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Archive for April 21, 2020

Spotlight On Kindness: Our Resilient Earth

April 22 is the 50th anniversary of Earth Day. The pandemic has gifted scientists enormous data unexpectedly on human environmental impact. We are seeing jaw-dropping improvements on an unimaginable scale in air and water quality globally due to The Great Pause, as clogged rivers flow again and smoggy skies once again return to brilliant blue, revealing Mother Earth’s inherent resiliency. – Ameeta

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“When you realize HEART and EARTH are spelled with the same letters, it all starts to make sense.” – Anonymous
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Editor’s Note: April 22 is the 50th anniversary of Earth Day. The pandemic has gifted scientists enormous data unexpectedly on human environmental impact. We are seeing jaw-dropping improvements on an unimaginable scale in air and water quality globally due to The Great Pause, as clogged rivers flow again and smoggy skies once again return to brilliant blue, revealing Mother Earth’s inherent resiliency. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
The pandemic has led inadvertently to “the largest-scale experiment ever” in slashing global air emissions with air pollution levels drastically dropping everywhere.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
KindSpringers reflect with awe on the boldness of two sparrows who entered their kitchen looking for crumbs; one can either view them as an intrusion or appreciate their welcome presence.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Befriending our Despair
Hugs In this timely video, Joanna Macy, an environmental activist and scholar, advises that pain alerts us to what needs attention. If we aren’t afraid, nothing can stop us.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
A new scientific review say our oceans can be returned to their former glory within a generation if we all make a concerted global effort.
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Rachel Remen: The Grace of Being Seen

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 21, 2020

a project of ServiceSpace

Rachel Remen: The Grace of Being Seen

Vocation is the place where our deep gladness meets the world’s deep need.

– Frederick Buechner –

Rachel Remen: The Grace of Being Seen

“I wanted to share with you a letter that meant a great deal to me that was posted to my website in response to my blog. Carol addresses it to physicians but it is true of us all; everyone who goes to work every day in this broken healthcare system in the hopes of helping others, despite everything. It has never been harder to be a health professional and I have never been prouder to be counted among the people who choose this work. We are what is right with the system. Perhaps some day we can build a system truly worthy of our patients and of us all.” Rachel Remen shares a beautiful letter she received. Though it is from several years ago, in today’s world with millions of healthcare workers at the frontlines of a global pandemic, this love letter to caregivers feels more timely than ever. { read more }

Be The Change

Express gratitude in some form to a caregiver in your community. For more inspiration read, “Three Stories of Healing and Transformation.” { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Why We Listen Better To Strangers Than Family

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Why We Listen Better To Strangers Than Family
by Kate Murphy

[Listen to Audio!]

2415.jpgOnce you know people well enough to feel close, there’s an unconscious tendency to tune them out because you think you already know what they are going to say. It’s kind of like when you’ve traveled a certain route several times and no longer notice signposts and scenery.

But people are always changing. The sum of daily interactions and activities continually shapes us, so none of us are the same as we were last month, last week or even yesterday.

The closeness-communication bias is at work when romantic partners feel they don’t know each other anymore or when parents discover their children are up to things they never imagined.

It can occur even when two people spend all their time together and have many of the same experiences.

Social science researchers have repeatedly demonstrated that people often understood close relationships no better than strangers, and often worse.

The closeness-communication bias not only keeps us from listening to those we love, it can also keep us from allowing our loved ones to listen to us. It may explain why people in close relationships sometimes withhold information or keep secrets from one another.

So what can you do about it? The British anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist Robin Dunbar said the primary way to maintain close relationships is through “everyday talk.” That means asking, “How are you?” and actually listening to the answer.

Too often spouses, and also parents with their children, reduce conversations to logistics such as what to have for dinner, whose turn it is to do the laundry, or when to leave for soccer practice. Friends might run down their latest accomplishments and activities. What often gets left out is what is really on people’s minds — their joys, struggles, hopes and fears. Sometimes people keep conversation light with friends and family because they assume they already know what’s going on, but also, they may be afraid of what they might learn.

But what is love if not a willingness to listen to and be a part of another person’s evolving story? A lack of listening is a primary contributor to feelings of loneliness.

About the Author: Kate Murphy is the author of “You’re Not Listening: What You’re Missing and Why It Matters.” Excerpted from this article.

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Why We Listen Better To Strangers Than Family
How do you relate to the notion that love is ‘a willingness to listen to and be a part of another person’s evolving story’? Can you share an experience of a time you were able to overcome closeness-communication bias and listen deeply in a close relationship? What helps you stop yourself from already knowing what the other person is going to say and stay committed to discovery in your communication?
Prasad wrote: Just because I taught communication courses and teach others to listen deeply, I used to think that I am very good listener. There were a few occasionswhen we wife or son or daughter caught me doing s…
David Doane wrote: We are one, inseparably interrelated, so of course we are part of one another’s story, if we want to be or not. The choice we have is how we are part of it. To be willing to listen, to truly pay a…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: This essay authored by Kate Murphy reminds me of a saying my father used to say in Sanskrit "Ati parichayatavagna" meaning too much closeness in relationship results in indifference. I often…
Rahul Brown wrote: I find that "How are you?" is a very poor question to ask someone who is close to you because its such a common question. Its rare for it to be a sincere question that merits a full and prop…
matt wrote: Thanks for sharing these are very wise words….
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