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Archive for December, 2020

Top 10 Insights from the Science of a Meaningful Life

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December 24, 2020

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Top 10 Insights from the Science of a Meaningful Life

Love is our true destiny. We do not find the meaning of life by ourselves alone — we find it with another.

– Thomas Merton –

Top 10 Insights from the Science of a Meaningful Life

“This year’s top insights speak to the moment, from concrete tips about how to bond with a friend to broader truths about how societies respond to diversity over time. All of them point toward strengths and solutions amid isolation, illness, and conflict. The final insights were selected by experts on our staff, after soliciting nominations from our network of more than 300 researchers. We hope they remind you how we’re all connected–and perhaps bring you a little bit of hope.” The following offering comes from the team at Greater Good. { read more }

Be The Change

As this tumultuous year draws to a close, reflect on what it has revealed to you about life and its meaning.

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Spotlight On Kindness: What Gives Us Meaning

As we near the end of a life-defining year, it feels natural to take inventory of our own lives. It’s plausible that what seems significant today might not have been on our radars last December. I’m truly inspired by the people featured this week, who find meaning and purpose with reckless abandon wherever they are. I hope these stories also help you find your inner compass. –Guri

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“You experience your soul each time you sense yourself as more than a mind and body, your life as meaningful, or you feel that you have gifts to give and you long to give them.” -Gary Zukav
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Editor’s Note: As we near the end of a life-defining year, it feels natural to take inventory of our own lives. It’s plausible that what seems significant today might not have been on our radars last December. I’m truly inspired by the people featured this week, who find meaning and purpose with reckless abandon wherever they are. I hope these stories also help you find your inner compass. –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Every year, Margarita Montanez, a grandmother of 12, makes tamales around the holidays. This year, she made over 800 tamales for a group of healthcare workers in California who saved her life.
Read More
Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
To spread cheer, she placed “kindness rocks” of hope around her town. She thought it was an unsuccessful attempt to bring joy, but it turned into much more as she learned about others’ responses.
Read More
Inspiring Video of the Week
Serve all
Play
Former homeless man gets in holiday spirit by dancing
Hugs Against all odds, one man’s spirit shines through. Three times a day, Traylor puts on a Santa hat, grabs a tambourine, and sets off dancing from his apartment in downtown LA.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
The age-old question, what gives our life meaning? The Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley features Top 10 Insights from the “Science of a Meaningful Life” in 2020.
The first insight explores how rich and varied experiences may be an overlooked key to a good life.
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Winter Solstice: Blessing for the Longest Night

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December 23, 2020

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Winter Solstice: Blessing for the Longest Night

There will be time enough for running. For rushing. For worrying. For pushing. For now, stay. Wait. Something is on the horizon.

– Jan Richardson –

Winter Solstice: Blessing for the Longest Night

“This week, in addition to preparing for Christmas Eve and Christmas Day services, many congregations will offer a “Longest Night” or “Blue Christmas” service. Usually held on or near the Winter Solstice, this gathering provides a space for those who are having a difficult time during the holidays or simply need to acknowledge some pain or loss they are carrying in the midst of this season of celebration.”From author and artist, Jan Richardson comes this poetic, timely and universal offering:”Blessing for the Longest Night.” { read more }

Be The Change

Blessings are meant to be shared. Share this one with a special someone in your life.

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Learning to Love Winter’s Night

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December 22, 2020

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Learning to Love Winter's Night

Wait without thought, for you are not ready for thought: So the darkness shall be the light, and the stillness the dancing.

– T.S. Eliot –

Learning to Love Winter’s Night

“I have put on good attitudes before and found ways of accepting situations –thankfully, I found ways out of some–while creating the semblance of normalcy. But for me, a change of attitude wasn’t enough. It didn’t go deep enough. It wasn’t always reliable. In order to live happily in Toronto, I needed to be able to love deeply, loving the people who live here and the place where I live. And especially, I needed to be able to know the dark, maybe even to love it.” Barbara Wright George shares more in this excerpt from her book, “Learning to Love: On the Way to Experience.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this short video on “Why We Need Darkness.” { more }

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Awakin Weekly: An Unusual Gift From My Grandfather

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
An Unusual Gift From My Grandfather
by Rachel Naomi Remen

[Listen to Audio!]

2376.jpgOften, when he came to visit, my grandfather would bring me a present. These were never the sorts of things that other people brought, dolls and books and stuffed animals. My dolls and stuffed animals have been gone for more than half a century, but many of my grandfather’s gifts are with me still.

Once he brought me a little paper cup. I looked inside it expecting something special. It was full of dirt. I was not allowed to play with dirt. Disappointed, I told him this. He smiled at me fondly. Turning, he picked up the little teapot from my dolls’ tea set and took me to the kitchen where he filled it with water. Back in the nursery, he put the little cup on the windowsill and handed me the teapot. "If you promise to put some water in the cup every day, something may happen," he told me.

At the time, I was four years old and my nursery was on the sixth floor of an apartment building in Manhattan. This whole thing made no sense to me at all. I looked at him dubiously. He nodded with encouragement. "Every day, Neshume-le," he told me.

And so I promised. At first, curious to see what would happen, I did not mind doing this. But as the days went by and nothing changed, it got harder and harder to remember to put water in the cup. After a week, I asked my grandfather if it was time to stop yet. Shaking his head no, he said, "Every day, Neshume-le." The second week was even harder, and I became resentful of my promise to put water in the cup. When my grandfather came again, I tried to give it back to him but he refused to take it, saying simply, "Every day, Neshume-le." By the third week, I began to forget to put water in the cup. Often I would remember only after I had been put to bed and would have to get out of bed and water it in the dark. But I did not miss a single day. And one morning, there were two little green leaves that had not been there the night before.

I was completely astonished. Day by day they got bigger. I could not wait to tell my grandfather, certain that he would be as surprised as I was. But of course, he was not. Carefully he explained to me that life is everywhere, hidden in the most ordinary and unlikely places. I was delighted. "And all it needs is water, Grandpa?" I asked him. Gently he touched me on the top of my head. "No, Neshume-le," he said. "All it needs is your faithfulness."

This was perhaps my first lesson in the power of service, but I did not understand it in this way then. My grandfather would not have used these words. He would have said that we need to remember to bless the life around us and the life within us. He would have said when we remember we can bless life, we can repair the world.

About the Author: Rachel Naomi Remen is a best-author of many books. Excert above is from her book, My Grandfather’s Blessings.

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An Unusual Gift From My Grandfather
How do you relate to the notion that all life needs is our faithfulness? Can you share a personal story of a time you felt the world repairing when you remembered to bless life? What helps you remember to bless the life around you and within you?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: This story narrated by the grand daughter is very timely as we are approaching the gift-giving Christmas time. The conventionalway of buying gifts is so terribly time consuming and people feel confuse…
David Doane wrote: To bless means to recognize and honor the sacredness of something. I believe life needs more than faithfulness. Life needs the circumstances that support it. For example, valuing and supporting the ex…
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Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and rippled out as Awakin Circles in 80+ living rooms around the globe. To join in Santa Clara this week, RSVP online.

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Some Good News

• Wislawa Szymborska: Life-While-You-Wait
• Gazing Into The Heart of Perfection
• A Case for Wonder

Video of the Week

• Tashi and the Monk

Kindness Stories

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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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A Case for Wonder

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 21, 2020

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A Case for Wonder

Dwell on the beauty of life. Watch the stars, and see yourself running with them.

– Marcus Aurelius –

A Case for Wonder

“Karl Barth once described theology as ‘necessarily the logic of wonders,’ and the same ‘logic’ should suffuse education. If we can cultivate the capacity for wonder in ourselves, and if we can foster it in others, then we might step into a more compelling and magical world. Inhabiting such a place would grant us a particular kind of grace, in which the familiar would never grow old, the unfamiliar would burn with sudden brilliance, and our lessons would never be finished.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this excerpt: “Wonder: When and Why the World Appears Radiant.” { more }

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The Land Has Memory

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 20, 2020

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The Land Has Memory

Injustices started when we began to lose our relationship to nature and treat it just as a resource to be commodified.

– Cherrie Moraga –

The Land Has Memory

“The denial and fear of death makes possession, possessiveness, and overconsumption possible. If we would just pull back a bit, slow down, and ask the “why” of each of our actions, based on the utter assurance of death, we would all be better off environmentally.” Playwright, poet, and essayist Cherrie Moraga sees the world as a place where the body knows and “the land has memory.” “Her writings have shaped fundamental aspects of contemporary woman of color feminist thought, including debates on ethnic nationalism, indigeneity, sexuality, and social justice. In addition to her plays and essay collections, she was coeditor with Gloria Anzaldua of the landmark feminist collection This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color.” More in this interview.” { read more }

Be The Change

Make time to explore the memories of the land you currently live on.

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Lydia Fairhall Amplifies Love

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 19, 2020

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Lydia Fairhall Amplifies Love

I really believe we are meant to feel loved, we’re meant to feel connected, we’re meant to feel like we belong together.

– Lydia Fairhall –

Lydia Fairhall Amplifies Love

“Lydia Fairhall has lived many lives in this one life. She is a Worimi woman, born on Bundjalung country, now living between the Kulin nations and Gubbi Gubbi country. From experiencing trauma in early life to an art-filled, soulful adult life as a mother, producer, executive, singer/songwriter and custodian of ancient wisdom, Lydia is the embodiment of compassionate resilience.” More in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Do something to tend to the wellness of yourself and someone else today.

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Tashi and the Monk

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December 18, 2020

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Tashi and the Monk

Hospitality is not to change people, but to offer them space where change can take place.

– Henri Nouwen –

Tashi and the Monk

On a remote mountaintop, former Buddhist monk Lobsang Phuntsok attempts to heal his own childhood abandonment by adopting 85 unwanted children and raising them with love and compassion at Jhamtse Gatsal, a children’s community in the foothills of the Himalayas. This film, directed by Andrew Hinton and Johnny Burke, follows Jhamtse’s newest arrival, a wild and troubled 5-year-old girl named Tashi, as she learns what love is and how it can help her to heal. { read more }

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How might you show more love and compassion to the “uninvited guests of the universe” in your own community?

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Tashi and the Monk

This week’s inspiring video: Tashi and the Monk
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Video of the Week

Dec 17, 2020
Tashi and the Monk

Tashi and the Monk

On a remote mountaintop, former Buddhist monk Lobsang Phuntsok attempts to heal his own childhood abandonment by adopting 85 unwanted children and raising them with love and compassion at Jhamtse Gatsal, a children’s community in the foothills of the Himalayas. This film, directed by Andrew Hinton and Johnny Burke, follows Jhamtse’s newest arrival, a wild and troubled 5-year-old girl named Tashi, as she learns what love is and how it can help her to heal.
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