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Archive for September, 2019

Diane Ackerman: 100 Names for Love

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 23, 2019

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Diane Ackerman: 100 Names for Love

Life can survive in the constant shadow of illness, and even rise to moments of rampant joy, but the shadow remains, and one has to make space for it.

– Diane Ackerman –

Diane Ackerman: 100 Names for Love

Diane Ackerman, best selling author of A Natural History of the Senses, An Alchemy of Mind, and The Zookeeper’s Wife, has built a reputation on her poetic sensibility and uncanny knack for scouting out connections between the heavens, Earth, and everything in between. In her latest memoir, One Hundred Names for Love: a Stroke, a Marriage, and the Language of Healing, Ackerman navigates between the science of aphasia, the culture of illness, and her marriage to author Paul West with graceful and surefooted verve. { read more }

Be The Change

Ackerman says, “I’ve always transcended best by pretending that I’m Margaret Mead viewing a scene for the first time or an alien from another planet regarding the spectacle of life on Earth and discovering how spectacular, unexpected, and beautiful it is.” Why not try this for yourself. Each morning this week, when you get up, imagine that you are on another planet seeing this world for the first time. What is it like to be in a new world?

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Giving Directions

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 22, 2019

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Giving Directions

Getting lost is the only place worth going to.

– -Tiziano Scarpa- –

Giving Directions

Like most of us, you’ve probably been asked for directions at least once in your life. While men are notorious for failing to admit when they’re lost and women less so, little research has been done on how directions are imparted and the characterization of the individual giving them. “Giving directions is a form of storytelling,” says Akiko Busch. “When people advise you to take the longest, most complicated route, it is their way of prolonging the pleasure of the journey.” In this Travel and Leisure article, Busch elaborates on how this simple act is often far more intimate than we realize, relying not only on our memory, but on our internal map of the places we hold most dear. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you ask for directions, pay attention to the route you’re given. What does it tell you about the giver?

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The Animal Rescuer of Assam

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 21, 2019

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The Animal Rescuer of Assam

Every creature was designed to serve a purpose. Learn from animals for they are there to teach you the way of life.

– Suzy Kassem –

The Animal Rescuer of Assam

Manoj Gogoi is a 44-year old father of two and self-taught naturalist dedicating his life to assisting the people and animals of India live in harmony. Through his tireless efforts thousands of animals have been rescued and returned to the wild. More than that, he has inspired others to volunteer with him and begun to alter the attitude and actions of people to consider the place of wildlife in their world. What pulled Gogoi to dedicate his life to wildlife conservation? “I was born in the Kaziranga area of Assam. I grew up in the lap of nature teeming with rhinoceros, leopards, beautiful Himalayas birds and snakes, even venomous ones. It is a familiar environment for me since childhood. Naturally, I developed a genuine fondness for the wild,” smiles Gogoi. Find out more in this article from “The Better India”. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on the wildlife you share space with in your community. Learn more about how to help them co-exist with people and take one action this week.

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Voice for the Planet

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 20, 2019

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Voice for the Planet

We’ve stolen our children’s future — and we’re still stealing it.

– Jane Goodall –

Voice for the Planet

From disappearing species to plastic pollution and our disastrously weak attempts to recycle it, here’s what the top voices on climate change – from Sir David Attenborough to Jane Goodall to Greta Thunberg – have to say about the planet’s escalating biodiversity crisis. { read more }

Be The Change

Raise your #VoiceForThePlanet and join the call for urgent action. { more }

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The Life of Death

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Cleaning Up the Mississippi River

This week’s inspiring video: Cleaning Up the Mississippi River
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Sep 19, 2019
Cleaning Up the Mississippi River

Cleaning Up the Mississippi River

Chad Pregracke grew up spending all his time either in, on or around the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. By the time he was 17, he began to realize the extent of the pollution for a river that provided drinking water for 18 million people. At age 23, he founded an organization that has engaged over 87,000 volunteers and taken 8.4 million pounds of garbage from 22 rivers across the United States. And he hasn’t stopped there – his organization gives educational workshops, plants trees, removes invasive species… Find out more about this everyday hero.
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Gathering as a Form of Leadership

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September 19, 2019

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Gathering as a Form of Leadership

Courage is the measure of our heartfelt participation with life, with another, with a community, a work; a future.

– David Whyte –

Gathering as a Form of Leadership

Priya Parker is an author, strategist, and the founder of Thrive Labs, a company devoted to helping organizations create intentional and transformative gatherings. She is also the author of, ‘The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters.’ In this interview she speaks to how we can forge stronger connections and more meaningful experiences through gatherings — whether it’s a birthday party, formal dinner, or impromptu celebration in the park. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider the complex relationships in your life and select one that you want to shift. Reach out and invite that person to meet you in a novel location and do something together that take you totally outside the contexts and circumstances of the ways you usually interact. Set an intention for what you want to give when you show up. Then get curious and let the magic unfold.

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The Hospital in a Hut

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September 18, 2019

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The Hospital in a Hut

The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

The Hospital in a Hut

Dr. Ashish Satav and his wife Dr. Kavita share their story of transforming lives in a remote tribal area of India. This inspiring journey of creating health started over 21 years ago in a hut. They have learned to create health from the bottom up — transforming their own lives in the process. { read more }

Be The Change

How might you serve your own community or neighborhood in a small way?

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Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness In Front Of You

There’s a saying that either we get a person for life or a lesson for life. While every person is deserving of kindness, what if we were to view the particular people who cross our paths as life’s lessons and opportunities for growth uniquely tailored just for each of us? Since we can’t bless everyone, let’s learn the lesson of compassion and be kind to those chosen few placed before us. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: There’s a saying that either we get a person for life or a lesson for life. While every person is deserving of kindness, what if we were to view the particular people who cross our paths as life’s lessons and opportunities for growth uniquely tailored just for each of us? Since we can’t bless everyone, let’s learn the lesson of compassion and be kind to those chosen few placed before us. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A 4-year-old autistic boy had a meltdown on a flight and wouldn’t sit still; the crew and passengers all came together to help him and his family make the trip more comfortable for him.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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A young KindSpringer, who recently moved back home after graduating, describes her everyday acts of kindness towards those around her – her parents, grandmother, friends, and people in the street.
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Toddler Besties
Hugs This sweet video shows the magic of children when 2 NY toddlers race towards each other for a giant hug, acting like they hadn’t seen other for years, when it was actually 2 days.
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Doing multiple small acts of kindness is beneficial since happiness is dependent on the number of positive events, rather than simply the intensity of each event.
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Green Renaissance

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September 17, 2019

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Green Renaissance

As you grow older, you will discover that you have two hands –one for helping yourself, the other for helping others.

– Audrey Hepburn –

Green Renaissance

In a culture where it can be difficult to sift through all the online media noise, Green Renaissance is creating content that captures the human spirit and reminds us that there is always something for which to be grateful. After becoming frustrated with the bombardment of negative messages being shared online, filmmakers Justine and Michael of South Africa decided to create one new short film a week that serves as an inspiration to pay attention to the daily graces that are evident all around us. “What we came to realize through our filmmaking journey over the years is that the world is filled with ordinary people who have extraordinary stories to share,” says Justine. Read more to learn how these two artists are using their gifts for the greater good. { read more }

Be The Change

How do you give of yourself to others? Over the next week, experiment with new ways of expressing your gifts.

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Awakin Weekly: Song Of The Birds

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Song Of The Birds
by David G. Haskell

[Listen to Audio!]

2388.jpgFor millennia, the language of birds has called us to cross divides. In the Qur’an, Solomon received a bounty and blessing when he was given the language of birds. Job exhorts us to hear the wisdom of the fowls of the air. News of the human world was carried into the divine ear by the speech of Norse Odin’s ravens and the bluebirds of the Taoist Queen of the West. In the voices of birds, we hear augury, portent, prophesy. We are drawn across boundaries into other places, other times.

Listen: an invitation. But it is hard to discern what is meant in this speech of our winged cousins. Birds inhabit flesh profoundly different from our own. Our inattention further muffles their language. We wall them out with bricks that keep us indoors, inside self-made worlds, and with presuppositions, closely guarded vaults of the mind. We’ve made ourselves a lonely place, so quiet.

Let in the sound. […]

When we understand the meanings of a sound made by a bird, nerves in two different brains touch and signal. The link between nerve cells is made from vibrating air, a connection as strong and real as the chemical links among nerves in a single brain. Bird sounds, then, are sonic neurotransmitters that leap across species boundaries.

This leap is creative. When bird and human minds connect, a new language is born. This expansive language weaves many species into a communicative whole, a web of listening and speech. Language-learning is indeed for everyone. It unites us. And so we return to the invitation offered to us by the birds around our homes. In their voices we hear the many rhythms of the seasons and the varied physicality of habitats. We learn the individual stories of each bird. We understand how our community is changing and what we should remember from this present moment. We hear and create Earth’s universal grammar.

Let’s answer the birds’ invitation, stepping outside to give them the simple gift of our attention. Listen. Wonder. Belong.

About the Author: David George Haskell is author of various books, including The Songs of Trees: Stories from Nature’s Great Connectors. The excerpt above from this podcast.

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Song Of The Birds
How do you relate to the notion of a new language being born when the minds of two different species connect? Can you share a personal story of a time you heard and created earth’s universal grammar by linking into the mind of another species? What helps you listen for wisdom in a language different from yours?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Let’s listen to what David George Haskell states in the last short paragraph of his podcast Song Of the Birds: "Let’s answer the birds’ invitation, stepping outside to give them the s…
david doane wrote: I believe that all of creation, living and not living, is interconnected. I believe we don’t create earth’s universal grammar and don’t create the connection or language between different …
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