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Archive for March, 2020

Artists & Nature

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 4, 2020

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Artists & Nature

I only went out for a walk, and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in.

– John Muir –

Artists & Nature

“Nature draws us out to explore, then gently sends us inward to reflect. Most often, we wind up feeling better as we gaze upon the moment-to-moment changes in the ocean, sky, mountain, desert, forest, meadow, or garden. We might be awed by the tiniest flower, bird, or insect, cheered by a profusion of color, intrigued by creatures looking for food or a mate, lulled by the incoming and outgoing tides, the rippling circles in a lake, or a babbling brook. As artists, how do we capture that experience? How do we translate it visually, acoustically, or tactilely?” Artist Mirka Knaster explores this question in this post that draws on examples from across the ages. { read more }

Be The Change

Give creative expression to your connection to nature today.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Kindness Is Never Wasted

Sometimes the smallest of kind acts done with genuine love and affection can help uplift a heavy heart. As we go about our busy lives, we’re not always tuned into the pain of others. This week’s stories come from some of the unlikeliest heroes and remind us that when the world’s burdens feel too much, just pay attention to what is in front of us, and let our hearts guide our actions. -Guri

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“Love and kindness are never wasted. They always make a difference. They bless the one who receives them, and they bless you, the giver.” -Barbara D.
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Editor’s Note: Sometimes the smallest of kind acts done with genuine love and affection can help uplift a heavy heart. As we go about our busy lives, we’re not always tuned into the pain of others. This week’s stories come from some of the unlikeliest heroes and remind us that when the world’s burdens feel too much, just pay attention to what is in front of us, and let our hearts guide our actions. -Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
An 8-year-old Thomas saw a video of a little girl with cancer, who had lost her hair to chemotherapy. He felt deeply sad and spent two years growing his hair so he can donate it to make wigs for kids.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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Known under the alias drjoybug, this KindSpring member found herself waking up to four inches of snow last week. She was pleasantly surprised at how the events of the day unfolded.
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Hugs 2-year-old hugs pizza delivery driver not knowing he just lost his daughter. The doorbell camera caught the hug that meant the world to Ryan Catterson. Here’s their sweet story.
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Can kindness slow down aging? New research shows that kindness doesn’t just make you healthier but it can actually help slow down aging and help prolong your life. Here’s the full article from Inc.com
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The Island’s Only Taxi

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March 3, 2020

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The Island's Only Taxi

Connection and connectedness are other words for community and communion.

– Parker Palmer –

The Island’s Only Taxi

Eigg is one of four small islands off the coast of Scotland, populated by sheep, dogs, and 109 local residents. Charlie Galli drives the only taxi on the island. He moved here looking to find a slower way of life, and a community who place greater value on relationships and conversation than they do on their mobile phones. “Sometimes I think there’s too much technology involved in life,” he says. “It’s not real –you’re not meeting people, you’re not grabbing their hand and shaking it. We’re losing that power – the art of conversation.” More in this engaging video. { read more }

Be The Change

Charlie finds meaning in doing favors to help people, saying that it might be a little thing for you to do, but big for the person you are doing it for. See if he’s right by doing one little favor a day for a week.

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Awakin Weekly: Releasing Willpower From Movement

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Releasing Willpower From Movement
by Gert van Leeuwen

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2404.jpgInitially, I used to move from willpower; I was concerned only with results. In retrospect, I realize that this created a sort of tunnel vision; my consciousness was debilitatingly limited. I allowed myself to be driven by the wants and automatic patterns I had developed in day-to-day activities. Eventually, I became rather tired of these patterns and wanted to change my behavior through my yoga practice — and also the development of relaxation.

The most important realization for me was that willpower is directed through thinking, while relaxation can only be felt. This realization and the experience of movement being initiated by relaxing certain muscles gave me enormous focus.

However, I did not know exactly how to develop this focus: should I approach it through my ego-bound decisiveness or through something else, something in my body? I noticed that I could couple the feeling of letting go with my breathing. That worked. It created a shift in my behavior, a shift from an ego-bound, cognitive control (willpower) to an emotionally bound, physical control whereby the focus of the movement was maintained. I developed the routine of connecting myself with essential technical points of attention in every asana movement — with relaxation as the central point within these directives.

I felt that I had found the solution for a complicated problem: if I allowed myself to complete the asana purely from feeling, then there was a risk that my technique would suffer, but if I focused on technically correct movement, willpower would take over. As it turned out, neither happened: I was able to maintain the correct technique and remain relaxed. This also became the way for me to release my tunnel vision. My thoughts became quiet and I was able to view the experiences of my body in an open, respectful manner. Through this experience with consciousness, and because I confronted my tension in an entirely new way, I was able to attain a new, higher level of consciousness. I was able to approach my tension from a feeling of relaxation together with a positive contact with my body. The "I"-focused, old manner, which was based on desires and driven by willpower, felt hard and aggressive when compared to this new experience.

I got the feeling that I was no longer the initiator of the movement: I felt how my body reacted to the focus of relaxation and movement initiated through my breath. I was able to observe this peacefully, without interfering, like an interested spectator.

At a certain moment, I felt that my body itself started to organize the movement. It was an awe-inspiring and, above all, totally physical moment.

My body underwent a transformation, and I became very warm. I felt light and full of energy and sensed a transparent connection with the space around me. This new development in my consciousness felt like a lightbulb suddenly went off. I was so surprised by this that my thoughts immediately took over, causing the experience to end. Luckily, I found that by starting over at the beginning (body consciousness) and without longing for this particular end result, I could replicate the experience.

I was less surprised the second time and so was able to lengthen the experience. It felt like an unsteady (but not frightening) connection with myself. Slowly, I regained a clearer overview of the situation without losing the physical sensations. This ‘gathering" of myself felt complicated because I was eager to return to my habitual manner of movement — namely, control. And control was the one factor that immediately stopped the experience. When I was able to continue moving without losing the sensations in my body, I once again experienced a large shift in consciousness. This could be described as higher consciousness.

Such experiences on a regular basis may well change your point of view in life. You will become more compassionate toward other people and the world in general, and you will cease to feel that you are alone. Returning to your self is like coming home.

About the Author: Gert van Leeuwen is the founder of Critical Alignment Yoga and Therapy, and the director of two schools in Amsterdam and Russia. The excerpt above is from his book, Yoga: Critical Alignment. You can learn more via his Awakin Call interview.

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Releasing Willpower From Movement
How do you relate to the notion that willpower is directed through thinking, while relaxation can only be felt? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to release tunnel vision and open into new spaces of relaxation? What helps you view the experiences of your body in an open, respectful manner?
David Doane wrote: I agree that willpower is directed through thinking. Willpower is a goal-directed head strong tunnel vision activity. Relaxation can be not directed by thinking, and can be directed by thinking. Relax…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: When I want or need to make a choice to change or modify my behavior I use my willpower, my cognitive control. It is not always easy to change my well established habitual patterns. When I feel tensio…
Bansi Pandya wrote: We use language (past) and thinking for objective description to reveal which is beyond itself, that is to say, all verbal formulation of intuitional apprehension obscures rather than reveals what has…
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Stress and the Social Self

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March 2, 2020

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Stress and the Social Self

In times of stress, the best thing we can do for each other is to listen with our ears and our hearts and to be assured that our questions are just as important as our answers.

– Fred Rogers –

Stress and the Social Self

“Relationships, Adrienne Rich argued in her magnificent meditation on love, refine our truths. But they also, it turns out, refine our immune systems. That’s what pioneering immunologist Esther Sternberg examines in The Balance Within: The Science Connecting Health and Emotions–a revelatory inquiry into how emotional stress affects our susceptibility to burnout and disease.” Maria Popova shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the Science of Stress. { more }

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Davis Dimock: The Gift

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March 1, 2020

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Davis Dimock: The Gift

I don’t even try to persuade people to be artistic. I just say it’s permissible.

– Davis Dimock –

Davis Dimock: The Gift

” A guy came here once from some outsider art magazine. He was taking pictures and he asked, “Do you do anything else?” So, I showed him some of my drawings. He said, “These are great. We could use these.” I told him I didn’t want them out in the world. It seems pretentious to think of myself as an artist. I think of artists as people who are going through the angst of creating stuff, and then the angst of getting a gallery to show the stuff, or sell the stuff. And I don’t like capitalism. It’s depressing. By just creating something on the land, my payment, my pleasure, is when other people spontaneously stop and look at it.” Davis Dimock– a self-described art laborer– shares more in this riveting interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a new look around your house and yard. It’s actually permissible to get creative. The possibilities are truly endless. Why not have some fun?

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