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Archive for 2019

Janwaar Castle: A Modern Skate Park in Rural India

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 10, 2019

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Janwaar Castle: A Modern Skate Park in Rural India

If Iâm losing balance in a pose, I stretch higher and God reaches down to steady me. It works every time, and not just in yoga

– -T. Guillemets- –

Janwaar Castle: A Modern Skate Park in Rural India

When is a skatepark more than a skatepark? When it is Janwaar Castle, a local playground in Janwaar village. Between 50-60 children visit the park every day where they learn English, music, dance, painting, 3D modelling, and general life skills. It is a place where Adivasis and Yadavs, boys and girls, and all age groups play together. There are two rules: no school no skating and girls first. Since skateboarding is âcool,â the children will do anything to hang out thereâincluding going to school. The park was conceptualized and created by Ulrike Reinhard, a German who fell in love with and moved to India after a trip there in 2012. Of skateboarding she says, âIt teaches you to fall and rise, take risks and most importantly, maintain balance.â { read more }

Be The Change

What activity can you do that challenges you to fall and rise, take risks and maintain balance?

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Awakin Weekly: Hard Times Require Furious Dancing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Hard Times Require Furious Dancing
by Alice Walker

[Listen to Audio!]

tow4.jpgI am the youngest of eight siblings. Five of us have died. I share losses, health concerns, and other challenges common to the human condition, especially in these times of war, poverty, environmental devastation, and greed that are quite beyond the most creative imagination. Sometimes it all feels a bit too much to bear. Once a person of periodic deep depressions, a sign of mental suffering in my family that affected each sibling differently, I have matured into someone I never dreamed I would become: an unbridled optimist who sees the glass as always full of something. It may be half full of water, precious in itself, but in the other half there’s a rainbow that could exist only in the vacant space.

I have learned to dance.

It isn’t that I didn’t know how to dance before; everyone in my community knew how to dance, even those with several left feet. I just didn’t know how basic it is for maintaining balance. That Africans are always dancing (in their ceremonies and rituals) shows an awareness of this. It struck me one day, while dancing, that the marvelous moves African Americans are famous for on the dance floor came about because the dancers, especially in the old days, were contorting away various knots of stress. Some of the lower-back movements handed down to us that have seemed merely sensual were no doubt created after a day’s work bending over a plow or hoe on a slave driver’s plantation.

Wishing to honor the role of dance in the healing of families, communities, and nations, I hired a local hall and a local band and invited friends and family from near and far to come together, on Thanksgiving, to dance our sorrows away, or at least to integrate them more smoothly into our daily existence. The next generation of my family, mourning the recent death of a mother, my sister-in-law, created a spirited line dance that assured me that, though we have all encountered our share of grief and troubles, we can still hold the line of beauty, form, and beat — no small accomplishment in a world as challenging as this one.

Hard times require furious dancing. Each of us is the proof.

About the Author: Alice Walker is a Pulitzer-winning author, poet, novelist, and activist. The passage above is from the preface of her book of poems: "Hard Times Require Furious Dancing".

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Hard Times Require Furious Dancing
What does learning to dance mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time when you held the line of beauty, form and beat through grief and troubles? What helps you stay aware of your balance so you can maintain it?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Life is a balancing act. It’s like a string of a string instrument. If you stretch it too hard, it will break. If you keep it too lose, it will not make a sound. Like all of us I have felt thousan…
David Doane wrote: The glass is always full of something, and the value of what’s there is defined by the glass holder. Learning to dance means learning to be in the present, enjoy the process, be ongoingly responsi…
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Some Good News

My Small Moment of Mending Brokenness
Artists as Hoarders
The Bad Kids

Video of the Week

The Teachings of Grass

Kindness Stories

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Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start an Awakin gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

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Inner Preacher vs Inner Teacher

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September 9, 2019

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Inner Preacher vs Inner Teacher

Art remains the one way possible of speaking truth.

– Robert Browning –

Inner Preacher vs Inner Teacher

Between message and meaning, “Art is co-created by artist and audience, by writer and reader.” In this Ursula K. Le Guin essay, Maria Popova explores the questions of where to find strength and hope, what is a writer’s calling in this time and place, what work will make a difference, and how we might create a community of purpose. To each, Le Guin’s answer is in trying to write well. Writing is not the “vehicle of a message.” It is lines of words that try to express things that are true and important. Truths are not put there but revealed “out of the corner of (the reader’s) eye.” It is not preached, but taught in the “area of silence, that empty space, in which other and further truths and perceptions can form in other minds.” { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on the questions posed to Le Guin based on your own situation: where do you find strength and hope, what is your calling in this time and place, what work will make a difference, how might you create a community of purpose?

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Artists as Hoarders

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September 8, 2019

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Artists as Hoarders

Every form of art is another way of seeing the world. Another perspective, another window.

– Claudia Gray –

Artists as Hoarders

When does collecting material for prospective art projects cross over and become hoarding? When it takes up so much space it requires a warehouse? When the time to collect and sort and store it all amounts to your entire lifetime? And what kind of imagination plus dedication does it take to finally assemble all the bits and pieces into something qualifying as art? Mirka Knaster opens the portal into the fascinating world of artists around the globe who hoard their way to stunningly beautiful and creative pieces of art. Dive in and become amazed. { read more }

Be The Change

Open the junk drawer. Dump it out and sort it by color. Create something; anything. Hang it up and sit silently with your creation, the way you would pause in front of a masterpiece.

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A Three Year Road Trip Documenting Kindness

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 7, 2019

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A Three Year Road Trip Documenting Kindness

The person who practices unselfishness, who is genuinely interested in the welfare of others, who feels it a privilege to have the power to do a fellow-creature a kindness… will be an elevating influence wherever they go.

– Orisen Swett Marden –

A Three Year Road Trip Documenting Kindness

Do you see the world as a place of hope and optimism? Understandably, many people don’t as the barrage of bad news hits the news feed every day. Mary Latham is not one of those people though. Instead of withdrawing from the world after the loss of her mother, in 2016 she began a journey to find and create kindness as she traveled across the US. Over the past years, she says she’s found nothing but goodness and kindness in the people who offered her hospitality. Read on to discover the truth in what Mary’s mother told her: “Mary, there are always going to be tragedies in the world, but there will always be more good you just have to look for it.” { read more }

Be The Change

As you head out your door, resolve to do an act of kindness at least once during your day.

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The Bad Kids

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September 6, 2019

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The Bad Kids

I believe that the world was created and approved by love, that it subsists, coheres, and endures by love, and that, insofar as it is redeemable, it can be redeemed only by love.

– Wendell Berry –

The Bad Kids

Vonda Viland is a mother figure, coach, cheerleader, and counselor. She has to be. As the principal of Black Rock Continuation High School on the edge of California’s Mojave Desert, Ms. V–as she’s known to her 121 at-risk students has heard countless stories of personal or familial alcohol or drug addiction, chronic truancy, and physical and sexual abuse. Over 90 percent of the school’s students live below the poverty line; most have a history of serious disciplinary issues and have fallen too far behind at traditional schools to catch up. As a new documentary about the school titled “The Bad Kids” explains, Black Rock is the students’ “last chance.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration watch “Teach Me to Be Wild” which tells the story of an animal sanctuary where injured animals and wounded youth heal together. { more }

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The Teachings of Grass

This week’s inspiring video: The Teachings of Grass
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Sep 05, 2019
The Teachings of Grass

The Teachings of Grass

How do we relate to the land that sustains us—as a source of belonging or as a source of belongings? As the planet teeters on the brink of environmental collapse, botanist, teacher, and author Robin Wall Kimmerer urges us to consider our broken relationship to the Earth and the hard choices that lie before us by examining the history of her Potawatomi ancestors. Through cultivating the sense of respect and gratitude for nature inherent in indigenous teachings, Kimmerer invites us to reclaim that wisdom and renew our earthly relationships to restore honor in the way we live. By rejecting the notion of nature as supplier, taking only those gifts that are freely given, the power of the sun, the blowing wind and the rolling surf, we have an opportunity to model ancient pathways and create a new sustainable vision for the living world.
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How Space Can Heal What Divides Us

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 5, 2019

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How Space Can Heal What Divides Us

For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love.

– -Carl Sagan- –

How Space Can Heal What Divides Us

The Overview Effect is the experience many astronauts describe after seeing the Earth from space. “There, devoid of territory lines and set in the vast backdrop of the universe, this spectacle gives them a new perspective on our need to come together as a global society. For most, it is profoundly life-changing.” Two years ago, MaryLiz Bender was so inspired by this phenomenon that she sold her belongings and set out for a minimal life on the road in search of answers from astronauts to better understand their transformation. In all of her interviews, the common theme was that seeing the Earth from space causes a shift in perspective that elevates empathy. In this article, Bender shares what she’s learned and provides insights into the profound effects of living from a place of awe and wonder. { read more }

Be The Change

Visit MaryLiz’s website, Cosmic Perspective, to see how she and her partner Ryan use film and innovative techniques that fuse art and technology to take people on a journey at the forefront of space exploration. { more }

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My Small Moment of Mending Brokenness

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September 4, 2019

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My Small Moment of Mending Brokenness

We must learn to regard people less in the light of what they do or omit to do, and more in the light of what they suffer.

– Dietrich Bonhoeffer –

My Small Moment of Mending Brokenness

“I used to believe that I was a very accepting person. But a few weeks ago, something happened at my workplace that made me recognize my own brokenness — it helped me see the disconnect between my values, and how I respond in certain moments. I work at the front desk of a hotel. On multiple occasions over the past couple of weeks, a sex-worker reserved a room on our property. Sitting at the front desk I’d see her interacting with people in the corridor, I’d see her check-in and check-out. And I would have this incredibly palpable feeling of disgust come up whenever she walked by…But there was another side of me which was like, “Wait a minute! At the end of the day, she’s a human being with a soul and inside of her is the beauty that Mother Earth puts in each and every one of us. So why am I judging her?” What follows is a simple yet profound story of healing. { read more }

Be The Change

Experiment with regarding people ‘in the light of what they suffer’ this week. Notice whether this practice catalyzes any shifts within you.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Competition And Kindness

We don’t often think of humility and competition together, but great athletes often exhibit great humility, as tennis #1 Naomi Osaka did toward 15-year-old phenom Coco Gauff. Humility, kindness and compassion are crucial to building lasting success. True champions are revealed from the inside, not just created by extraordinary efforts on the outside. Let’s reveal our inner champion. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: We don’t often think of humility and competition together, but great athletes often exhibit great humility, as tennis #1 Naomi Osaka did toward 15-year-old phenom Coco Gauff. Humility, kindness and compassion are crucial to building lasting success. True champions are revealed from the inside, not just created by extraordinary efforts on the outside. Let’s reveal our inner champion. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
An 8-year-old second grader grabs the hand of a fellow classmate with autism on the first day of school after seeing him in the corner standing alone and crying.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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A Kindness Champion who has made and given over 35,000 origami doves is linked together by the universe with a woodcarver who makes beech doves and crosses to give to people in hospice.
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Kindness in Sports
Hugs Naomi Osaka’s act of kindness towards her younger competitor, 15-year-old Coco Grauff, was more remarkable than any win or loss.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Naomi Osaka teaches a lesson in humility and sportsmanship at the US Open Tennis Tournament.
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