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Archive for November, 2020

The Gentle Art of Blessing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 9, 2020

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The Gentle Art of Blessing

To bless all without distinction is the ultimate form of giving, because those you bless will never know from whence came the sudden ray that burst through the clouds of their skies, and you will rarely be a witness to the sunlight in their lives.

– Pierre Pradervand –

The Gentle Art of Blessing

“On awakening, bless this day, for it is already full of unseen good which your blessings will call forth, for to bless is to acknowledge the unlimited good that is embedded in the very texture of the universe and awaiting each and all.” Pierre Pradervand is the author of ‘The Gentle Art of Blessing: A Simple Practice That Will Transform You and Your World.’ He posits that making the conscious choice to bless every person or being in your life can truly make a world of difference. More here. { read more }

Be The Change

Practice the gentle art of blessing this week (or this year, or this lifetime!) For more inspiration check out this Awakin Call with Pradervand. { more }

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What Is Compassion?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 8, 2020

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What Is Compassion?

Compassion is not a relationship between the healer and the wounded. It’s a relationship between equals. Only when we know our own darkness well, can we be present with the darkness of others. Compassion becomes real when we recognize our shared humanity.

– Pema Chodron –

What Is Compassion?

“Compassion literally means to suffer together. Among emotion researchers, it is defined as the feeling that arises when you are confronted with anothers suffering and feel motivated to relieve that suffering.” We are living in a time where a deep understanding of, and value for, compassion is more critical than ever. More from Dachner Keltner on the evolutionary roots of compassion here. { read more }

Be The Change

Experiment with trying to look for the basis of shared humanity in every single one of your interactions this week. Notice how this orientation affects you, and perhaps others.

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The Conviction of Belonging: An Update

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 7, 2020

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The Conviction of Belonging: An Update

After all, what are any of us after but the conviction of belonging?

– Wallace Stegner –

The Conviction of Belonging: An Update

Recently DailyGood featured “I Am Everybody,” an inspiring post by author Phyllis Cole-Dai, in which she shared the story of her ‘signature’ red coat, that over the years has been autographed by hundreds of strangers. This one-of-a-kind coat is an emblem of our profound interconnections, and Phyllis invited readers to write her if they wanted their names added to the mix. The flood of responses she received from around the world, put her life happily on hold for the rest of the week. She shares an update here. { read more }

Be The Change

What does the word ‘belonging’ conjure up for you?How might you take a small action to make someone feel that they truly belong?

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Moving Across Political Divides Post-Election

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November 6, 2020

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Moving Across Political Divides Post-Election

We owe our loyalty to each other and to our children’s children, not to party politics.

– DaShanne Stokes –

Moving Across Political Divides Post-Election

Joan Blades is an “accidental activist” at the forefront of movements that have shaped American culture and politics. Through her various endeavors Blades has experientially acted upon an insight about the power of ordinary people driving change. She is the co-founder of MoveOn.org, and another remarkable initiative called Living Room Conversations. In this timely video, she and her collaborator Mark Meckler share more about their work and their deep conviction that Americans can build bridges across differences– simply by conversing as a nation and regarding those with radically different beliefs as fellow human beings. { read more }

Be The Change

Tune into the Awakin Call with Joan Blade this weekend. RSVP info and more details here.

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A Living Room Conversation Across Political Divides

This week’s inspiring video: A Living Room Conversation Across Political Divides
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Video of the Week

Nov 05, 2020
A Living Room Conversation Across Political Divides

A Living Room Conversation Across Political Divides

Joan Blades is an “accidental activist” at the forefront of movements that have shaped American culture and politics. Through her various endeavors Blades has experientially acted upon an insight about the power of ordinary people driving change. She is the co-founder of MoveOn.org, and another remarkable initiative called Living Room Conversations. In this timely video, she and her collaborator Mark Meckler share more about their work and their deep conviction that Americans can build bridges across differences– simply by conversing as a nation and regarding those with radically different beliefs as fellow human beings.
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Deepening Our Comfort With Uncertainty

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November 5, 2020

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Deepening Our Comfort With Uncertainty

Deep trust in life is not a feeling but a stance that you deliberately take. It is the attitude we call courage.

– Br. David Steindl-Rast –

Deepening Our Comfort With Uncertainty

“In our daily lives, there are endless forms of uncertainty far more things we cannot know than know. Objectively, this could be cause for great delight, wonder, and surrender. We could be relieved and appreciative that we do not have to perpetually hold onto the steering wheel, captain the ship, drive our lives. There is much to discover that can surprise us, so much to which we can gratefully yield, so much permission to let go of our need to know or control what will happen. And yet when we experience the presence of true uncertainty in our lives, it can be rattling. It goes against the conditioning most of us have internalized that not knowing is threatening that it must be hidden or overridden, solved or resolved, as quickly as possible.” Kristi Nelson shares more in this piece that resonates richly with our times. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with the woman behind MoveOn.org and Living Room Conversations, Joan Blades: “Moving On Post-Election.” RSVP info and more details here. { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Love Over Fear

Our shared humanity is bigger than any short-term achievement. At times, it seems easier and justifiable to lean into our anxieties or to fall in step with superficial divisions created by faulty human-made systems. It is especially during those times that we must hold our lanterns higher. With every thought, speech, action, we cast a ballot to choose kindness over hostility, love over fear. -Guri

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Editor’s Note: Our shared humanity is bigger than any short-term achievement. At times, it seems easier and justifiable to lean into our anxieties or to fall in step with superficial divisions created by faulty human-made systems. It is especially during those times that we must hold our lanterns higher. With every thought, speech, action, we cast a ballot to choose kindness over hostility, love over fear. -Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
“It’s my job as a citizen to vote,” Joe LaMuraglia took his civic duty to heart. He drove 2,000 miles roundtrip from Boston to Georgia to cast his vote after his absentee ballot didn’t reach him.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
In the freezing winter, they noticed that the guard at their building was not wearing a jacket. Her husband’s spontaneous act of generosity that followed warmed her heart.
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Kid President’s 20 Things We Should Say More Often
Hugs We can all use a little levity right now. Kid President believes the things we say can help make the world better. Here’s his special list of 20 things we should say more often.
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In other news …
A great reminder from the folks over at the Greater Good Magazine! How to protect your body from social media stress. Watch the short video HERE.
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Hope: An Owner’s Manual

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 4, 2020

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Hope: An Owner's Manual

To be hopeful means to be uncertain about the future, to be tender toward possibilities, to be dedicated to change all the way down to the bottom of your heart.

– Rebecca Solnit –

Hope: An Owner’s Manual

“Look, you might as well know, this thing is going to take endless repair: rubber bands, crazy glue, tapioca, the square of the hypotenuse. Nineteenth century novels. Heartstrings, sunrise: all of these are useful. Also, feathers. To keep it humming, sometimes you have to stand on an incline, where everything looks possible; on the line you drew yourself.” Barbara Kingsolver shares more in this beautiful excerpt from her 2008 Commencement speech at Duke University, “How to Be Hopeful.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration read this excerpt from Martin Luther King Jr’s Nobel Prize acceptance speech: “We Shall Overcome.” { more }

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Let Us All Unite

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November 3, 2020

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Let Us All Unite

The vote is precious. It is the most powerful non-violent tool we have in a democratic society, and we must use it.

– John Lewis –

Let Us All Unite

“You the people have the power, the power to create machines, the power to create happiness. You the people have the power to make life free and beautiful, to make this life a wonderful adventure. Then in the name of democracy let’s use that power. Let us all unite. Let us fight for a new world, a decent world that will give men a chance to work, that will give you the future and old age and security. Let us fight to free the world, to do away with national barriers, do away with greed, with hate and intolerance. Let us fight for a world of reason, a world where science and progress will lead to all men’s happiness. Let us all unite!” More in this stirring excerpt from Charlie Chaplin’s celebrated film “The Great Dictator.” { read more }

Be The Change

How can we cultivate the power to make life free and beautiful?

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Awakin Weekly: How Caterpillar Turns Into A Butterfly

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
How Caterpillar Turns Into A Butterfly
by Norie Huddle

[Listen to Audio!]

2462.jpgIf you kneel down on the ground and look at a caterpillar very carefully,
you’d probably think he’s a pretty nice furry fellow
with a rather boring life.
And you would be right.

BUT …
the caterpillar does have one big surprise for you,
which is the story of how he becomes a butterfly.

For most of his life
all our caterpillar does is crawl around on leaves and plants,
up and down, down and up, up and down,
eating and eating and eating.
Yum, yum, yum.

Until one day, our furry little caterpillar starts to spin long silky threads!
All around himself he weaves a beautiful little chrysalis
Round and round and round and round and round
until he is completed surrounded by strong silken walls.

After our caterpillar has finished weaving his chrysalis,
there start to appear in his body
cells that have never been there before.

The caterpillar’s new cells are called ‘imaginal cells.
They are so totally different from the caterpillar cells
that his immune system thinks they are enemies… and gobbles them up.

But these new imaginal cells continue to appear. More and more of them!
Pretty soon, the caterpillar’s immune system
cannot destroy them fast enough.

More and more of the imaginal cells survive.
And then an amazing thing happens!
The little tiny lonely imaginal cells start to clump together
into friendly little groups.
They all resonate together at the same frequency,
passing information from one to another.

Then, after awhile, another amazing thing happens!
The clumps of imaginal cells start to cluster together!
A long string of clumping and clustering imaginal cells,
all resonating at the same frequency,
all passing information from one to another there inside the chrysalis.
Then at some point,
the entire long string of imaginal cells
suddenly realizes all together
that it is something different from the caterpillar.

Something new! Something wonderful!
…and in that realization
is the shout of the birth of the butterfly!

Since the butterfly now "knows" that it is a butterfly,
the little tiny imaginal cells
no longer have to do all those things individual cells must do.
Now they are part of a multi-celled organism—
A FAMILY who can share the work.
Each new butterfly cell can take on a different job—

There is something for everyone to do.
And everyone is important.
And each cell begins to do just that very thing it is most drawn to do.
And every other cell encourages it to do just that.
A great way to organize a butterfly!

About the Author: Norie Huddle has written seven published books on environmental issues and on transforming humanity. Growing up in the woods of northern Virginia, doing a 9-month, 5000-mile bicycle trip across America, and now living in Ecuador have been been formative experiences for her. Above passage is from her 1990 book, Butterfly.

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How Caterpillar Turns Into A Butterfly
How do you relate to the process of transformation of the caterpillar into a butterfly as a metaphor for your own journey? Can you share an experience where you could see your own emergence as similar to the butterfly’s emergence? What helps you recognize that you are constantly emerging from your past caterpillar self into your present butterfly self?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: The central message of the story of the Caterpillar TurningInto A Butterfly is the story of transformation and emergence of ourselves as we travel in our life’sjourney. We all change. Nothing rema…
David Doane wrote: I can identify with the caterpillar that transforms into a butterfly. The caterpillar went through major transformation inside the chrysalis and then broke out as abutterfly. I too have gone through m…
Elaine Gotfryd Noonan wrote: The caterpillar intuitively knows it must change in order to evolve. Voila the chrysalis. Voila .. imaginal cells thrive ( no matter what the outdated " caterpillar" thoughts) .The power of …
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Global call with Joan Blades!
513.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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