. Like the Statue of Liberty, Yo-Yo Ma and his music exhort us to remember that “in culture we build bridges, not walls.” { read more }

Be The Change

Read more about this moving performance’s power to cross the divide.
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Awakin Weekly: Spiritual Life Begins Within The Heart

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Spiritual Life Begins Within The Heart
by Joan Chittister

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tow2.jpgThe truth is that we spend our lives in the centrifuge of paradox. What seems certainly true on the one hand seems just as false on the other. Life is made up of incongruities: Life ends in death; what brings us joy will surely bring us an equal and equivalent amount of sorrow; perfection is a very imperfect concept; fidelities of every ilk promise support but also often end.

How can we account for these things? How can we deal with them? How can we find as much comfort in them as there is confusion? These are the queries that will not go away but which, the spiritual giants of every age knew, need to be faced if we are ever to rise above the agitation of them. There is a point in life when its paradoxes must be not only considered but laid to rest.

The great truth of early monastic spirituality, for instance, lies in the awareness that only when life is lived in the aura of the transcendent, in the discovery of the Spirit present to us in the commonplaces of life, where the paradoxes lie, can we possibly live life to its fullness, plumb life to its depths. […]

To the average person whose life is exemplary most of all for its ordinariness—to people like you and me, for instance—it is what goes on inside of us that matters for the healthy life and real spirituality.

Clearly, the spiritual life begins within the heart of a person. And when the storms within recede, the world around us will still and stabilize as well. Or to put it another way, it was greed that broke Wall Street, not the lack of financial algorithms. Whatever it is that we harbor in the soul throughout the nights of our lives is what we will live out during the hours of the day.

This single-minded concentration on the essence and purpose of life, along with a focus on inner quietude and composure, makes for a life lived in white light and deep heat at the very core of the soul. Centering on the spirits within us, rather than being obsessed with the vicissitudes and petty imperfections of life gives the soul its stability, whatever the kinds or degrees of turbulence to be dealt with around it. […]

It is the paradoxes of our own times that skulk within us, that confuse us, sap our energy, and, in the end, tax our strength for the dailiness of life. They call us to the depth of ourselves. They require us to see Life behind life. Confronting the paradoxes of life around us and in us, contemplating the meaning of them for ourselves, eventually and finally, leads to our giving place to the work of the Spirit in our own lives.

About the Author: Sister Joan Chittister has been a nun since her teen years, is an advocate for justice, and authored more than 50 books. Excerpted from her book Between the Dark and the Daylight.

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Spiritual Life Begins Within The Heart
What do you make of the notion that spiritual life begins within our heart? Can you share an experience of a time you centered on the spirit within you instead of the vicissitudes of life? What helps you confront the paradox of life around you?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Sister Joan Chittister’swords are deeply thought provoking to me. To me the spiritual life is very important. As a human being I experience and display paradoxes in my life and see paradoxes aroun…
David Doane wrote: The opposite of a truth is another truth. Death is the opposite of birth, not of life. Everything ends. We don’t have to confront paradox — we can deal with paradox by realizing that life is full…
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