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Archive for 2019

Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness Is “Power”

It can be easy to feel numb in the face of events happening “at” and around us. Numbness protects us from over-saturation of our senses and feelings of powerlessness. We cannot control the events themselves, but as Susan Fowler shows us in the article below, we can control and hold ourselves accountable for how we treat others – with kindness, compassion, and generosity. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: It can be easy to feel numb in the face of events happening “at” and around us. Numbness protects us from over-saturation of our senses and feelings of powerlessness. We cannot control the events themselves, but as Susan Fowler shows us in the article below, we can control and hold ourselves accountable for how we treat others – with kindness, compassion, and generosity. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Susan Fowler describes beautifully how she took back “power” in her life by focusing on the things she could control – her mind and how well she treated others.
Read More
Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A KindSpringer realized that she had the power to completely change someone’s day by something as simple as a few kind words.
Read More
Inspiring Video of the Week
Serve all
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Everybody can be great
Hugs Listen to a short audio excerpt of Martin Luther King, Jr. urging his congregation in 1968 to greatness through service and love.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Two simple practices that anyone can do to help build a more peaceful world: Seeing similarities and offering kindness.
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Meredith’s Joy Jars

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 4, 2019

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Meredith's Joy Jars

Dwell as near as possible to the channel in which your life flows.

– Henry David Thoreau –

Meredith’s Joy Jars

How do you help a teen get over a broken heart? Pam found a way and Meredith found a calling. A simple solution which has reached thousands around the world. Learn more through this beautiful short video. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Pam’s gift to Meredith which keeps on growing. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Unconditioned Stillness

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Unconditioned Stillness
by Rick Hanson

[Listen to Audio!]

2309.jpgStillness, a sense of the unchanging, is all around.

For example, it’s not the ultimate stillness, but there is that lovely feeling when the house is quiet and you’re sitting in peace, the dishes are done and the kids are fine (or the equivalent), and you can really let down and let go. In your character, you have enduring strengths and virtues and values; situations change, but your good intentions persist. In relationships, love abides — even for people who drive you crazy!

More subtly, there is the moment at the very top of a tossed ball’s trajectory when it’s neither rising nor falling, the pause before the first stroke of the brush, that space between exhalation and inhalation, the silence in which sounds occur, or the discernible gap between thoughts when your mind is quiet.

In your mind there is always an underlying calm and well-being that contains emotional reactions, like a riverbed that is still even as the flood rushes over it. There is also the unchanging field of awareness, itself never altered by the thoughts passing through it.

More abstractly, 2+2=4 forever; the area of a circle will always be pi times the radius squared; etc. The fact that something has occurred will never change. The people who have loved you will always have loved you; they will always have found you lovable. Whatever is fundamentally true — including, ironically, the truth of impermanence — has an unchanging stillness at its heart. Things change, but the nature of things — emergent, interdependent, transient — does not.

Moving toward ultimate matters, and where language fails, you may have a sense of something unchangingly transcendental, divine. Or, perhaps related, an intuition of that which is unconditioned always just prior to the emergence of conditioned phenomena.

Wherever you find it, enjoy stillness and let it feed you. It’s a relief from the noise and bustle, a source of clarity and peace. Give yourself the space, the permission, to be still — at least in your mind — amidst those who are busy.

To use a traditional saying: May that which is still be that in which your mind delights.

About the Author: Rick Hanson is an author and scientist. You can learn via his Awakin Call.

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Unconditioned Stillness
How do you relate to the notion of an unchanging stillness as a container that holds all impermanence? Can you share a personal story of a time you felt this unchanging stillness? What helps you delight in your stillness?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Our thoughts, feelings and actions are expressed in response to stimuli. If they are expressed automatically and unmindfully, they can cause harm and suffering.There is unconditioned space, stillness,…
David Doane wrote: What is unchanging and constant is change, impermanence, uncertainty, oneness. Acceptance of those unchanging truths and abiding in them is an unchanging stillness that is a container that holds imper…
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Awakin Circles:
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Some Good News

Grief is Praise
Why We Walk
We Are Designed for Connection

Video of the Week

Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the U.S.-Mexico Border

Kindness Stories

Global call with Angela Oh!
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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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On our website, you can view 17+ year archive of these readings. For broader context, visit our umbrella organization: ServiceSpace.org.

Luc Reynaud: Welcome to My House

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 3, 2019

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Luc Reynaud: Welcome to My House

Music is an outburst of the soul.

– Frederick Delius –

Luc Reynaud: Welcome to My House

Luc Reynaud is a musician from Washington, focused on combining music and service to others. When Hurricane Katrina hit the southeast coast, Luc felt compelled to go down and help, using some construction skills (and a guitar) he had picked up during a soul-searching trip. Luc began playing his guitar around the shelter he was volunteering at, eventually writing a song with one of the children, called ‘Freedom Song.’ Ultimately, this song went on to be recorded both by Luc and separately by Jason Mraz, who also used it for an organization called Free the Slave. Luc’s love of music lead him to form Luc and the Lovingtons who tour the world reaching out to those struggling, whether it be performing at homeless shelters in California, or at refugee camps in Syria. Luc and the Lovingtons are currently working on their new album “Welcome to my House.” { read more }

Be The Change

Everyone has a gift to give the world. Music, listening, art, gardening – any number of things. Take a moment to let down your walls and determine what gift you can give, and find a way in which you can share it with the world. S

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A New Republic of the Heart

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June 2, 2019

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A New Republic of the Heart

Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing
and rightdoing there is a field.
I’ll meet you there.

– Rumi –

A New Republic of the Heart

When we face a moment of crisis, individually or collectively, a whole wave of radical conversations is inevitable. For these conversations to really make a difference, we must break through our personas and our inauthentic poses. This is a deeper level of discourse than has hitherto seemed thinkable in public–disarming, tender, and authentic. Such a conversation requires a level of trust, vulnerability, and truthfulness that our culture seems to preclude, and we tend to shy away from it. The courageous vulnerability to speak and listen at this level is profoundly humbling. We have to speak from the place of not knowing and curiosity. We have to listen with an open mind and a soft heart. Terry Patten invites us to meet him in this place of not knowing, so that we may enter the profound shared experience of creating a republic of the heart. { read more }

Be The Change

Start your own radical conversation. Reflect on where there is a sense of urgency in your life. Then ask one or more people to sit with you with the intention drawn out of your comfort zones into something deeper and more real, meaningful, and rewarding.

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Grief is Praise

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June 1, 2019

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Grief is Praise

There is a sacredness in tears

– Washington Irving –

Grief is Praise

In this excerpt from The Smell of Rain on Dust, Martin Prechtel tells the story of a friend who has asked his advice about burying his recently deceased mother. In the book, Prechtel explains that the unexpressed grief prevalent in our society today is the reason for many of the social, cultural, and individual maladies that we are currently experiencing. In this beautiful tale, he illustrates what happens when one stoic, mid-western American expresses his grief based on Prechtel’s advice. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider what you have not grieved and set aside the time to allow that expression remembering that “grief is praise of those we have lost.” Find or create a song to praise the life and love you have been given.

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Mark Nepo: Where To Now?

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Why We Walk

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 31, 2019

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Why We Walk

We do have enough time. Life is long, if we listen to ourselves often enough, and look up.

– Erling Kagge –

Why We Walk

Erling Kagge is a Norwegian explorer, lawyer, art collector, author, and the first person to have completed the Three Poles Challenge on foot –the North Pole, the South Pole and the summit of Mount Everest. Kagge is also the author of “Walking: One Step at a Time,” and six other books. What follows is an excerpt from Walking.

{ read more }

Be The Change

Consider what your own relationship to walking is in light of Kagge’s perspectives.

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Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the U.S.-Mexico Border

This week’s inspiring video: Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the U.S.-Mexico Border
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Video of the Week

May 30, 2019
Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the U.S.-Mexico Border

Cellist Plays Bach in the Shadow of the U.S.-Mexico Border

With powerful words, performing music by Bach, renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma reminds us of music’s unique power to connect and unite everyone. At the border between sister cities Laredo, Texas and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, he quotes from the poem by Emma Lazarus on the base of the Statue of Liberty: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free…". Like the Statue of Liberty, Yo-Yo Ma and his music exhort us to remember that "in culture we build bridges, not walls."
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School Strike for Climate Change

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 30, 2019

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School Strike for Climate Change

I ask you to please wake up and make changes required possible

– Greta Thunberg –

School Strike for Climate Change

At a young age, Greta Thunberg realized that all of the facts and solutions about how to stop climate change are known. But why aren’t we applying this knowledge in order to make a difference? At age 15, Greta started a school strike outside the Swedish Parliament. While many people tell her that she should be in school or that she should study to be a climate scientist, Greta believes that if nobody does anything to stop climate change now, studying for her future will be a waste of time. She is doing what she can to bring attention to this crisis, and has inspired students around the world to take action for the planet. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Greta Thunberg’s work. { more }

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George Orwell: Some Thoughts on the Common Toad

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May 29, 2019

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George Orwell: Some Thoughts on the Common Toad

Even in the most sordid street the coming of spring will register itself by some sign or other, if it is only a brighter blue between the chimney pots or the vivid green of an elder sprouting on a blitzed site.

– George Orwell –

George Orwell: Some Thoughts on the Common Toad

Novelist and essayist Eric Arthur Blair, pen name George Orwell, is perhaps best known for his prescient depictions of creeping totalitarianism and social injustice as captured in 1984 and Down and Out in Paris and London. Blair is also recognized as an avowed appreciator of the living world who intuitively understood nature’s role in transforming the human spirit in the aftermath of war: “I think that by retaining one’s childhood love of such things as trees, fishes, butterflies and to return to my first instance toads, one makes a peaceful and decent future a little more probable…” In his thought-provoking essay, Isaac Yuen explores the remarkable capacity for wonder and compassion that exemplifies Blair’s writing in “Some Thoughts on the Common Toad,” an ode to one of Earth’s most humble inhabitants. { read more }

Be The Change

Folded within the tender green whorl of a poplar bud, shimmering cobalt blue on a young bird’s wing, reflected in the golden perfection of a toad’s eye lies the secret sweetness of nature. Keep a diary of the small, hopeful manifestations of our planet’s capacity for renewal.

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