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Archive for March, 2020

The Woman Behind India’s First Testing Kit

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 31, 2020

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The Woman Behind India's First Testing Kit

My constant prayer for myself is to be used in service for the greater good.

– Oprah Winfrey –

The Woman Behind India’s First Testing Kit

“India has been criticized for its poor record of testing people in the battle against coronavirus. That, however, is set to change, thanks in large part to the efforts of one virologist, who delivered on a working test kit, just hours before delivering her baby .On Thursday, the first made-in-India coronavirus testing kits reached the market, raising hopes of an increase in screening of patients with flu symptoms to confirm or rule out the Covid-19 infection.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, here’s an interview with Dr. Larry Brilliant, the epidemiologist who led the smallpox eradication program in India: ‘Birds and Saints Don’t Collect.’ { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Keeping The Smoke Hole Open

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Keeping The Smoke Hole Open
by Martin Shaw

[Listen to Audio!]

2411.jpgIn Siberian myth, when you want to hurt someone, you crawl into their tent and close the smoke hole.

That way God can’t see them.

Close the smoke hole and you break connection to the divine world. Mountains, rivers, trees.

Close the smoke hole and we become mad.

Close the smoke hole and we are possessed by ourselves and only ourselves.

Close the smoke hole and you have only your neurosis for company.

Well, enough of that. Really, c’mon. We’re grown-ups. Let’s take a breath.

We may have to seek some solitude, but let’s not isolate from the marvelous.

High alert is the nature of the moment, and rightly so, but I do not intend to lose the reality that as a culture we are entering deeply mythic ground.

I am forgetting business as usual. No great story begins like that.

What needs to change? Deepen? What kindness in me have I so abandoned that I could seek relationship with again?

It is useful to inspect my ruin.

Could I strike up an old relationship with my soul again?

You don’t need me to tell you how to keep the smoke hole open. You have a myriad of ways.

We are awash with the power of words — virus, isolate, pandemic — and they point toward very real things. To some degree we need the organizational harassment of them.

But do they grow corn on your tongue when you speak them?

Where is the beauty-making in all of this?

That is part — part — of the correct response. The absolute heft of grief may well be the weave to such a prayer mat.

Before we burn the whole world down in the wider rage, could we collectively seek vigil in this moment?

Cry for a vision?

It’s what we’ve always done.

About the Author: Excerpted from Emergence Magazine.

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Keeping The Smoke Hole Open
How do you relate to the allegory of the smoke hole as our connection to all that’s beyond our little ego? What is helping you connect with the marvelous while remaining in solitude at this time? What is an old relationship with your own soul that you are rekindling now?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: The Coronavirus presents a great challenge to all of us for safety and survival.Whose safety and whose survival? The little ego says " the safety and survival for me at the cost of others." …
David Doane wrote: Martin Shaw’s allegory of the smoke hole is profound for me. The Western World has closed the smoke hole, and in so doing we have broken our connection to divinity not only outside our tent but al…
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Awakin Circles:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and rippled out as Awakin Circles in 80+ living rooms around the globe. To join in Santa Clara this week, RSVP online.

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Some Good News

Humanity’s Wake Up Call
Canada’s Caremongering Trend
Krista Tippett on Hope

Video of the Week

What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

Kindness Stories

Global call with Cynthia Li!
464.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

About
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.

Erich Fromm: The Antidote to Helplessness and Disorientation

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 30, 2020

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Erich Fromm: The Antidote to Helplessness and Disorientation

Hope is a decisive element in any attempt to bring about social change in the direction of greater aliveness, awareness, and reason. But the nature of hope is often misunderstood and confused with attitudes that have nothing to do with hope and in fact are the very opposite.

– Erich Fromm –

Erich Fromm: The Antidote to Helplessness and Disorientation

“To be human is to be a miracle of evolution conscious of its own miraculousness — a consciousness beautiful and bittersweet, for we have paid for it with a parallel awareness not only of our fundamental improbability but of our staggering fragility, of how physiologically precarious our survival is and how psychologically vulnerable our sanity. To make that awareness bearable, we have evolved a singular faculty that might just be the crowning miracle of our consciousness: hope.” { read more }

Be The Change

For another thought-provoking perspective on hope, read Margaret Wheatley’s case for “Finding Hope in Hopelessness.” { more }

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Krista Tippett on Hope

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 29, 2020

a project of ServiceSpace

Krista Tippett on Hope

You cannot swim for new horizons until you have courage to lose sight of the shore.

– William Faulkner –

Krista Tippett on Hope

“A couple of years ago I started sometimes asking, at the end of my conversations: What makes you despair, and where are you finding hope? It turns out that answers to the two parts of that question are more often conjoined than oppositional. The puzzle of us, the contradictions alive in each one of us and in this moment we inhabit –these are the crucible of my hope.” Krista Tippett shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration read “Restoring Balance and Meaning in Ourselves” — a passage that begins with a profound Taoist story… { more }

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What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 28, 2020

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What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

Freeing yourself was one thing, claiming ownership of that freed self was another.

– Toni Morrison –

What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

In this short animated film, “The Locust Mystery,” learn how the gentle harmless grasshopper and the devouring devastating locust are actually the same creature. And how we, also, have many differing “selves” that emerge under various circumstances. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you glimpse something about yourself you don’t recognize as “You”, get curious. How might this other you be an ally?

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Caring For Self and Others in Troubled Times

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 27, 2020

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Caring For Self and Others in Troubled Times

Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength, while loving someone deeply gives you courage.

– Lao Tzu –

Caring For Self and Others in Troubled Times

“Warm greetings of peace, hope, and healing to you and yours. As we navigate these perilous waters of our common life — with all the grace and gratefulness we can muster — you might find support in exploring these thoughts on ‘Caring for Self and Others in Times of Trouble: Some Spiritual Tools and Tips’. Please share these wherever you wish, taking what you need and leaving the rest.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read Tara Brach’s words on “The Sacred Art of Pausing.” { more }

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What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

This week’s inspiring video: What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Mar 26, 2020
What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

What an Insect Can Teach Us About Adapting to Stress

In this short animated film, "The Locust Mystery," learn how the gentle harmless grasshopper and the devouring devastating locust are actually the same creature. And how we, also, have many differing "selves" that emerge under various circumstances.
Watch Video Now Share: Email Twitter FaceBook

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How Does A Heart of Service Respond to These Times?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 26, 2020

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How Does A Heart of Service Respond to These Times?

In times of crisis, people reach for meaning. Meaning is strength. Our survival may depend on our seeking and finding it.

– Viktor Frankl –

How Does A Heart of Service Respond to These Times?

“Coronavirus has uprooted the fabric of our lives. How does a heart of service respond to an unknown cause and how do we build resilience when we can’t be physically together? Uncertain times raise significant questions that can architect a new story for our future. Carbon emissions have dropped dramatically, but xenophobia is rising. Nursing homes are being evacuated, only to bring elders home to their families. Shopping malls are empty but family meals are on the rise. Awakening of kindness is pervasive, but the inequality of human suffering is evident. Borders are still present, but the boundaries of our shared humanity are getting blurry. Yes, undercurrents of fear are everywhere, but so are prayers. Jack Kornfield recently shared, “The virus isn’t happening to us; it’s happening for us.” Last week 90 individuals from across the ServiceSpace ecosystem circled online to explore the call of these times. { read more }

Be The Change

At the end of this month, ServiceSpace is hosting a follow up conversation for kindred spirits: “What Would Love Do?” Learn more here. { more }

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What Would Love Do? (+ New Website!)

How do we respond with compassion?  â â â â â âÂ

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ServiceSpace
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Dear ServiceSpace Community,

Coronavirus has uprooted the fabric of our lives. How does a heart of service respond to an unknown cause, how do we build resilience when we can’t be physically together, and how do we amplify lotus in the mud? With the backdrop of 20 years of holding such inquiries, ServiceSpace volunteers globally have sprung to action.

As one response, we’ve just launched: karunavirus.org Karuna is a Sanskrit word for compassion, and the website intends to amplify the voice of our collective compassion — by featuring news articles of everyday people choosing love over fear. Read below for a recent roundup of stories that simply renew our faith in life.

Uncertain times raise significant questions that can architect the arc of our future. Carbon emissions have dropped dramatically, but xenophobia is rising. Government surveillance is increasing, while global cooperation is going up. Shopping malls are empty, but family meals are on the rise. Awakening of compassion is pervasive, but the inequality of human suffering is evident. In a context of “social distancing”, neighbors lean out of their windows to sing songs together. Borders are still present, but the boundaries of our shared humanity are getting blurry. Yes, undercurrents of fear are everywhere, but so are prayers. Jack Kornfield recently shared, “The virus isn’t happening to us; it’s happening for us.” May we step into our highest aspirations to serve this inflection point in history.

To that end, ServiceSpace offers many virtual ways to engage, and we’ve initiated many creative experiments to serve the needs of the hour. Here’s some of them:

  • Be inspired: DailyGood, KarmaTube, Awakin Calls and more continue with gusto. Subscribe.
  • Engage: join one of numerous circles, from virtual Awakins to 21-day challenges to even dance. View Virtual Circles.
  • Brainstorm: as a follow-up to our “physical distance, social solidarity” dialogue, we’re hosting a global one on March 31st: what would love do? RSVP here.

In a recent interview, Terry Tempest Williams offered a courageous reflection:

“A good friend of mine said, ‘You are married to sorrow.’ And I looked to him and I said, ‘I am not married to sorrow. I just choose not to look away.’ I think there is deep beauty in not averting our gaze, no matter how hard it is, no matter how heartbreaking it can be. It is about presence, bearing witness. I used to think bearing witness was a passive act, but I don’t believe that anymore. When we are present, when we do not divert our gaze, something is revealed. The very marrow of life. We change. A transformation occurs. A consciousness shift.”

Perhaps we’re in the middle of living into that new story. Imagine Italian airforce using Pavoratti, Spanish military doing acts of service, and street police playing guitars — to *inspire*. Corporations giving unexpected wage hikes. Canadians starting “Kindness Mongering.” Six year old in Australia adorably gifting her tooth fairy money, an 8th grader in Japan making 612 masks, and college kids everywhere buying groceries for elders. Cuba sending an army in "white robes" (doctors) to help Italy. A landlord allowing tenants to stay without rent, an Irish priest’s poem going viral, disabled activitists producing hand sanitizer. Imagine. Sometimes a crisis mirrors our deepest impulse — that we can always respond with compassion.

Lastly, a headline that made me smile: An aquarium closes, but penguins can now roam free. As one door closes, another surely opens up.

In service,

Nipun and the ServiceSpace Crew
Change Yourself, Change the World
P.S. For some non-Corona inspiration, a few stories from a January retreat: Gandhi 3.0: Vortex of Noble Friendships
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ServiceSpace is an incubator of volunteer-run projects that nurtures a culture of generosity. What started as a small experiment in 1999 has rippled into myriad expressions of service in dozens of countries around the globe. For more, watch a video on our unique design principles.
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Humanity’s Wake Up Call

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 25, 2020

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Humanity's Wake Up Call

Everything that is in the heavens, on earth, and under the earth is penetrated with connectedness, penetrated with relatedness

– Hildegard of Bingen –

Humanity’s Wake Up Call

“The rapid spread of novel coronavirus has prompted government, business, and civil society to take dramatic action–canceling events large and small, restricting travel, and shutting down major segments of the economy on which nearly all of us depend. It is a demonstration of our ability, when the imperative is clear, for deep and rapid global cooperation and change at a previously unimaginable speed and scale.There is an obvious desire to protect ourselves and our loved ones. But we are also seeing something more as communities mobilize to address the crisis–a sense of mutual responsibility, born of a recognition that we are ultimately bound to a common fate.” David Korten shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

What shifts are you feeling called to make in this time? Take a moment to write down what you have been waking up to in this period.

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