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Archive for November 5, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Halloween Kindness

Children have a natural instinct to care for others. Interestingly, as the study below shows, this kindness instinct diminishes after the age of 11 as children become more aware of social norms and act less instinctively. With age, kids learn that success is more valued than people and are socialized to view kindness as “weak”. Let’s embrace the strength of our natural instincts. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Children have a natural instinct to care for others. Interestingly, as the study below shows, this kindness instinct diminishes after the age of 11 as children become more aware of social norms and act less instinctively. With age, kids learn that success is more valued than people and are socialized to view kindness as “weak”. Let’s embrace the strength of our natural instincts. – Ameeta
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Kindness In the News
A man recalls his grandfather’s Halloween tradition of sharing Chinese family dishes and pumpkin pancakes in the front yard. This transcended language barriers and built community.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
This KindSpringer returned a child’s lost luggage tag and was overwhelmed by the child’s thank-you note explaining the sentimental significance of the luggage tag.
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Giving Back Halloween Candy
Hugs After encountering an empty Halloween candy bowl placed outside, this 8-year-old boy gives Halloween candy from his own bag for trick-or-treaters still yet to come.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
A recent study shows that we are instinctively kind as children.
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What Focusing on the Breath Does to Your Brain

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 5, 2019

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What Focusing on the Breath Does to Your Brain

Feelings come and go like clouds in a windy sky. Conscious breathing is my anchor.

– -Thich Nhat Hanh- –

What Focusing on the Breath Does to Your Brain

What if you could regulate your stress levels by controlling your breath? A new study from the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research suggests that while fast breathing rates may promote feelings like anxiety, stress, and fear, slowing down our breath may reduce these very same emotions. This article from Greater Good Magazine examines how breathing impacts various regions of the brain responsible for thinking, feeling, and behavior. { read more }

Be The Change

Feeling stressed? Complement this article with Seven Ways to Slow Down from mindful.org. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: When My Life Is In Danger

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When My Life Is In Danger
by Christina Feldman

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2358.jpgA few years ago, an elderly monk arrived in India after fleeing from prison in Tibet. Meeting with the Dalai Lama, he recounted the years he had been imprisoned, the hardship and beatings he had endured, the hunger and loneliness he had lived with, and the torture he had faced.

At one point the Dalai Lama asked him, “Was there ever a time you felt your life was truly in danger?”

The old monk answered, “In truth, the only time I truly felt at risk was when I felt in danger of losing compassion for my jailers.”

Hearing stories like this, we are often left feeling skeptical and bewildered. We may be tempted to idealize both those who are compassionate and the quality of compassion itself. We imagine these people as saints, possessed of powers inaccessible to us. Yet stories of great suffering are often stories of ordinary people who have found greatness of heart. To discover an awakened heart within ourselves, it is crucial not to idealize or romanticize compassion. Our compassion simply grows out of our willingness to meet pain rather than to flee from it.

We may never find ourselves in situations of such peril that our lives are endangered; yet anguish and pain are undeniable aspects of our lives. None of us can build walls around our hearts that are invulnerable to being breached by life. Facing the sorrow we meet in this life, we have a choice: Our hearts can close, our minds recoil, our bodies contract, and we can experience the heart that lives in a state of painful refusal. We can also dive deeply within ourselves to nurture the courage, balance, patience, and wisdom that enable us to care.

If we do so, we will find that compassion is not a state. It is a way of engaging with the fragile and unpredictable world. Its domain is not only the world of those you love and care for, but equally the world of those who threaten us, disturb us, and cause us harm. It is the world of the countless beings we never meet who are facing an unendurable life.

The ultimate journey of a human being is to discover how much our hearts can encompass. Our capacity to cause suffering as well as to heal suffering live side by side within us. If we choose to develop the capacity to heal, which is the challenge of every human life, we will find our hearts can encompass a great deal, and we can learn to heal—rather than increase—the schisms that divide us from one another.

About the Author: Christina Feldman is a long-time meditation teacher residing in New England, as a mother and grandmother. Excerpted from this article.

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When My Life Is In Danger
What does compassion mean to you? Can you share a story of a time you were able to develop the capacity to heal suffering? What helps you develop the capacity to heal suffering?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Compassion is a caring feeling that arises in us when we see someone going through suffering. Seeing someone suffering evokes compassion in me and an inclination in me to reach out and help the person…
d wrote: Compassion is feeling with and for the other, sincerely caring, and helping in some way. To suffer means to carry. Suffering isn’t pain — suffering is how we carry our pain. We each suffer or car…
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Compassion to me means feeling love, care, kindness and empathy for everyone, no exceptions.It means to look below the surface and seek to understand what may be underneath driving the behavior or wor…
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