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Archive for August, 2019

Wendell Berry on Caretaking

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 31, 2019

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Wendell Berry on Caretaking

Whether we and our politicians know it or not, Nature is party to all our deals and decisions, and she has more votes, a longer memory, and a sterner sense of justice than we do.

– Wendell Berry –

Wendell Berry on Caretaking

“In 2018, Helena Norberg-Hodge sat down with Wendell Berry for a far-reaching discussion. The two are giants of the local economy movement. Berry is a poet and activist, an author of over forty books. Norberg-Hodge founded Local Futures, which works to renew ecological, social, and spiritual well-being by promoting a systemic shift toward economic localization.Together they touch on human nature, technology, experiential knowledge, agriculture policy, happiness, wildness, and local food systems. Through their discussion, Berry and Norberg-Hodge offer a critique of our economic system and show how the caretaking of the natural world and local communities are one and the same.”

{ read more }

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For more inspiration, read Berry’s profound piece: What Are People For? { more }

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A Wall that Brings People Together

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August 30, 2019

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A Wall that Brings People Together

At the end of the day it’s not about what you have or even what you’ve accomplished…it’s about who you’ve lifted up, who you’ve made better. It’s about what you’ve given back

– Denzel Washington –

A Wall that Brings People Together

“Memphis Rox is one of the only facilities like it in the country: a climbing gym aimed at introducing disadvantaged urban youth to a sport that its founders hope will challenge them physically and mentally — and keep them in school and off the streets. To lower the barriers, Memphis Rox has a pay-as-you’re-able model that differentiates it from the standard membership-only setup. Opened in March 2018 by Hollywood director Tom Shadyac (Ace Ventura: Pet Detective), and operated by a small corps of millennial climbing enthusiasts and neighborhood activists, Memphis Rox has quickly become more than a gym. It is a foothold in a private sector effort to help Memphis climb free of its reputation as one of the poorest large cities in America.” { read more }

Be The Change

What can you do to further lift up people in your own sphere of influence? Take small steps in that direction today.

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Why We Need Darkness

This week’s inspiring video: Why We Need Darkness
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Video of the Week

Aug 29, 2019
Why We Need Darkness

Why We Need Darkness

Diane Knutson is a former National Park Ranger and the creator of the Lights Out Movement in Rapid City, South Dakota. Light pollution not only impacts our view of the universe, but our environment, our individual health, and energy consumption. Not long ago, the starry night sky was clearly visible — now, songbirds mistake city skylines for the rising sun, eight out of ten children will never see the Milky Way, and exposure to artificial light at night has been linked to physical and mental health problems. Knutson explains the problem with light pollution and provides solutions for regaining a dark sky.
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Who Decides History’s Future?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 29, 2019

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Who Decides History's Future?

Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.

– Chinua Achebe –

Who Decides History’s Future?

“The West is wrestling with its colonial heritage in the most literal sense: its museums teem with treasure taken on conquests abroad. Crowns and swords, books and bones. The breadth of culture ripped from its home is hard to comprehend, as is the sheer scale of it: ninety percent of Africas art is held on other continents. Imagine the Liberty Bell gone, Versailles stripped of its Hall of Mirrors, the Roman Forum empty of columns and stones. To see them, you would have to travel across seas, deserts, mountains; apply for visas and buy a ticket for a glance at your peoples history behind glass. Spread that theft to Asia, the Americas, and even other corners of Europe. The scope is unimaginable, as are the emotional scars left by the absence of national treasures.” Alexandra Haven explores questions of ownership, ethics and the future of the world’s art in this thoughtful essay. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on an action in your own life that you would like to make amends for. Take a step towards that today.

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Gratitude Behind Bars

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August 28, 2019

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Gratitude Behind Bars

Real happiness is not vulnerable, because it does not depend on circumstances.

– Nisargadatta Maharaj –

Gratitude Behind Bars

“Does gratefulness truly make us happy? How does gratefulness serve us during difficult times? What is your experience of gratitude as a person who is incarcerated and denied so many of the freedoms and privileges associated with happiness? These are some of the questions we explored through Grateful Anyhow, a recent project in partnership with Prisoner Express (PE) that engaged approximately 350 incarcerated men and women in an exploration of the transformative power of gratefulness.” More from The Gratefulness Team here. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read “On Death Row: Creating Art from Pain.” { more }

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Mark Nepo: Where To Now?

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Spotlight On Kindness: “Seeing” Souls

Our souls ache to be seen. Regardless of our age, gender, race or sexual orientation, we need to be able to see and be seen on the inside, not just as we’re socially or physically embodied. If we and others don’t access or shine light on our souls, our bodies rebel and announce our untended souls’ existence through disease. Let’s all look beyond the surface to heal ourselves and others. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Our souls ache to be seen. Regardless of our age, gender, race or sexual orientation, we need to be able to see and be seen on the inside, not just as we’re socially or physically embodied. If we and others don’t access or shine light on our souls, our bodies rebel and announce our untended souls’ existence through disease. Let’s all look beyond the surface to heal ourselves and others. – Ameeta
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The Red Oak Tree that Tweets

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August 27, 2019

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The Red Oak Tree that Tweets

On the last day of the world I would want to plant a tree.

– W.S. Merwin –

The Red Oak Tree that Tweets

Deep in a forest of central Massachusetts stands an average red oak tree. Nothing is special about it, except for the fact that it tweets, offering insight into climate change. { read more }

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For more inspiration, read “Trees Are Sanctuaries” by Hermann Hesse { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Abandon Only What Is Not Yours

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Abandon Only What Is Not Yours
by Shaila Catherine

[Listen to Audio!]

2390.jpgThe wise understand the importance of letting go — even letting go of the things we strive for and attain. Meditative training is more about letting go than it is about attaining levels of absorption. Spiritual life invites you to relinquish all that binds you, whether that is your cherished fantasies, destructive attitudes, assumptions, views, or treasured roles, beliefs, and ideals.

“If you don’t want to suffer, don’t cling” could summarize the main thrust of all the Buddha’s instructions. But if you can’t follow that simple instruction completely and need (as so of many us do) more complex approaches to help you or keep you busy until you finally tire of clinging, an extensive array of meditation tools have been devised by generations of practitioners.

And yet, if at any point you are unsure what to do in this practice, just let go.

It is not necessarily one more task to perform. It is, simply, what occurs when you are not clinging: a direct expression of wisdom arising in a moment of experience. Simple wisdom tells us, "When you are being dragged, let go of the leash." When you feel the pain of grasping and understand the holding on as the cause of your suffering, the solution becomes obvious.

Some people fear that letting go could diminish the quality of their lives, health, abilities, achievements, or personal property. To this, the Buddha said, "Whatever is not yours, abandon it; when you have abandoned it, that will lead to your welfare and happiness." This invites a profound reflection on what one can authentically claim as one’s own. As we discern the impermanent, conditioned character of all material and mental processes, we eliminate perceptions, sensory experience, and material things as fields for possession. On the surface it seems like we are asked to give up everything, but simultaneously comes the realization that there is actually nothing possessed and consequently nothing that can actually be given up. The great abandonment is to let go of the concept of ownership.

Letting go in meditation is the relinquishment that involves no loss. Recognizing impermanence leads to the realization of the pure and ungraspable nature of things. Knowing this basic fact of things, one has nothing to fear. And the extraordinary delight that arises with realization surpasses all temporary pleasures, softening any residual fear that may want to grasp again what can never actually be possessed.

About the Author: Shaila Catherine is a meditation teacher, with particular expertise in deep states of absorption. Excerpt above is from her book, Focused and Fearless.

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Abandon Only What Is Not Yours
What does ‘relinquishment that involves no loss’ mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you let go of the leash? What helps you recognize the impermanence of things in your daily life?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We all have different kinds of suffering. I have sufferedand all the people I know have suffered. This is first Noble Truth. The Second Noble Truth is making an inquiry about the cause of suffering. T…
David Doane wrote: Not only is it an illusion that I possess things, it is an illusion that there are things to possess. So, for me to relinquish what I really don’t have and really doesn’t exist is relinquishme…
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Chitrakoot’s Tree Man: 11 Years, 40,000 Trees

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August 26, 2019

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Chitrakoot's Tree Man: 11 Years, 40,000 Trees

For in the true nature of things, if we rightly consider, every green tree is far more glorious than if it were made of gold and silver.

– Martin Luther –

Chitrakoot’s Tree Man: 11 Years, 40,000 Trees

The tragic death of his wife and three children led Bhaiyyaram to vow to live only for others. He began to plant trees on fallow land near his village. No water near, so four times each day he hauled two 20-kilo boxes with a rope slung over his shoulders. Living in a hut he built nearby to guard the trees from thieves, his eleven years of work has produced a plantation of 40,000 trees. { read more }

Be The Change

What do you find is lacking in your neighborhood that you could do something about? Plant a tree, cultivate a garden, gather friends to clean out a vacant lot that’s used for garbage, spend a little time creating something beautiful.

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Joe Peace: A Peace Chain Reaction

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August 25, 2019

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Joe Peace: A Peace Chain Reaction

All you have shall some day be given; Therefore give now, that the season of giving may be yours and not your inheritors

– Kahlil Gibran –

Joe Peace: A Peace Chain Reaction

“I was working at a friend’s studio. I walked in and picked up these scraps of clay off the floor and made these pieces about softball size, maybe seven of them. For me they were small because I’d been making larger sculptural pieces. So I made these pieces and said to my friend, “It’s a peace chain. I’m going to make it the rest of my life.” The year was 1991, and true to his word Joe Murphy — now known as Joe Peace — has been making and gifting the world peace pendants ever since. He’s made over half a million of them, each inscribed with the word ‘peace’ in one of 122 languages. More on this artist’s unique journey here. { read more }

Be The Change

What is something you’d like to offer the world for the rest of your life? For more information about Joe’s work, visit his website here. { more }

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