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Archive for November, 2020

The Lost Spells: A Lyrical Rewilding of the Human Heart

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 30, 2020

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The Lost Spells: A Lyrical Rewilding of the Human Heart

As you sit on the hillside, or lie prone under the trees of the forest, or sprawl wet-legged by a mountain stream, the great door, that does not look like a door, opens.

– Stephen Graham –

The Lost Spells: A Lyrical Rewilding of the Human Heart

“A century after the great nature writer Henry Beston insisted that we need “a wiser and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals,” observing how “in a world older and more complete than ours they move finished and complete, gifted with extensions of the senses we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear,” Macfarlane and Morris bring us the mystery and wisdom of wild things as complementary and consolatory to our tame incompleteness.” More from Brain Pickings about “The Lost Spells” here. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read this interview with Micah Mortali, author of “Rewildling: Meditations, Practices and Skills for Awakening in Nature.” { more }

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Uncommon Gratitude

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 29, 2020

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Uncommon Gratitude

Beauty is the antidote to grief and despair, and it is the one sure thing I can bring to bear when I confront a place that has fallen on hard times.

– Trebbe Johnson –

Uncommon Gratitude

“Before me lies a slope of wild grasses, saturated in the copper light of early autumn. Insects dabble in wild asters and Queen Anne’s lace, and animal trails wind through the dense greenery. But just where the terrain should plunge steeply through a woodland of maple, beech, cherry, and ash trees, it flattens out like a gigantic tennis court or helicopter landing pad. What just a few weeks earlier and for many thousands of years before had been a hillside in rural northeastern Pennsylvania has been sliced in half by a five–acre concrete slab. It is, in fact, the site of a new gas pad.” Trebbe Johnson shares more in this essay on giving thanks to wounded places. { read more }

Be The Change

Give gratitude for a wounded place in your own life and landscape today.

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Eating the Sun: Small Musings on a Vast Universe

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November 28, 2020

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Eating the Sun: Small Musings on a Vast Universe

Your luminosity is intrinsic, but your brightness will depend on who is looking at you.

– Ella Frances Sanders –

Eating the Sun: Small Musings on a Vast Universe

Says Maria Popova of Ella Frances Sanders’ latest book,”In fifty-one miniature essays, each accompanied by one of her playful and poignant ink-and-watercolor drawings, Sanders goes on to explore a pleasingly wide array of scientific mysteries and facts — evolution, chaos theory, clouds, the color blue, the nature of light, the wondrousness of octopuses, the measurement of time, Richard Feynman’s famous cataclysm sentence, the clockwork mesmerism of planetary motion, our microbiome, the puzzlement of why we dream. What emerges is something sweetly consonant with Nabokov’s exultation at our “capacity to wonder at trifles” — except, of course, even the smallest and most invisible of these processes, phenomena, and laws are not trifles but condensed miracles that make the everythingness of everything we know.” { read more }

Be The Change

Check out more of Sanders’ lovely and thought-provoking work here: “11 Untranslatable Words From Other Cultures.” { more }

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Prince Ea: Three Seconds

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November 27, 2020

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Prince Ea: Three Seconds

It is up to us to take care of this planet, it is our only home. To betray nature is to betray us. To save nature is to save us.

– Prince Ea –

Prince Ea: Three Seconds

A presentation, in the inimitable style of spoken word artist Prince Ea, of where humanity stands today and how we must all work together to make it to the fourth second. This film won first prize in the short film category of the Film4Climate initiative in 2016. Can we come together to create a tidal wave of change? { read more }

Be The Change

How can you join this global call to action for climate change? Start by sharing films like this one with your family, friends, and local community. And share your own personal stories of change.

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Three Seconds

This week’s inspiring video: Three Seconds
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Video of the Week

Nov 26, 2020
Three Seconds

Three Seconds

A presentation, in the inimitable style of spoken word artist Prince Ea, of where humanity stands today and how we must all work together to make it to the fourth second. This film won first prize in the short film category of the Film4Climate initiative in 2016. Can we come together to create a tidal wave of change?
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What We Get Wrong About Time

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November 26, 2020

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What We Get Wrong About Time

What then is time? If no one asks me, then I know. If I wish to explain it to someone who asks, I know it not.

– St. Augustine –

What We Get Wrong About Time

“Most of us tend to think of time as linear, absolute and constantly “running out” — but is that really true? However much time feels like something that flows in one direction, some scientists beg to differ.” Read on to learn more about what we know and don’t know about the nature of time, and how our perception of it influences our lives. { read more }

Be The Change

Is there anything you aspire to shift in your own relationship to time? Think of three small steps you can take in that direction this week, and put them into action.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Changing The Frame

There is no doubt that life has dramatically changed for most of the world this year. Many of us are grappling with reality or have grudgingly found ways of working around things. Meanwhile, there are those who are seeing the opportunities within the constraints. This week’s stories highlight people who have learned to change their frame and embrace and dance with the ever-changing life. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: There is no doubt that life has dramatically changed for most of the world this year. Many of us are grappling with reality or have grudgingly found ways of working around things. Meanwhile, there are those who are seeing the opportunities within the constraints. This week’s stories highlight people who have learned to change their frame and embrace and dance with the ever-changing life. –Guri
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Deciphering Words in the Woods

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November 25, 2020

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Deciphering Words in the Woods

If trees have memories, respond to stress, and communicate, then what can they tell us? Will we listen?

– Katie Holten –

Deciphering Words in the Woods

“Ogham is Ireland’s earliest form of writing. Dating from the fourth century, it is often affectionately called a tree alphabet. It is an archaic script using trees for letters. In Ogham, the characters were called feda trees or nin forking branches due to their shape. Astonishingly, this ancient alphabet was written from the roots up — each character sprouting from a central line, like leaves on a stem or branches on a tree.” Artist Katie Holten seeks to decolonize language and rewild the imagination by transforming letters into trees. Combining the ancient script Ogham with Irish and English, her Irish Tree Alphabet transforms words into an arboreal language of place and belonging. { read more }

Be The Change

A forest is growing in Norway. In 100 years it will become an anthology of books. Learn more about the Future Library here. { more }

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To Be a Loved Horse: Dufresne’s Story

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November 24, 2020

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To Be a Loved Horse: Dufresne's Story

Empathy is a special way of coming to know another and ourself, a kind of attuning and understanding. When empathy is extended, it satisfies our needs and wish for intimacy, it rescues us from our feelings of aloneness.

– Carl Rogers –

To Be a Loved Horse: Dufresne’s Story

“A friend of mine was looking to buy a horse that could be a backyard buddy. She didn’t want to spend a lot of money, so I suggested we go to the local monthly horse auction to see if we might rescue one of the horses from a potential death sentence.For those of you who are unfamiliar with horse auctions, many times the meat buyers end up taking the unwanted animals at low prices. There are always horses there who have plenty of life left and just need someone to show up and recognize their value, see their heart, and offer them a space where they can just be a loved horse.” What happened next is an unexpected and electrifying story of hope and healing. { read more }

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Try to attune to another and extend empathy where it is most needed this week.

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Awakin Weekly: Time Confetti And The Broken Promise Of Leisure

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Time Confetti And The Broken Promise Of Leisure
by Ashley Whillans

[Listen to Audio!]

2467.jpgIt’s true: we have more time for leisure than we did fifty years ago. But leisure has never been less relaxing, mostly because of the disintermediating effects of our screens. Technology saves us time, but it also takes it away. This is known as the autonomy paradox. We adopt mobile technologies to gain autonomy over when and how long we work, yet, ironically, we end up working all the time. Long blocks of free time we used to enjoy are now interrupted constantly by our smart watches, phones, tablets, and laptops.

This situation taxes us cognitively, and fragments our leisure time in a way that makes it hard to use this time for something that will relieve stress or make us happy. Researchers call this phenomenon time confetti, which amounts to little bits of seconds and minutes lost to unproductive multitasking. Each bit alone seems not very bad. Collectively, though, all that confetti adds up to something more pernicious than you might expect.

Each interruption in itself is mundane and takes only seconds. But collectively they create two negative effects. The first is the sheer volume of time they take away from your hour. The second, more invasive effect of time confetti is the way it fragments the hour of leisure. It’s most likely that these interruptions are randomly distributed throughout the hour.

When we try to enjoy a birthday dinner, notifications about our friends’ tropical vacation photos make our pasta taste less delicious. When we try to choose a restaurant for our next date, the endless ocean of reviews and ratings leads us to spend more time choosing our meals than savoring them. When we try to have meaningful time off with friends and family, our alerts from work create guilt and dread over what we’re not getting done.

Thinking about work while trying to relax induces panic, because feelings of time poverty are caused by how well activities fit together in our mind. If we are trying to be a committed parent while our work email goes off, we can’t help thinking we should be working on our next deadline instead of being present with our child. This conflict makes us feel like a bad parent (“Why am I thinking about work while trying to hang out with my kid?”) and a bad employee (“Am I hanging out with my kids too much? Will that promotion go to someone else?”).

It also takes time to cognitively recover from shifting our minds away from the present to some other stress-inducing activity. People end up enjoying their free time less and, when asked to reflect on it, estimate that they had less free time than they actually did. That’s how invasive the technology time trap is: time confetti makes us feel even more time impoverished than we actually are.

When we feel time-poor, we take on small, easy-to-complete tasks because they help us feel more control over our time. We think, There! I made a protein shake and finished that errand. I’m getting stuff done! In this case, it’s a false sense of control that doesn’t alleviate the root cause of our busyness.

Time poverty feels the same for everyone, but time affluence looks different for everyone. It could mean spending fifteen more minutes strumming the guitar instead of scrolling through your phone, or it could be ten minutes of meditation, or a Saturday morning learning how to invest your savings instead of Slacking about work gossip. No matter what time affluence looks like for you, the happiest and most time affluent among us are deliberate with their free time. Working toward time affluence is about recognizing and overcoming the time traps in our lives and intentionally carving out happier and more meaningful moments each day.

About the Author: Excerpted from here. Originally adapted from Time Smart: How to Reclaim Your Time and Live a Happier Life.

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Time Confetti And The Broken Promise Of Leisure
How do you relate to the notions of time poverty, time affluence, time confetti, and the autonomy paradox? Can you share a personal story of a time you made an intentional shift from time poverty to time affluence? What helps you be intentional with your time?
David Doane wrote: I think we have less time for leisure than we had fifty years ago. Those notions of time trigger in me that my time is precious and it is very important to take charge of how I use my time. I made an …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: When my mind is divided between two cognitive polls like I want to do something leisurely and enjoyable such as reading a book and checking important email messages I feel trapped by time and feel tim…
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