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Archive for June 9, 2020

Spotlight On Kindness: Bold Hope

It feels different this time. There has always been injustice, and yet our collective response feels more widespread and urgent this time. But is it different? Yes, if we allow ourselves to transform and if we each commit to seeing and confronting injustice immediately around us. We co-create our future, and we are the ones who help bend the arc of the moral universe towards justice. – Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: It feels different this time. There has always been injustice, and yet our collective response feels more widespread and urgent this time. But is it different? Yes, if we allow ourselves to transform and if we each commit to seeing and confronting injustice immediately around us. We co-create our future, and we are the ones who help bend the arc of the moral universe towards justice. – Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A homeowner in DC gave overnight refuge to 70 protesters inside his home after DC law enforcement had pushed them down his street. “I didn’t do anything. I just opened a door,” he said.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
After transiently feeling helpless, a KindSpringer from Minnesota is doing her best to contribute to the community by doing small kind acts such as creating food bags to donate for those in need.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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President Obama’s Commencement Address
Hugs President Obama encourages the Class of 2020 to seize the opportunity before them to help create a new “normal” and a more just society.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
During these times of upheaval, more and more people join the broadest protests in US history to call for equal justice.
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Turning to Face the Dark

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 9, 2020

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Turning to Face the Dark

Wherever men and women are persecuted because of their race, religion, or political views, that place must — at that moment — become the center of the universe.

– Elie Wiesel –

Turning to Face the Dark

“In May of 2019, Rabbi Dr. Ariel Burger sat down with educator and writer Parker J. Palmer for an unscripted conversation. What emerged was a wide-ranging contemplative dialogue on suffering, healing, and joy. Parker is the author of ‘Five Habits to Heal the Heart of Democracy’, and many other life-changing books. Ariel is the author of ‘Witness: Lessons from Elie Wiesel’s Classroom'”
{ read more }

Be The Change

Join a conversation this Wednesday, June 10th with Rabbi Burger and Cleary Vaughan-Lee, on “Becoming and Witnessing in These Tumultuous Times.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Inclining Toward Freedom, Even Through Imperfections

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Inclining Toward Freedom, Even Through Imperfections
by Larry Yang

[Listen to Audio!]

2420.jpgIf we focus only on awakening, we miss most of the spiritual practice. I’m much more interested in how we practice with not awakening, with not being enlightened, because, frankly, those states of being are more present in my life than not.

Lately, as I strive to promote diversity and anti-racism both inside and outside of dharma communities, I’m finding new depths of disappointment and disillusionment at the limitations of my own capacities, at the imperfections of our communities, and at the harm occurring in our larger culture. We don’t live in an enlightened world—have you noticed? As a dharma teacher, I was trained to teach the insights and kindnesses that I have felt. However, these days I feel propelled to teach from where I am—to be real and authentic in the moment, in the midst of places where I do not have answers, and from the limitations of my own flaws. […]

We must dig deep into our practice in order to navigate the extremes of despair and disillusionment. We must listen to what is underneath it all, to where freedom is calling from, by asking: Can I open to this? Can I turn toward this? Or in the inadequate language with which we must communicate, can I love this too? Can we incline toward the despair and imperfections of this life with the same diligence we give other objects of mindfulness? Can we practice presence when life feels impossible?

It may seem counterintuitive, but when we practice awareness and offer kindness to the uncooked, imperfect aspects of our lives, we actually strengthen our mindfulness. We don’t need to attach to either awakening or non-awakening; neither is anything more than an experience to hold with tender awareness.

Awakening and not awakening are two sides of the same coin. They are the same experience. We can’t experience awakening without experiencing not awakening. We can’t experience insight without becoming intimately familiar with our conditioned patterns. […]

Thus, even in my imperfections, even in my failures, I can still incline my heart toward freedom. This is how I see the paths of awakening and non-awakening interweaving. This is freedom in the midst of suffering. This is resilience despite the forces of violence and oppression. We can create beautiful lives right where the world is not yet awake.

Each time we practice awareness and kindness, we transform not only our personal world but the world itself. We begin to be able to hold the unholdable, to connect the broken heart and the raging mind. We look for the precious wisdom embedded within that bitter rage, and as soon as we begin to look, we are no longer consumed by the rage itself. We turn toward the direct experience of despair and weave it into care, love, and, dare we say, freedom. This is the magnitude of our spiritual practice. It asks us to include all the contradictions and paradoxes of awakening and not awakening and everything in between. It is the in-between—the range from extreme to subtle, the spectrum connecting opposing forces—that constitutes the totality of our lives, our practice, and our freedom.

About the Author: From full article here. Larry Yang is a Spirit Rock teacher and is a core teacher at the East Bay Meditation Center (Oakland) and Insight Community of the Desert (Palm Springs); his book is Awakening Together.

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Inclining Toward Freedom, Even Through Imperfections
What does inclining your heart toward freedom in the midst of suffering mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to experience insight by becoming intimately familiar with your conditioned patterns? What helps you treat awakening and non-awakening as two sides of the same coin?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: The two words thatstand out from Larry Yang’s passage are Freedom and Imperfactions. We all want to be free from suffering, from our limitations created by conditioning of our mind. It is a a jour…
David Doane wrote: Inclining your heart toward freedom means to me to act with integrity. It’s not doing out of obligation, it’s not doing to impress, it’s not manipulation or bargaining, it’s action tru…
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