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Archive for January, 2020

Meaning and the Song of the Soul

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 31, 2020

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Meaning and the Song of the Soul

Music is the language of the spirit. It opens the secret of life bringing peace, abolishing strife.

– Kahlil Gibran –

Meaning and the Song of the Soul

“Meaning is what calls from the depths of the soul.
It is the song that sings us into life. Whether we have a meaningful life depends upon whether we can hear this song, this primal music of the sacred. The sacred is not something primarily religious or even spiritual. It is not a quality we need to learn or to develop. It belongs to the primary nature of all that is. When our ancestors knew that everything they could see was sacred, this was not something taught but instinctively known. It was as natural as sunlight, as necessary as breathing. It is a fundamental recognition of the wonder, beauty and divine nature of the world. And from this sense of the sacred, real meaning is born, the meaning that makes our hearts sing with the deepest purpose of being alive.” Llewellyn Vaughn-Lee shares more in this beautiful passage. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with celebrated Irish singer, theologian and interfaith minister, Noirin Ni Riain: A Theology of Listening. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Wild Soul – A Nature Poem

This week’s inspiring video: Wild Soul – A Nature Poem
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Video of the Week

Jan 30, 2020
Wild Soul - A Nature Poem

Wild Soul – A Nature Poem

Here’s a nature poem from one of the wild places of our amazing planet. A short poem that urges you to come closer to nature and add some wildness to your soul.
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Shari Swanson: A Storyteller Rediscovers Her Song

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 30, 2020

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Shari Swanson: A Storyteller Rediscovers Her Song

At times our own light goes out and is rekindled by a spark from another person. Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude of those who have lighted the flame within us.

– Albert Schweitzer –

Shari Swanson: A Storyteller Rediscovers Her Song

When Shari Swanson, a former lawyer and DailyGood volunteer attended her first ServiceSpace retreat, she experienced her deepest aspirations being reflected back to her by the community. The alchemy of that experience helped give her the confidence to wholeheartedly follow her dream of writing a children’s book. “Honey: The Dog Who Saved Abe Lincoln” was released earlier this month. In this piece Swanson gives us a glimpse of the backstory, and more details about her heartwarming debut. { read more }

Be The Change

What kind words can you offer to someone who might be feeling discouraged today?

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Herd: A Spiritual Journey

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 29, 2020

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Herd: A Spiritual Journey

Before I can tell my life what I want to do with it, I must listen to my life telling me who I am.

– Parker Palmer –

Herd: A Spiritual Journey

In 1999 Liz Mitten Ryan, award-winning artist, mother of six and founder of a successful fine art publishing company in Vancouver, moved with her architect husband, and a herd of eleven horses, to Gateway 2 Ranch — a 320-acre slice of paradise nestled in the grasslands of British Columbia. For several months their home was a simple tent in the midst of an enchanted landscape studded with lakes, wild flowers, emerald hills and whispering woods. In this vast solitude it became customary for Liz to spend her days following the herd. Communing with them she began to recognize their deep gift for connection to all of life, and how being in their presence awakened that sense of connection within her own heart. Thus began the path of her deepest calling — to connect with animals and spirit and to share that understanding with the world as best she could. Watch the entire, award-winning film on her work: “Herd: A Spiritual Journey.” { read more }

Be The Change

Reconnect to the song in your own heart.

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Spotlight On Kindness: The Cosmic Web

Each one of us, being a thread in the cosmic web of humanity, holds the power to uplift another with every positive thought and kindness shared. We are all responsible for the energy we bring forward every day as we play our part in the intricate web of life. This shared awareness enables us to rise above the voices of division and strengthens the bonds of reconciliation. – Mish

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Rachel Remen: The Soul of Medicine

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 28, 2020

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Rachel Remen: The Soul of Medicine

Perhaps the most important thing we bring to another person is the silence in us, not the sort of silence that is filled with unspoken criticism or hard withdrawal. The sort of silence that is a place of refuge, of rest, of acceptance of someone as they are. We are all hungry for this other silence.

– Rachel Naomi Remen –

Rachel Remen: The Soul of Medicine

“The heart has had a very central role in medicine. Aristotle describes the temples of Asclepius, which was the first medical center. He described this as a group of buildings with courtyards and, in one of the courtyards of the temples of Asclepius there was a statue of Venus, the goddess of love. What that’s about is that the perspective of the heart is central to the practice of medicine.” In this riveting interview, acclaimed author Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen delves into what it means to be human, shares the story of her connection to Quan Yin, explores the soul of medicine, the dance between mastery, mystery, and more. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on when you last experienced the healing quality of silence in another person. For more inspiration read Remen’s post on “The Recovery of the Sacred,”. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: A Heart Of Warmth Is Not Something Impossible

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A Heart Of Warmth Is Not Something Impossible
by Tenzin Palmo

[Listen to Audio!]

tow2.jpgWhat does love mean? In the West, we mistake the meaning of love; we bandy the word around all the time, from “I love ice-cream” to “I love God”. But we mistake love for desire, for greed, for lust, and for attachment. We think that to love something or someone means to hold on very tightly and to think of it as “mine”. And because of this grasping mind, we suffer very much. We suffer from the fear that we will lose what we desire, and we suffer from grief when we do lose. Think about that. We usually mistake attachment for love. But attachment is not love. Attachment is grasping, attachment is clinging. And this is the root cause of our being in this state of suffering.

The Buddha said that there is a truth of suffering and that there is a cause of suffering. The cause of suffering is grasping. We hold things so tightly because we don’t know how to hold things lightly. But everything is impermanent. Everything is flowing– it’s not static or solid. We cannot hold on to anything. As long as we try to hold on to the flow of the river, we either end up with nothing– because we can’t grasp water in a tight fist. Or else, we dam up the flow and end up with something very stagnant, smelly and stale. The actuality is movement. If we try to hold on tightly, we kill it. And that causes so much pain; it causes so much fear in our lives. That’s not love. Love is a tremendous opening of the heart. It’s a heart which thinks ”May you be well and happy” and not “May you make me well and happy”. In order to cultivate that kind of heart which wishes for the happiness of others, we can start first by opening with our family. This means by trying to make them happy and being open towards them. But not clinging or grasping– just being there for them. Showing them love, showing them affection, because they are the first people who need our love and affection. But it’s not a tight grasping affection. When I was 19, I decided to go to find a Lama, and I said to my mother “I’m going to India” and she said, “Oh yes, when are you leaving?” She didn’t say “What do you mean you are going to India? How could you leave your poor old mother?” She said, “Oh yes, when are you leaving?’” not because she didn’t love me, but because she did love me. She loved me and she wanted me to fulfill my own potential and be happy. She was not thinking “Oh, but if you’re going to leave me, I’m going to be lonely. I’m going to be miserable. How can you abandon me?” So, because of her non-attachment, she rejoiced in my happiness. Even while I was away, though I am sure she missed me very much, but she rejoiced in all the things I did, the places I went and the people I met. […]

That’s love. And that heart of warmth is not something impossible. It’s something we can all develop. That joy in making others happy, in thinking how we can give a little happiness, a little joy to others that we meet, through a kind word, through a smile, through a gift or whatever. Not always thinking “Oh, but they never gave me anything, so why should I give them anything?”, or “They never smile at me, so I’m not going to smile at them.” That’s such a petty, small mind. Think about a society in which everyone is at least nice to each other. That would be heaven, would it not? And yet it doesn’t take that much to be pleasant, even to people who are not pleasant in return. If we were affable to everybody, then on the whole, people would be agreeable in response.

Because it’s really true that we get out of life what we put into it. And if we are always radiating negative thoughts and feelings – anger, resentment or just self-absorption—then that’s what we’ll get back. […]

So it’s up to us. We create this world as we project it from our mind. We can make this world into something meaningful. We can make some genuine contribution to our environment. Even just within our own circle, by helping others to feel better, we can have a life that has some purpose. So that at the end of our life, we can look back and say, “well, at least I did what I could.” Or we could waste it– we can go through life grumbling, and moaning and complaining and blaming other people in the family, an unhappy childhood and one’s parents or the government and society. Whether we go up or whether we go down or whether we stand still, is up to us. And if we want to be miserable, we can be absolutely miserable. We have full permission. But if we don’t want to be miserable, that is also up to us. Things can change. Things are changing moment to moment. We can change. And if we change ourselves, everything changes. Everything changes.

About the Author: From here.

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A Heart Of Warmth Is Not Something Impossible
What does developing a heart of warmth mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced love as a tremendous opening of the heart? What helps you develop a heart of warmth?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Love is born in heart. It flourishes in heart.It flows from heart. Love liberates us from the grasping of selfish desire, from the craving of getting something from someone even at the cost of the oth…
David Doane wrote: Tenzin Palmo equates heart of warmth with love, so I’ll go with that. To me, developing a heart of warmth includes recognizing that the other is a person just like me, being genuinely caring about…
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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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United in Change

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January 27, 2020

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United in Change

Within sorrow is grace. When we come close to those things that break us down, we touch those things that also break us open. And in that breaking open, we uncover our true nature.

– Wayne Muller –

United in Change

“The 2016 election laid bare how divided our country was, each side seemingly incapable of seeing the others’ viewpoints. News reports were filled with stories about the raging poles of the political spectrum, no room any longer for the middle, on climate or anything else. The months leading up to the election and the time since had left me feeling beaten down, like a child of parents on the verge of divorce, everything steeped in rancor, the capacity for dialogue broken, the sides separated by an insurmountable barrier. When InsideClimate News came to me with an idea for a series about conservative perceptions of climate change, I thought it might give me a chance to attempt to climb that barrier, to cross over what sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild called the “empathy wall.”” Meera Subramanian shares more in this thought-provoking piece. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration read, “How Space Can Heal What Divides Us.” { more }

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Understanding King’s Non-Violence

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January 26, 2020

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Understanding King's Non-Violence

Occasionally in life one develops a conviction so precious and meaningful that he will stand on it till the end. That is what I have found in nonviolence.

– Martin Luther King, Jr. –

Understanding King’s Non-Violence

“In Kingian Nonviolence, a philosophy developed out of the teachings of Martin Luther King Jr., there is a distinction made between nonviolence spelled with a hyphen, and nonviolence spelled without a hyphen. ‘Non-violence’ is essentially two words: ‘without’ ‘violence.’ When spelled this way, it only describes the absence of violence. As long as I am “not being violent,” I am practicing non-violence. And that is the biggest misunderstanding of nonviolence that exists.” Kazu Haga shares more in this excerpt from his book, “Healing Resistance: A Radically Different Response to Harm.” { read more }

Submitted by: Pancho Ramos Stierle

Be The Change

For more inspiration listen to an excerpt from Martin Luther King’s speech,”The Drum Major Instinct.” { more }

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Serotiny: The Story of Lead to Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 25, 2020

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Serotiny: The Story of Lead to Life

I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. This is why right, temporarily defeated, is stronger than evil triumphant.

– Martin Luther King, Jr. –

Serotiny: The Story of Lead to Life

Serotiny refers to the process of seeds using the destructive power of fire to trigger the germination of new growth. On the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination, the organization Lead to Life gathered in Atlanta to honor the life of gun victims by putting weapons of killing through fire to forge shovels; plant trees to honor those lives with shovels created from that process; and share the journey with others in public ceremony. Share in the ceremony of this magical process. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on a place of darkness in your heart. Write your sorrow on a slip of paper. Burn the slip. Tuck the ashes next to the roots of a plant and water them in. Honor the transformation.

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