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Archive for 2020

The Beauty in Breaking

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 27, 2020

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The Beauty in Breaking

God breaks the heart again and again and again until it stays open.

– Michele Harper –

The Beauty in Breaking

Michele Harper is a female, African American emergency room physician in a profession that is predominantly male and white. In her new book, “The Beauty in Breaking,” she explores the themes of race, gender, injustice and hope — and in doing so shares the story of how her own healing emerged through a life lived in service of others. Read an excerpt from the book here. { read more }

Be The Change

Kintsugi is an art born out of brokenness. Read more about it in this beautiful piece: The Golden Joinery of Love. { more }

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The Wayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 26, 2020

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The Wayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World

What is even more astonishing is that the entire science of wayfinding is based on dead reckoning. You only know where you are by knowing precisely where you have been and how you got to where you are.

– Wade Davis –

The Wayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World

Wade Davis, anthropologist and passionate scholar of indigenous cultures that span the globe, shares the value of learning from these dynamic, living societies, as we face the challenges threatening the earth. He takes us on a journey to “the heart of the world” and asks the question, “What does it actually mean for a people to believe that the earth is resonant and alive and responsive to their desires and that they themselves have a reciprocal obligation to that landscape?” { read more }

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How can you re-imagine your part in the human story as beyond business as usual?

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One Love

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Spotlight On Kindness: “Scorched, But Still Standing”

California wildfires impacted over a million acres this week. Though feared destroyed, most of the ancient redwoods at the oldest state park withstood the blaze. Among the survivors is a 2,000-year-old tree known as the “Mother of the Forest.” One newspaper headline read, “Scorched, But Still Standing.” Even during their hardship, these elders seem to be teaching us about resiliency? –Guri

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Editor’s Note: California wildfires impacted over a million acres this week. Though feared destroyed, most of the ancient redwoods at the oldest state park withstood the blaze. Among the survivors is a 2,000-year-old tree known as the “Mother of the Forest.” One newspaper headline read, “Scorched, But Still Standing.” Even during their hardship, these elders seem to be teaching us about resiliency? –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
NBC News reports shares more on Big Basin Redwood State. “When forest fires, windstorms and lightning hit redwood trees, those that don’t topple can resprout. The forest is not gone. It will regrow.”
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
From the giant redwoods to this little ten-year-old — in a small act of kindness towards a complete stranger, this young girl reveals her gigantic heart.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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What Trauma Taught Me About Resilience
Hugs In this profoundly moving TEDx talk, Charles Hunt talks about growing up against all odds. And realizing that resilience can be learned, and is critical to happiness and success.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
“Why do some people bounce back from adversity and misfortune? Why do others fall apart? Find out which character strengths make all the difference — and how you can develop them yourself.” The 5 Best Ways to Build Resiliency
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Beyond Hope: Letting Go of a World in Collapse

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August 25, 2020

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Beyond Hope: Letting Go of a World in Collapse

If you’re right and you know it, speak your mind. Speak your mind. Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is still the truth.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

Beyond Hope: Letting Go of a World in Collapse

“The rapid acceleration of violent events around the globe: the uprising of religious fundamentalism, xenophobia, homophobia, speciesism, misogyny, societal breakdown, mass animal die-offs, the unparalleled disintegration of the cryosphere, and the rapid decay of our very biosphere; it all weighs heavy on my mind and heart. There is no denying that we are living through what scientists are calling, the 6th Great Extinction Event. These are indeed unprecedented times.[…] The bottom line is that I don’t write for comfort. I don’t write to make friends. I don’t write to preserve the status quo. I write to rattle cages until the locks fall off. I write to demolish old paradigms. I write to give voice to the voiceless: animals, Earth, and the Soul. I write to make hearts bleed with grief, and heal from Self reclamation. I write to shock, anger, irritate, and destroy the ignorance of antiquated belief systems. I write to bring light to the critical conversations that are swept under the rug and spotlight the cracks in our consciousness that have separated us from life.”More in this excerpt from Deb Ozarko’s book, ‘Beyond Hope.’ { read more }

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For more inspiration, join a special call this week with Deb Ozarko. More details and RSVP info here.

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Awakin Weekly: The Wisdom Of Uncertainty

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Wisdom Of Uncertainty
by Jack Kornfield

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tow3.jpgOne day Ajahn Chah held up a beautiful Chinese tea cup, “To me this cup is already broken. Because I know its fate, I can enjoy it fully here and now. And when it’s gone, it’s gone.” When we understand the truth of uncertainty and relax, we become free.

The broken cup helps us see beyond our illusion of control. When we commit ourselves to raising a child, building a business, creating a work of art, or righting an injustice, some measure of failure as well as success will be ours. This is a fierce teaching. Margaret is an aid worker whose clinic in Kosovo was burned to the ground, yet she began again. She knows that her work is helping people through success and failure. Emilee, who lost her most promising math student to a gang shooting, was broken-hearted. But she doesn’t regret having tutored him and now she is tutoring several others in his honor.

We may lose our best piece of pottery in the firing, the charter school we work so hard to create may fold, our start up business may go under, our children may develop problems beyond our control. If we only focus on the results, we will be devastated. But if we know the cup is broken, we can give our best to the process, create what we can and trust the larger process of life itself. We can plan, we can care for, tend and respond. But we cannot control. Instead we take a breath, and open to what is unfolding, where we are. This is a profound shift, from holding on, to letting go. As Suzuki Roshi says, “When we understand the truth of impermanence and find our composure in it, there we find ourselves in Nirvana.”

When people asked Ajahn Chah questions about enlightenment or what happens at death or whether meditation would heal their illness, or whether Buddhist teachings could be practiced equally by westerners, he would smile and say “It’s uncertain, isn’t it?” Chögyam Trungpa called this uncertainty “groundlessness.” With the wisdom of uncertainty, Ajahn Chah could simply relax. Around him was an enormous sense of ease. He didn’t hold his breath or try to manipulate events. He responded to the situation at hand. When a senior western nun left the Buddhist order to become a born again Christian missionary, and then returned to the monastery to try to convert her old friends, many were upset. “How could she do this?” Confused, they asked Ajahn Chah about her. He responded with a laugh, “Maybe she’s right.” With these words, everyone relaxed. When called for, Ajahn Chah could plan the construction of a great temple or oversee the network of over 100 monasteries started by his monks. When disciplining misbehaving monks, he could be decisive, demanding and stern. But there was a spaciousness around all these actions, as if he could turn to you a moment later and smile – like a wink – and say, “It’s uncertain, isn’t it?” He was living proof of the secret of life described in the Bhagavad Gita, “to act well without attachment to the fruits of your actions.”

The trust expressed by Ajahn Chah comes whenever our consciousness rests in the eternal present. “From where I sit,” he said, “nobody comes and no one goes.” “In the middle way, there is no one who is strong or weak, young or old, no one who is born and no one who dies. This is the unconditioned. The heart is free.” The ancient Zen masters call this enlightenment “the trusting mind.” The Zen texts explain how to do so, “To live in Trusting Mind is to be without anxiety about non-perfection.” The world is ‘imperfect.’ Instead of struggling to perfect the world, we relax, we rest in the uncertainty. Then we can act with compassion and we give our best. Without attachment to the outcome, we bring fearlessness and trust to any circumstances.

About the Author: Jack Kornfield is the meditation teacher, and author of various books. Excerpt above is from his book, The Wise Heart.

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The Wisdom Of Uncertainty
What does the ‘wisdom of uncertainty’ mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to lean into the wisdom of uncertainty and accept non-perfection? What helps you live in the ‘Trusting Mind’?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Knowing and accepting tha fact that the cup of my life is going to be broken one day and not to get hung up or chained by the fear of uncertainty is the way of living fully. This is my understanding o…
David Doane wrote: The wisdom of uncertainty is that there is no certainty. That is a basic fact of life and to accept it is to avoid a lot of grief. I always have some amount of awareness of uncertainty which helps me …
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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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Teaching to Transgress: bell hooks on Education

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 24, 2020

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Teaching to Transgress: bell hooks on Education

…to begin always anew, to make, to reconstruct, and to not spoil, to refuse to bureaucratize the mind, to understand and
to live life as a process –live to become…

– Paulo Freire –

Teaching to Transgress: bell hooks on Education

“My hope emerges from those places of struggle where I witness individuals positively transforming their lives and the world around them. Educating is always a vocation rooted in hopefulness. As teachers we believe that learning is possible, that nothing can keep an open mind from seeking after knowledge and finding a way to know.” This piece explores bell hooks’ inspiring perspectives on education, and explores her contributions within the context of her biography and work. { read more }

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For more inspiration, check out bell hooks book, “Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom.” { more }

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The Waters of Heterodoxy

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 23, 2020

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The Waters of Heterodoxy

For whatever we lose (like a you or a me),
It’s always our self we find in the sea.

– e.e. cummings –

The Waters of Heterodoxy

“In The Fourth Phase of Water, Gerald Pollack [an award-winning and highly acclaimed professor) offers an elegant new theory of water chemistry that has profound implications not only for chemistry and biology, but for the metaphoric foundation of our understanding of reality and our treatment of nature.[…] The Fourth Phase of Water contributes to a much larger paradigm shift that is proceeding across all the sciences, and indeed to a transition in the defining mythology of our civilization. In science alone, the implications of his findings, if verified, are profound, especially in areas like cell biology, plant physiology, chemical signaling, and of course medicine. Beyond that, they erode the story that we live in a dead universe of generic substances, that we, the sole intelligence of that universe, are therefore its rightful lords and masters. Pollack is part of the evolution of science toward a more shamanic worldview that understands that all things possess some kind of beingness.” Charles Eisenstein shares more in this essay. { read more }

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For more inspiration check out this fascinating interview: “Living Water”. { more }

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Expanding the Spirit of Democracy

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August 22, 2020

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Expanding the Spirit of Democracy

We suffer, ironically, from our indifference to those among us who suffer.

– Parker J. Palmer –

Expanding the Spirit of Democracy

“How might we unlock hope in an expansive spirit of democracy for present and future generations in this time of upheaval? As the underside of American society is being revealed and the stark inequities and racial prejudices made manifest, we are called to reflect on what brought us to this disturbing state of affairs. With shock and recrimination we are responding to the truth of our history and the entrenched habits of structural racism along with economic inequity. This history is revealing itself in the consequences of brutal slavery and Jim Crow laws, the near extermination of Native Americans, subsequent theft of land and banishment to reservations, the ongoing history of discrimination against Latinx, Asian, and immigrant communities, and the endless overseas wars and militarization of our society at the expense of the wellbeing of humans and nature.” Mary Evelyn Tucker shares her thoughts about the future of democracy in this pivotal moment. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read “5 Habits to Heal the Heart of Democracy,” by Parker Palmer. { more }

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The Phone Call

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 21, 2020

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The Phone Call

The first duty of love is to listen.

– Paul Tillich –

The Phone Call

In 1992 Auburn Sandstrom was 29, the mother of a three-year-old son, caught in an abusive marriage and an addict. One night she hit rock bottom. She was writhing in pain on the floor of her filthy apartment wrestling with withdrawal from a drug she had been addicted to for several years. In her hand, she gripped a ragged piece of paper with a phone number of a counselor her mother had mailed to her in a rare moment of connection. In total despair, Sandstrom called the number. It rang. A man answered. { read more }

Be The Change

How can you be fully present for a loved on or stranger today?

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The Phone Call

This week’s inspiring video: The Phone Call
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Aug 20, 2020
The Phone Call

The Phone Call

In 1992 Auburn Sandstrom was 29, the mother of a three-year-old son, caught in an abusive marriage and an addict. One night she hit rock bottom. She was writhing in pain on the floor of her filthy apartment wrestling with withdrawal from a drug she had been addicted to for several years. In her hand, she gripped a ragged piece of paper with a phone number of a counselor her mother had mailed to her in a rare moment of connection. In total despair, Sandstrom called the number. It rang. A man answered.
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