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Archive for 2020

Embracing Holy Envy

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 14, 2020

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Embracing Holy Envy

We must embrace more holy envy and less unholy ignorance.

– Robert Azzi –

Embracing Holy Envy

“In 1985, Lutheran Bishop Krister Stendahl, in defending the building of a Mormon temple by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Stockholm, enunciated “Three Rules of Religious Understanding:” “When trying to understand another religion, you should ask the adherents of that religion and not its enemies.”‘Don’t compare your best to their worst,” and:
“Leave room for holy envy.” Stendahl challenges us to be open to recognizing elements in other religions–even those that may appear foreign or threatening–and to consider how we might wish to support, embrace, emulate or further explore those elements that might help us to deepen our understanding of our own religious traditions and more deeply connect to others: to embrace ‘holy envy.'” { read more }

Be The Change

For more insight, here is an NPR article on Barbara Taylor Bradford’s book ‘Holy Envy’. { more }

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Do Not Lose Heart — We Were Made for These Times

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 13, 2020

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Do Not Lose Heart -- We Were Made for These Times

Struggling souls catch light from other souls who are fully lit and willing to show it. If you would help to calm the tumult, this is one of the strongest things you can do.

– Clarissa Pinkola Estes –

Do Not Lose Heart — We Were Made for These Times

Clarissa Pinkola Estes stirringly invites us to embrace the moment we are in with all of its fear, uncertainty, and turmoil. She says, “I too have felt despair many times in my life, but I do not keep a chair for it…In any dark time, there is a tendency to veer toward fainting over how much is wrong or unmended in the world. Do not focus on that. Do not make yourself ill with overwhelm.” This passage calls us to constructive action — and recalls us to our deepest purpose. { read more }

Be The Change

What is your response to times of great challenge? What would it look like in your life to be “fully lit and willing to show it”?

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Why the World Needs Sharks

This week’s inspiring video: Why the World Needs Sharks
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Video of the Week

Mar 12, 2020
Why the World Needs Sharks

Why the World Needs Sharks

For many, an image of a shark conjures up feelings of fear and trepidation, often perpetuated by negative media portrayals and news stories. But for conservationist Ocean Ramsey, sharks are highly evolved, intelligent creatures that help maintain balance in underwater ecosystems. In this compelling TEDx Talk, Ocean describes what she’s come to learn through getting up close and personal with this often-feared predator and how we can take action to prevent their widespread decimation.
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The Longest Night

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 12, 2020

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The Longest Night

I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.

– Sarah Williams –

The Longest Night

Winter Solstice, the longest night of the year, has a parallel in the tale of days we call our lives. During a dark time it can be hard to remember the warmth and joy that also comes and goes. This lovely animated poem reminds us to keep taking one step at a time toward the coming light. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider what helps you remember the times of light with “memories warm and spirits lighter”. Share your light with someone you know going through a dark time.

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The Slow Joy of Jane Hirshfield’s Ledger

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March 11, 2020

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The Slow Joy of Jane Hirshfield's Ledger

We cannot let our ideas blind us to our unknowing.

– Jane Hirschfield –

The Slow Joy of Jane Hirshfield’s Ledger

“”It’s such a slow joy,” says poet Jane Hirshfield, about the work of revising a poem. We’ve just left the trailhead for a hike on what she calls the “hem” of Mount Tamalpais. Already were deep in conversation about how Hirshfield produces the wise and tender poems that fill her nine poetry collections, including the newly-published Ledger.”” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read Jane Hirschfield’s piece on, “Living By Questions.” { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Giving With Love

Thoreau said that “the hero is commonly the simplest and obscurest of men”. We often feel we don’t have much to offer, especially when life has thrown many challenges our way. But, as in the story below, a simple janitor in a school in India who had only small thrown-away pencils to give materially, was able to give infinitely with the heart to show us the true meaning of love and heroism. -Ameeta

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Editor’s Note: Thoreau said that “the hero is commonly the simplest and obscurest of men”. We often feel we don’t have much to offer, especially when life has thrown many challenges our way. But, as in the story below, a simple janitor in a school in India who had only small thrown-away pencils to give materially, was able to give infinitely with the heart to show us the true meaning of love and heroism. -Ameeta
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
A golfer earns a spot in the Arnold Palmer Invitational after missing a putt due to a distraction caused by an audience member. His kindness after losing turned out to be a winning putt.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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A KindSpringer stopped to help a man change a flat tire on the side of the road. Afterwards, he reflected on why he doesn’t stop more often to help and connect with someone.
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Hugs When a 5-year-old from California heard that some parents were behind on lunch payments, she decided to take action and raised enough to pay off her entire district’s lunch debt.
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Read this incredibly humbling lesson from a simple sweeper woman – it matters not what you give, but the amount of love you put into that giving.
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20-Year Reforestation Project Plants 2.7 Million Trees

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March 10, 2020

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20-Year Reforestation Project Plants 2.7 Million Trees

We have now felled forest enough everywhere, in many districts far too much. Let us restore this one element of material life to its normal proportions, and devise means for maintaining the permanence of its relations to the fields, the meadows and the pastures, to the rain and the dews of heaven, to the springs and rivulets with which it waters down the earth.

– George Perkins Marsh (in 1864 –

20-Year Reforestation Project Plants 2.7 Million Trees

“When celebrated Brazilian photographer Sebastiao Salgado took over family land in the state of Minas Gerais, instead of the tropical paradise that he remembered as a child, he found the trees cut down and the wildlife gone. He was devastated. It was 1994 and he had just returned from a traumatic assignment reporting on the genocide in Rwanda. “The land was as sick as I was — everything was destroyed,” Salgado told The Guardian. “Only about 0.5% of the land was covered in trees.” Salgado’s wife, Lelia Deluiz Wanick Salgado, had the idea to replant the forest… { read more }

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What are you called to restore –both within yourself and in the world around you?

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Awakin Weekly: I Have No Need For An Enemy

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
I Have No Need For An Enemy
by Troy Chapman

[Listen to Audio!]

2405.jpgIn passing my sentence, the judge said, “There’s no hope that you can ever be rehabilitated.” My sentence of 60-90 years was a tragic and too predictable end of the road I’d been traveling. Quite logically, I considered taking my own life. But in the end, I determined to live. I don’t mean I decided merely not to die, but to really be alive from that point on, to embrace life and find some meaning and truth I could live by and for.

It began with me. I became obsessed with the question of what went wrong and how to set it right. I wanted to know where my brokenness started. Was it mine alone or was I one fracture in a much larger disintegration? […] As I began to wake up, I found myself concerned for other individuals and for us as a whole. I was developing social consciousness, which soon turned into social activism.

This view served me for a while, giving me a sense of moral order. But I soon realized that my activism wasn’t very different from my earlier anger. In fact, my anger had crept back in, only now it was wrapped up in the sense that I was doing good and fighting evil. I hadn’t gotten rid of my anger at all, only justified it. I still had enemies, was still locked in opposition to them, and I still wanted to win, to destroy them. I’d moved from seeking my enemies’ physical destruction to seeking political, intellectual, social, and philosophic destruction, but it was still about enemies. My activism, like my previous thinking, was dualistic.

Over time this dualism gave way to my hunger for simple goodness. The catalyst for this change was nothing more noble than exhaustion. I was simply tired of being angry all the time, tired of waking up every morning to a battle. I needed some rest. This need led me away from easy moral certitude. I developed the ability to see things through the eyes of my enemies. I saw in them the same fear that had so long governed me. The same confusion, the same grasping for security, the same hunger for love. I saw their humanity, and this ruined me as a warrior.

But was this the end of my activism? For a while I thought it was, for who can be an activist without decisively taking sides? How could I fight against prisons when I empathized with the jailers?

I had spent most of my life splitting the world up into two sides, then fighting to defend one against the other. The game had strategies, a clear objective, a field of play, and an opponent. The game has rules and no matter which side we’re on, we’re bound by the rules. The poet Rumi pointed to something beyond this game when he said, “Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing there is a field. I’ll meet you there.”

When I began to see myself in others—even in my enemies—I found myself heading for Rumi’s field. Here the game is not a game. No one wins unless and until everyone wins. The line between victim and perpetrator no longer runs between “I” and “Other.” It now runs right through the center of my soul. I am both, as we are all both.

What then is left to fight for? Where does an out-of-work activist go? Well—God is hiring and God is on the third side. Not the prisoner’s or the jailer’s side. Not the pro-choice or the pro-life side. Not the Left or the Right.

The third side is that little-represented side of healing. It’s the side that cares as much about the enemy as the friend, that says love is the only justice, the only victory there is. It does not want anyone destroyed. It does not want to win if someone else must lose. It wants something much larger than winning and losing.

Asking myself these questions I realized that enemies always serve a purpose. The war relationship is a symbiotic one in which the enemy on one side serves some need within the enemy on the other side, even while both protest this fact and claim they only fight because they have no choice.

I realized I do have a choice. Indeed, the freedom to choose how to respond may be the only total freedom we have. The world outside isn’t within our control, but this freedom always is.

I have no need for an enemy.

About the Author: Excerpted from this an article, published in 2002 in Yes Magazine.

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I Have No Need For An Enemy
How do you relate to the notion that love is the only justice? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to go to the third side of healing? What helps you see yourself in others, even your enemies?
Mariette wrote: Wow… Troy captures the mission of Brilliance Inside: to heal society’s cycle of violence. And it started the same place he did: in prison. I bring love’s healing ways every day into prison a…
Mariette wrote: Ha! Another thought popped in. When my cousin was murdered a few years ago, within 36 hours, I had moved from disbelief all the way to acceptance (with the loving companionate support of maximum-secur…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We see man-created sides in many areas of our life such as social, political, economic and religious. We often draw lines between us and them. The other on the other side becomes our enemy. We fight f…
David Doane wrote: For me, the notion that love is the only justice means love is realizing that we are one, there is no me/us and them, there is only us, and what I do to the so called other, be it hurtful or kind, I d…
Rupai Bhuva wrote: What I summarised out of the passage was that I have an enemy as long as I live in a world with polarity.

The black and white colours represent polarities and when they are merged together, polarit…

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Some Good News

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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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The Wanderer: Earth as Art

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March 9, 2020

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The Wanderer: Earth as Art

The purpose of art is washing the dust of daily life off our souls.

– Pablo Picasso –

The Wanderer: Earth as Art

“There is this one extravaganza, already in production for five million years now, called Earth. Because it is so full of redundancies, so repetitious in its winters and fishes, we feel we have seen enough to get a handle on it; we would like to set out our critique of the planet’s aesthetic merits and failures before we are toast like Tacitus. There was once a critique that it was “very good,” but that was affectionate and antediluvian; it is high time for a dispassionate reassessment of Earth as art.” Amy Leach takes the reader on this dazzling, tongue-in-cheek, magic carpet ride of a piece. { read more }

Be The Change

Using Leach’s essay as a guide and your artistic eye, wander through your area of the Earth.

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Stories of Kindness from Wuhan

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 8, 2020

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Stories of Kindness from Wuhan

In a time of crisis we all have the potential to morph up to a new level and do things we never thought possible.

– Stuart Wilde –

Stories of Kindness from Wuhan

“I want to dedicate a thread to regular Chinese people who stepped up to fill in the gaps, helping fellow citizens in this fight against the #coronavirus. These stories dont make international headlines. But they are still important.” A journalist at qz shares stories of ordinary people and their extraordinary acts of humanity. { read more }

Submitted by: Birju Pandya

Be The Change

Read Rebecca Solnit’s thoughtful perspectives on how disasters can move us from a sense of self-interest to a sense of community. { more }

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