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Archive for November 12, 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: World Kindness Day

Tomorrow, November 13, is World Kindness Day. To celebrate, join the #PracticeKindness movement below. Participate in the livestream and pledge to do an intentional act of kindness. Create an intentional pause to connect with our common humanity. Challenge your friends to do the same and let’s all start a tsunami of kindness from tiny ripples and waves! – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Tomorrow, November 13, is World Kindness Day. To celebrate, join the #PracticeKindness movement below. Participate in the livestream and pledge to do an intentional act of kindness. Create an intentional pause to connect with our common humanity. Challenge your friends to do the same and let’s all start a tsunami of kindness from tiny ripples and waves! – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A passenger on a flight carrying many soldiers overheard 2 soldiers saying that the sack lunch on the flight was costly. His kind act to buy all the soldiers lunch led to many ripples.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A KindSpringer walking in the cold noticed a man in a thin sweater with a backpack. She offered him a warm hat from her car after taking time to respect his dignity and space.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Hugs Tom Hanks portrays America’s most beloved neighbor, Fred Rogers, in this timely story of kindness triumphing over cynicism, based on his true real-life story of friendship.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Join the movement to #PracticeKindness and tune in tomorrow here.
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How to Make #My Khartoum Cool

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 12, 2019

a project of ServiceSpace

How to Make #My Khartoum Cool

If stories come to you, care for them. And learn to give them away where they are needed. Sometimes a person needs a story more than food to stay alive.

– Barry Lopez –

How to Make #My Khartoum Cool

“Andariya was established by Omnia Shawkat and Salma Amin, Sudanese women in their late twenties who saw the gap in bi-lingual digital cultural content on Sudan and South Sudan. Both Omnia and Salma were members of the Sudanese diaspora when they began planning for Andariya, as an active and engaging platform for Sudanese and South Sudanese inside and outside the Sudans.” { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Andariya — a platform that “strives to be a pioneering, innovative, multi-media digital platform for contemporary issues and edutainment through creating and curating cultural stories.” { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Staying Small To Stay Safe

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Staying Small To Stay Safe
by Peggy Dulany

[Listen to Audio!]

tow5.jpgSomewhere along the line of human evolution, fears caused many of us (especially those who lost their link to the natural environment and came to live in crowded, stressful living conditions) to shrink into a smaller way of understanding — and living — our existence. We needed to feel safe. And the unknown made us fearful. So we shrank the unknown into manageable bits that took much of the meaning — and the magic — out of it.

It’s very understandable when you think of it from the survival point of view: we are mortal, our lives are so relatively short, and, just when we are beginning to be able to understand something larger than our small, limited lives, we die. We manufacture all kinds of beliefs (religions, ideologies, myths) to rationalize our life and our death, to reassure ourselves that something (heaven, hell, reincarnation), some meaning, will continue after our bodies disintegrate and the light in our eyes is extinguished.

We come to live smaller lives out of fear of the wars that might kill us; of possible violence against ourselves that, in turn, cause us to manifest that against others; of the possibility that the emotional, physical, spiritual violence that we may have encountered in our childhoods and our short lives will be repeated on ourselves or our children.

So we do whatever we have to do to keep ourselves safe: a solution has been to ‘hide’ from the daring, bold, adventurous child of our self who wanted to go out and explore the world – and make our self very small and even invisible so that no one will perceive us as a threat and no one will hurt us. We hide as a way of protecting our self and, in doing so, we hide our magnificence, our wholeness, our full creativity, as well as those aspects we were taught were bad. We use a great deal of energy trying to keep these parts of ourselves invisible, sometimes to the extent that even we forget their very existence.

But magnificence and other, less appealing qualities don’t like to be shrunk or compartmentalized. They suffer, fester, seek weaknesses in the walls of their containment and escape (to the horror of our safely small selves) in little – or sometimes larger – eruptions that startle or lead to disapproval or amazement by others and set our alarm bells to clanging loudly.

About the Author: Peggy Dulany is a philanthropist and founder of Synergos. Excerpted from this article.

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Staying Small To Stay Safe
How do you relate to the notion that magnificence doesn’t like to be shrunk or compartmentalized? Can you share an experience of a time your magnificence erupted beyond its walls of containment? What helps you transcend your fears and let your magnificence shine?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: When we are not in the fight, flight or freeze survival zone, our mind and heart are open to see and experience amazing, vowing and magnificent presence of natural beauty and beauty of human mind and …
David Doane wrote: I agree that magnificence (the real self of each of us) doesn’t like to be shrunk or compartmentalized, which we do to a great extent in an effort to control, such as to try to control outcome or …
Abhi wrote: Normal zones of life get punctured by outbursts of different emotions….unpredictable, intense and powerful….getting in touch with how, within me is literally an assembly line that sorts out emotio…
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