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Archive for 2020

What We Get Wrong About Time

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DailyGood News That Inspires

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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“A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.” –Winston Churchill
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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
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
This story starts with two men in a friendly competition. Scott learned to bake from scratch after being furloughed from his job. His friend Jeremy challenged him to a bake-off. And so it began.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
Ann knew it would be just her and her husband for Thanksgiving meal this year. However, when she received an offer for a fantastic deal from the supermarket, she did not decline the opportunity.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Keeping Family History Alive
Hugs Since 1926, the Quander family has been coming together for a family reunion every year. This StoryCorps clip shares how they find ways of keeping family history alive today.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Research says that it’s bringing fathers closer to children, in a positive side effect of the pandemic lockdown. A Harvard survey of parents found that 68% of fathers in the United States say they now feel closer to their kids. Read the full article HERE.
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Deciphering Words in the Woods

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DailyGood News That Inspires

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 }

Be The Change

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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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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Let’s Be Well: A Video Game Born From a Child’s Grief

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November 23, 2020

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Let's Be Well: A Video Game Born From a Child's Grief

We bereaved are not alone. We belong to the largest company in all the world — the company of those who have known suffering

– Helen Keller –

Let’s Be Well: A Video Game Born From a Child’s Grief

Paula Toledo was the mother of a two-year old, and a two-week-old baby when she lost her husband to mental illness and suicide. In the wake of that devastating loss, “I felt the most important thing I could do was to care for myself and my children. And so I did — albeit, while I laid in the dirt. Instead of clawing my way out, I decided to surrender and play there with my young children. Insulated by the love of my sons, we all found wonder in our creations. Instead of sand castles, we built hospitals and ambulances.It became obvious to me that my children were expressing their grief.” Less than a decade later, Toledo’s son Luke created “Let’s Be Well,” an innovative video game that demystifies mental illness and nurtures well-being. { read more }

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Learn more about Luke and Let’s Be Well here. { more }

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How to Love a Country

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 22, 2020

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How to Love a Country

We’re the promise of one people, one breath declaring to one another: I see you. I need you. I am you.

– Richard Blanco –

How to Love a Country

The Cuban American civil engineer turned writer, Richard Blanco, straddles the many ways a sense of place merges with human emotion to make home and belonging — personal and communal. The most recent — and very resonant — question he’s asked by way of poetry is: how to love a country? At Chautauqua, Krista Tippett invited him to speak and read from his books. Blanco’s wit, thoughtfulness, and elegance captivated the crowd.” { read more }

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For more inspiration check out this powerful photo essay: “Portraits of Refugees Posing with their Most Valued Possessions.” { more }

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A War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 21, 2020

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A War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina

You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream.

– C.S. Lewis –

A War Orphan Who Became a Ballerina

Michaela DePrince is “the ballerina who flies.” Orphaned at age three in war-torn Sierra Leone, DePrince was malnourished and sick when she and her “mat-mate” at the orphanage were adopted by Elaine and Charles DePrince of New Jersey. Inspired by a photograph of a ballerina in a magazine, DePrince trained as a ballet dancer and is now with the Dance Theater of Harlem. “I think no matter where you come from and what you’ve been through, having a loving family and support is all you need to achieve your goals.” { read more }

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What goal or dream is most alive in your heart at this time? Take a step towards it today.

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Praying for the Earth

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November 20, 2020

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Praying for the Earth

When the earth is sick and dying,
There will come a tribe of people
From all races
Who will put their faith in deeds,
Not words, and make the planet
Green again.

– Cree Prophecy –

Praying for the Earth

“The earth needs our prayers more that we know. It needs us to acknowledge its sacred nature, that it is not just something to use and dispose. Many of us know the effectiveness of prayers for others, how healing and help is given, even in the most unexpected ways. There are many ways to pray for the earth. It can be helpful first to acknowledge that it is not unfeeling matter but a living being that has given us life. And then we can sense its suffering: the physical suffering we see in the dying species and polluted waters, the deeper suffering of our collective disregard for its sacred nature. Would we like to be treated just as a physical object to be used and abused? Would we like our sacred nature, our soul, to be denied?” Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee shares more in this moving piece. { read more }

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What is your prayer for the Earth?

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The Honorable Harvest

This week’s inspiring video: The Honorable Harvest
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Nov 19, 2020
The Honorable Harvest

The Honorable Harvest

We humans are members of the Universe who must take life in order to live our own lives. How do we learn to honor and respect the countless lives that sustain us? We can begin with please and thank you. Listen as Robin Wall Kimmerer gently shares the wisdom of the honorable harvest.
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