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Archive for May 5, 2020

Spotlight On Kindness: Of Life And Death

We lost one of our own members recently. Known by the alias, Leolady, Carole was a beautiful spirit, a devoted tutor to her students, many of whom stayed in touch long after their classes were over. Although she suffered from chronic pain these past few months, Carole never stopped showing kindness to others to the very end. This newsletter is dedicated to Carole. She will be dearly missed. -Guri

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Editor’s Note: We lost one of our own members recently. Known by the alias, Leolady, Carole was a beautiful spirit, a devoted tutor to her students, many of whom stayed in touch long after their classes were over. Although she suffered from chronic pain these past few months, Carole never stopped showing kindness to others to the very end. This newsletter is dedicated to Carole. She will be dearly missed. -Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
An unlikely scenario for an act of kindness was a Sheriff guarding six inmates at a worksite. He unexpectedly lost consciousness, the inmates tried to help him and returned to a hero’s welcome.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
During a lunch conversation at the office, this KS member picked up on something that he knew would bring a smile to his co-worker’s face. He quickly acted anonymously to brighten her day.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Canceled Birthday party starts a wave of kindness in entire town
Hugs When you’re 7, your birthday is everything! Friends found a way to celebrate Piper’s canceled party, which ended up sparking something much bigger for their entire town.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Air pollution in major cities has dropped by as much as 60% thanks to shelter-in-place policies. Upworthy shares some amazing images from around the world.
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The Little Priestess: Listen with the Ear of the Heart

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 5, 2020

a project of ServiceSpace

The Little Priestess: Listen with the Ear of the Heart

Listen to your heart. It knows all things, because it came from the Soul of the World and it will one day return there.

– Paulo Cohelo –

The Little Priestess: Listen with the Ear of the Heart

Noirin Ni Riain is an Irish spiritual singer, theologian, teacher, author and Interfaith minister. Known as the High Priestess of Gregorian Chan, Noirin has released sixteen albums since 1978, including three with her sons Eoin and Micheal O’ Suilleabhain. Her voice has rung out for peace on many continents, from United Nations conferences to gatherings with the Dalai Lama. In this short excerpt, titled “Little Priestess”, she describes her early sense of vocation, and the abrupt way in which an early dream was shattered. Eventually leading her to a new and expanded one. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration join a special on-line workshop this Thursday with Noirin and her sons– Song of the Cocoon: Tuning the Heart’s Ear in Times of Transition. RSVP info and more details here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Harder I Work, The More I Love

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Harder I Work, The More I Love
by Lynne Twist

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2347.jpgBurnout is being disconnected from Source. I don’t think it’s as related as we’d like to think, to working too long or too hard or eating pizza and Coke instead of veggies and water. All those things play into it — I don’t recommend working yourself to death or anything. But true burnout is being disconnected from Source. That’s really where it happens.

We all know times when we were soaring: we were working 24/7 and we wanted to work 24/7, and what we were producing was so exciting that we couldn’t stop. That’s an example of being connected to Source in a way that your body will go with you.

At the same time, I do think it’s important to take care of one’s capacity to serve. That’s the other thing I feel responsible to take care of: to nourish my own capacity to serve, and that comes from Source. That comes from meditation. That comes from being in nature. That comes from being in touch with the love I have for my husband and my children and my family. My love for God. My love for the spirit world. My love for the shamans. When I’m in touch with that, I can do anything. And then that’s a source of enormous joy.

We once had a conference in Ireland with the Nobel laureates. We sponsored women to come from war zones all over the world. This conference was very confronting.

At one point on the second day, I was having lunch with colleagues from Iran, four lawyers who worked with Shirin Ebadi. A group of six women arrived in a van. My colleagues saw the van pulling up and they ran across this green lawn crying with joy. They were all lawyers who had worked together for years before they got arrested. As the women got out of the van, women who had been in prison for years and tortured, they all ran towards each other and they hugged and they rolled around on the grass and they cried and they danced. It’s making me cry thinking about it.

Then that night we had a party, the most joyous, raucous, wild, wonderful party of all women dancing with each other that I’d ever seen in my life; women from the Congo, women from Ethiopia, women from Honduras, all of whom had been through hell — the kind of things they’ve been through, you can’t even talk about.

My assertion from that enormous experience, and I’ve had many experiences like that, is that the pain and the joy are one. It’s all connected. And often the deeper people have allowed themselves to go into the pain, the greater capacity they have for joy.

I’ve seen that particularly with African women, with their incredible burdens in many cases. But when they celebrate — which they find a way to do every day, through singing, through dancing, through feeding each other — the joy is just breathtaking. I’ve been in Rwanda after the genocide and found the joy there in those people. I’ve been in Ethiopia after the famine. The capacity for human joy is probably unlimited.

I find it in myself. I find that my capacity for joy is enhanced by my capacity to face the suffering world and engage with it. My capacity for joy and lightheartedness and fun and release is strengthened by my capacity to face the darkness. And my capacity to face the darkness is strengthened by my capacity to celebrate joy. The harder I work, the more I love.

About the Author: Lynne Twist is the founder of Pachamama Alliance. The excerpt above was taken from an interview with Lynne.

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Harder I Work, The More I Love
How do you relate to the notion that the deeper people have allowed themselves to go into the pain, the greater capacity they have for joy? Can you share a personal story of a time your capacity to face the suffering world directly expanded your capacity for joy, or vice versa? What helps you take care of your capacity to serve?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: It is my understanding based on my experiences that deep joy comes from facing pain, suffering and hardship rather than running away from it.It is like going through the heat of the fire to experience…
David Doane wrote: I’d like to know what Lynne Trist means by Source. She said when she’s in touch with Source she can do anything. I doubt that — I wish we could do anything — as I see it, we can only do what…
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Global call with Noirin Ni Riain & Sons!
479.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

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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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