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Archive for August 13, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Back To School Kindness

August is back-to-school time for many. As a new beginning and a reset of sorts, it can be more than about just new clothes and school supplies. We can encourage children to be aware of how others are feeling, and to act with loving, intentional kindness whenever possible. And “it’s always possible” (the Dalai Lama). Children hold the key to the change. Let’s all help. – Jane

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Editor’s Note: August is back-to-school time for many. As a new beginning and a reset of sorts, it can be more than about just new clothes and school supplies. We can encourage children to be aware of how others are feeling, and to act with loving, intentional kindness whenever possible. And “it’s always possible” (the Dalai Lama). Children hold the key to the change. Let’s all help. – Jane
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A 6-year-old boy from Georgia could create any T-shirt he wanted for the first day of school. He wanted one that would help other students make friends.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
This member joined a group to help support the families of incarcerated people. In one event, the group donated school supplies and books to fill 150 backpacks for children.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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#ElPasoChallenge
Hugs This 11-year-old boy is spreading positivity. He’s asking people around the world to the honor the El Paso victims by performing 22 acts of kindness.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Schools and teachers can lead the way toward creating a more kind society. Here are some ideas to get started.
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A Man Without Words: The Story of a Contemporary Miracle

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 13, 2019

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A Man Without Words: The Story of a Contemporary Miracle

The limits of my language means the limits of my world.

– Ludwig Wittgenstein –

A Man Without Words: The Story of a Contemporary Miracle

“When I met this man he was twenty-seven years old. Because he didn’t know there was sound, because he didn’t know he was deaf, he didn’t know there was hearing and deafness. He studied lips and mouths. He knew something was happening. He’s a very smart man. He’d be staring at lips. He’d stare at your mouth and he’d stare at this person’s lips and he thought he was stupid. He thought he was stupid because he thought we had figured this mouth-movement stuff out visually…One of the things that attracted me to him more than anything else–the intelligence in his eyes caught my eye–but more than that, he hadn’t given up. I can’t imagine going twenty-seven years thinking I was stupid and watching mouths. The most frustrating thing I can imagine. He didn’t know what language was. He didn’t know what sound was, but he knew something was happening and he wanted to know what that something was.” Susan Schaller shares the remarkable story of what happened next in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

More from Susan Schaller in this interview– Communicating Visual Poetry. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Grateful For Nothing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Grateful For Nothing
by Gregg Krech

[Listen to Audio!]

2322.jpgIf you’re reading this, there’s a good chance your life is relatively safe — so safe that safety isn’t on your mind. So when nothing happens, you don’t feel particularly grateful. You expect to be safe, just as you expect the light to go on when you hit the switch on the wall. But when you expect to die or you expect your home to be destroyed, "nothing happened" is a miracle.

That’s our challenge: to allow our hearts and minds to be touched by gratitude without the presence of a hurricane. To appreciate life and the grace by which we wake up each day and go to sleep in safety. To recognize that our personal safety is a gift and something we have little control over. We may survive a hurricane and have a heart attack the next day. Our lives are all hanging by a thread. It makes us nervous to think about it, so we try not to. But that thread has held us up since we were born. And once in a while it’s good to notice it so we can be thankful for it.

"Nothing happened" isn’t particularly exciting. It’s not as entertaining as a good movie. It’s not intellectually challenging, nor is it adorable like a baby kitten. But when you expect the worst and nothing happens, it’s worthy of celebration. A celebration of the fact that despite all of our problems and aches and pains and financial challenges and relationship conflicts we’re alive and we’re breathing and at the moment, we’re safe.

So take a moment and sit back. And breathe in "nothing happened." And breathe out a breath of thanks. Gratitude for just being able to breathe. Now that’s really something!

About the Author: Gregg Krech is an author, poet, and one of the leading authorities on Japanese Psychology in North America. Excerpt above from Gratefulness blog.

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Grateful For Nothing
How do you relate to the notion of “nothing happened” being worthy of celebration? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced gratitude for nothing happening? What helps you be grateful for your breath?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Every moment I breathe in and out. It is a gift of life. a thread running through my life, holding my life. It is so close to me that I do not notice it, not aware of it and be grateful for having suc…
David Doane wrote: I see "nothing happened," which means nothing happened that is a problem, as being very worthy of celebration. It’s a time without disruption, a time of peace and stability, a time to br…
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