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Archive for January, 2021

10 Ways & 50 Questions to Help Strengthen Democracy

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 10, 2021

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10 Ways & 50 Questions to Help Strengthen Democracy

To safeguard democracy the people must have a keen sense of independence, self-respect, and their oneness.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

10 Ways & 50 Questions to Help Strengthen Democracy

Ken Cloke is a world-recognized mediator, dialogue facilitator, conflict resolution systems designer, teacher and more. Given the political polarization, deep divisiveness and unrest rearing its head in the United States, he recently shared a detailed list of 10 actions that can help us transform autocratic, power-based political conflicts into democratic, collaborative efforts. In addition he offered up a set of 50 questions that can be used in political arguments with friends and family to help make true dialog possible, and more productive. { read more }

Be The Change

Check out the various suggestions in Cloke’s lists. Consider following through on the suggested actions and questions that feel most resonant to you.

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We Must Deepen Our Capacity for Healing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 9, 2021

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We Must Deepen Our Capacity for Healing

Today we acknowledge the shadows, but we lean into the light.

– Carrie Newcomer –

We Must Deepen Our Capacity for Healing

“Today I want to feature some friends of mine who represent the face of love, truth, and justice. Each of them has an upcoming online event that you may want to participate in. People of good will need opportunities like this as we absorb the insurrection and the pandemic rages on.” In the wake of disturbing recent events in America’s capital, community leaders, activists, authors, artists and teachers are speaking up for justice and peace. Here we share timely reflections, resources and inspiration from Parker Palmer, Rhonda Magee, and other voices that DailyGood has featured over the years. { read more }

Be The Change

Check out the resources and perspectives offered in the above piece and share with family and friends whom you think might benefit.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Do What You Can

At the height of the Information Age, the 24-hour news cycle feels like a blessing and a curse. It’s no secret that “bad news” has always dominated the headlines or that humans are highly empathetic to what we see or hear. How do we balance our need to be informed and contribute at a broader scale? And yet, ensure that it doesn’t stifle our ability to do what we can, where we are? –Guri

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“Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” -Reinhold Niebuhr
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Editor’s Note: At the height of the Information Age, the 24-hour news cycle feels like a blessing and a curse. It’s no secret that “bad news” has always dominated the headlines or that humans are highly empathetic to what we see or hear. How do we balance our need to be informed and contribute at a broader scale? And yet, ensure that it doesn’t stifle our ability to do what we can, where we are? –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
UPS Driver Anthony Gaskin often delivers 180 packages a day, always with a wave and a smile. Here’s the heart-warming story of how the neighborhood comes together to celebrate what he means to them.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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How often do we miss an opportunity to help someone out? This KindSpringer made sure that she didn’t and went out of her way to help a stranded 19-year-old.
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Bon Jovi – Do What You Can
Hugs This song is an oldie but goodie, a great reminder: “‘Round here, we bend but don’t break. Down here, we all understand, when you can’t do what you do, you do what you can.”
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Every January, we share our favorite top 10 most inspiring kindness stories of the past year. It’s never easy to highlight just ten, and this year was no different given the outpouring of the human spirit due to the pandemic. HERE’S OUR TOP 10 FOR 2020!
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Processing What Happened at the US Capitol

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 8, 2021

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Processing What Happened at the US Capitol

We will not end white-body supremacy– or any form of human evil–by trying to tear it to pieces. Instead, we can offer people better ways to belong and better things to belong to.

– Resmaa Menakem –

Processing What Happened at the US Capitol

Resmaa Menakem national expert on cultural trauma joins the executive director of African American Child Wellness Institute, and 2020 Minnesota Teacher of the year in this powerful in-depth dialog around the violence and chaos that erupted this Wednesday, when a mob that included white supremacists stormed the US Capitol. How did it come to this? And what do these times demand from ordinary citizens? In the midst of this unprecedented turmoil these three voices offer crucial perspectives, and respond in real-time to distraught callers. { read more }

Be The Change

How are you processing these events? How are you discussing this with family and friends? Learn more about the tools that Menakem offers, including a free Racialized Trauma e-course. { more }

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Deepcasting in a Broadcast World (+ 3 Pods!)

Incubator of compassionate action.

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2021 has arrived.
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In 2020, the most commonly searched keyword on Google was "why". Whether it is the rise of dawn or setting of dusk, this feels like the time to come together, evolve, build bridges and share our strengths to lift up the common good.
g3_gate.jpg Last January, we had just hosted an unforgettable retreat at the Gandhi Ashram in India; by March, however, everything came to a halt. Rolling up our sleeves, we launched KarunaVirus to bring attention to compassion amidst the suffering (see top-10 patterns of 2020). With 100+ leaders, we hosted public dialogues on transforming many systems whose pitfalls were now glaringly evident. Anticipating Zoom fatigue, we innovated a new "Pod Platform" for “deepcasting” in a broadcast world. It’s been quite a year.
Thank you for holding sacred at the center.
UPCOMING PODS
How to make power express love, and love humanize power? Germany’s Innocracy movement is helping launch a 7-day Love+Power Pod with project intiators from 13 countries. Dacher Keltner and Gary Zukav are expected guest speakers.
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redwoods.jpg Buddha classified four specific virtues as boundless — kindness, equanimity, joy and compassion. To reach that potential, though, requires crossing its subtle “near enemies”. Two monks and 11 volunteers are anchoring a practice pod, as a encore of the first one!
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Between the affirming and denying factors of a tension lies a reconciling third force that Rumi calls “field beyond wrong-doing and right-doing.” Rev. Bonnie and Rev. Eric anchor a 2-week pod around moving beyond binary thinking.
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UPCOMING CONVERSATIONS
Awakin Calls continue to bring us profound conversations each week. awcalls.jpgComing up: Saturday with Ruth Pittard, a life-long educator from North Carolina whose life changed after a mystical experience at the age of six; in India, the uber popular Kabir singer Prahlad Tipanya-ji joins us this weekend to share his lens on today’s world; and next Wednesday, Matthew Fox returns for a dive into intuition. Among many memorable conversations of 2020, the recent call with legendary doctor Paul Farmer is a definite highlight: Genuine Humility with Restless Compassion.
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RECENT INSPIRATION …
As our work attempts to balance content with context, and broadcast with deepcast, here’s a reflection from Japan last November:

When the winds of nature are behind us, we fly through the skies like the murmurations of starlings — in elegant formations divined by an intelligence that far surpasses the power of markets, military and mass media. We realize that we are not merely what we do, but who we become by what we do. As our ego empties, the song of the infinite plays through our lute. With our hand, head and heart extended out in great awe, it becomes clear that the smallest of our intentions is a delicate prayer that tilts the axis of all life. Indeed, in a gentle way, we can shake the world. It’s the only thing that ever has.

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Fare Well – Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2020 (Part 1)

This week’s inspiring video: Fare Well – Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2020 (Part 1)
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Video of the Week

Jan 07, 2021
Fare Well - Edinburgh's Hogmanay 2020 (Part 1)

Fare Well – Edinburgh’s Hogmanay 2020 (Part 1)

Hogmanay is the Scots word for the last day of the year and is synonymous with the celebration of the New Year. Its origins reach back to the celebration of the winter solstice, although the date has been changed to suit the Roman calendar. This year, because people were not able to come together physically, entertainment company, Underbelly, has shared its spectacular drone show online, in three parts. The visuals are accompanied by words by Scotland’s poet laureate, Jackie Kay, and read by Scottish performers, including David Tennant, Siobhan Redmond, and Lorne MacFadyen, with music by Celtic electronic band Niteworks. Enjoy the show!
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Hannah Arendt & the Politics of Truth

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 7, 2021

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Hannah Arendt & the Politics of Truth

As citizens, we must prevent wrongdoing because the world in which we all live, wrong-doer, wrong sufferer and spectator, is at stake.

– Hannah Arendt –

Hannah Arendt & the Politics of Truth

“It’s important to remember that Hannah Arendt wrote “Truth and Politics” as a response to the reaction she received from publishing Eichmann in Jerusalem. What most worried her was a form of political propaganda that uses lies to erode reality. Political power, she warned, will always sacrifice factual truth for political gain. But the side effect of the lies and the propaganda is the destruction of the sense by which we can orient ourselves in the world; it is the loss of both the commons and of common sense.” More in this article from OpenDemocracy. { read more }

Be The Change

Do you feel aware of your agency and empowered to stand for justice? Learn more about Arendt’s insights and convictions in this piece on ‘Love and How to Live with the Fundamental Fear of Loss.’ { more }

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Choosing Earth: With Duane and Colleen Elgin

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 6, 2021

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Choosing Earth: With Duane and Colleen Elgin

We can return to the Earth that is our only home, consciously choosing sustainable ways of living with the Earth. Choose it or lose it.

– Duane Elgin –

Choosing Earth: With Duane and Colleen Elgin

“Duane Elgin’s book, Choosing Earth projects a half-century into the future to explore our world in a time of unprecedented transition. Duane offers a whole-systems view of the converging adversity trends facing humanity and three major scenarios for the future that are most likely to emerge from these powerful trends. By illuminating deep psychological, spiritual and scientific changes that are already underway, it offers hope for the emergence of a mature, planetary civilization beyond our times of crisis. Based on a lifetime of research and a decade of community organizing by the author, Choosing Earth is an unvarnished look at the reality of our world in crisis and an invitation for us to actively shape our future rather than be passive victims of denial and delay.” Kosmos Journal shares more in this interview with Duane and Colleen Elgin. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the Choosing Earth Project and how to participate here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Dark Skies Show Us Stars

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Dark Skies Show Us Stars
by Bear Guerra

[Listen to Audio!]

2478.jpgOne of my earliest childhood memories finds me waking from a deep sleep in the middle of the night, during a family road trip. Far from any city lights, I look out the window toward the sky above, and for the first time, I see what seemed to be an infinitude of stars. I’ll never know for sure if I was actually dreaming or not, but I still have the distinct recollection of becoming aware of the immensity of the universe in which we exist. I still recall the intense mix of awe, fear, and hope that I felt, unable to look away until the stars faded with the first light of day.

I often think back to that night and the deep connection I felt to the natural world. But in recent years, the memory has also taken on a metaphorical connotation, reminiscent of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous words of hope, “Only when it is dark enough can you see the stars.” Today it is not uncommon to read or hear or believe that we are living in “dark times”—such is the state of the world, and our need for hope in the face of many challenges: climate change, inequality, isolation, pandemic, to name only a few.

I, too, have spent most of my life thinking of darkness as a problem demanding more light—in both the literal and the symbolic sense. But perhaps this fear of the dark has been part of our collective problem.

For all practical purposes, most of us now live in the perpetual glow of a world that never sleeps. As essayist and poet Mark Tredinnick has said, “Cities are factories for unmaking the night.” We are driven by commerce, for which darkness is just another inconvenient obstacle in the path of production and consumption; we rely on the latest technology to offer the facade of a connection to one another. But more light is not what we need; it’s more darkness.

Given the myriad ways in which we humans have all but severed our connection to the natural world, perhaps none will prove to be as profound as the loss of the night sky and of our connection to the dark.

The loss of our connection to darkness and to the night sky is emblematic of our deeper separation from the natural world. We need to question our blind acceptance of a world bathed in artificial light; to not fear the night but to reconnect with it, to be awed by it, to know that if we are patient, we will be able to see through the darkness. As I ponder how the technology to which we are now tethered is affecting me and those closest to me; as I wonder how I can guide my own child to embrace the night and understand that without darkness we are not just incomplete … we fail to dream.

I think back again on the voice of Martin Luther King Jr., the famous dream maker, who saw stars through the darkness.

About the Author: Bear Guerra is a photographer whose work explores the impacts of globalization, development, late-stage capitalism, and the contemporary human condition. Excerpted from Emergence Magazine.

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Dark Skies Show Us Stars
How do you relate to the notion that ‘without darkness, we are not just incomplete, we fail to dream’? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to embrace darkness and see the stars because of it? What helps you embrace the night?
susan schaller wrote: I and my life transformed when Death, total darkness, and the accompanying pain, physical and the grief for my soon to be motherless twins, turned me to choosing life. Suicidally depressed since 5, I …
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We all emphasizethe value of light, knowledge, and to move from darkness to light. All wisdom traditions relate to darkness as ignorance and as light as knowledge.Author Bear Guerra presents a differe…
David Doane wrote: My belief is that darkness is the other side of light and together they make a whole. Without darkness the day would be incomplete. Yin requires yang to be a complete whole. I believe we are always dr…
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Tara Brach: True Refuge

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 5, 2021

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Tara Brach: True Refuge

Only by listening inwardly in a fresh and open way will you discern at any given time what most serves your healing and freedom.

– Tara Brach –

Tara Brach: True Refuge

“Tara Brach is an author, clinical psychologist, and the founder and senior teacher of the Insight Meditation Community of Washington. In this episode of Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon speaks with Tara about “the Trance of Unworthiness” –a state in which we believe that we are too inadequate, incomplete, and broken to love ourselves. Tara explains why we are so tough on ourselves and the steps needed to cultivate self-compassion. Tami and Tara also discuss how we can find refuges within no matter our current difficulties.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this short passage on “The Sacred Art of Pausing,” by Tara Brach. { more }

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