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Archive for February, 2021

The Caribou Guardians

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 28, 2021

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The Caribou Guardians

The animals of the planet are in desperate peril. Without free animal life, I believe we will lose the spiritual equivalent of oxygen.

– Alice Walker –

The Caribou Guardians

High on a forested mountain in northern British Columbia, in the traditional territory of the West Moberly Dunne-za First Nations (WMFN) and Saulteau First Nations (SFN), Starr Gauthier is on patrol with a twelve-gauge shotgun slung over her shoulder and a laptop bag in hand. Starr is a Caribou Guardian charged with tending to the Klinse-za Caribou Maternity Pen built by these First Nations, as part of their effort to protect an animal that is vital to their cultures.
{ read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this short film “The Refuge.” { more }

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Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living

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February 27, 2021

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Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living

The witchery of living
is my whole conversation
with you, my darlings.
All I can tell you is what I know.

– Mary Oliver –

Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living

“Will the hungry ox stand in the field and not eat
of the sweet grass?
Will the owl bite off its own wings?
Will the lark forget to lift its body in the air or
forget to sing?
Will the rivers run upstream?

Behold, I say — behold
the reliability and the finery and the teachings
of this gritty earth gift.”

So begins this poem from Mary Oliver. It is a poem that bristles with imperatives, pointblank inquiries and penetrating insight. It is a poem large of heart and long of stride, that whisks the reader right into the enchanted thicket that is,’the witchery of living.’ Read it here. { read more }

Be The Change

What does this poem spark within you?
If you were to try to encapsulate the sum of all that you know of life, what would you say?

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One Thousand Cranes

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 26, 2021

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One Thousand Cranes

Although the world is full of suffering, it is also full of the overcoming of it.

– Helen Keller –

One Thousand Cranes

Cranes are revered in Japan as mystical creatures and are said to live for a thousand years. A thousand paper cranes are often given to wish for the recovery of a seriously ill person. In this moving video one woman with a traumatic past uses her fingers, eyes and heart to teach young people from difficult backgrounds the skill of origami so that like her they are able to make something beautiful. Though their scars do not go away in the process, they learn to use the lines of those scars to create something of beauty to share with others. She eloquently points out that one person cannot do it alone but with a collective effort, bit by bit, each person’s potential for growth and hope can be realized. { read more }

Be The Change

Read the story of Sadako’s paper cranes and how she has become a universal inspiration toward peace. { more }

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Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

This week’s inspiring video: Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest
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Video of the Week

Feb 25, 2021
Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

Brazil, which was once a leader in climate action, is now most often mentioned with worry in discussions about climate change, desertification and deforestation. But there are lights in the darkness. Watch the seemingly miraculous results grounded in the simple acts of planting trees and a desire to improve the lives of both the animal and human kingdoms, at the heart of Instituto Terra.
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Be A Blessing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 25, 2021

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Be A Blessing

When memory is transmitted, it makes witnesses. Witnesses are activated people who now are telling other people’s stories.

– Rabbi Ariel Burger –

Be A Blessing

“There is a question rolling around even in the most secular of corners: What do religious people and traditions have to teach as we do the work ahead of repairing, renewing, and remaking our societies, our life together? Krista Tippett’s conversation with Rabbi Ariel Burger, a student of the late, extraordinary Elie Wiesel, delves into theological and mystical depths that are so much richer and more creative than is often imagined even when that question is raised.” { read more }

Be The Change

Who or what are you bearing witness to in this time? How is the process of witnessing shaping you? For more inspiration, check out this conversation between Parker Palmer and Burger: Learning to Face the Dark. { more }

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A Little Light (+ Water, Classroom, Business)

Incubator of compassionate action.

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Context holds content.
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Around the globe, so many people want to give and so many need the help, and yet our Tinder-ized intelligence is ill-equipped to pair them up. That’s not because of a lack of content, but a lack of context. It is only when generosity graces our interactions that relationships deepen, trust increases and context blossoms. In such a field, our collective genius comes alive in a profoundly unique way.
g3_gate.jpg Our Pod Platform is cultivating a resurgence of such context! In January pods, policymakers explored Power, elders engaged in a 21-day New Story challenge, activists practiced Metta, healers dived into Third Force. Already in February, we’ve completed a pod around Sacred Space, heart of animals, and are currently well into a month-long immersion on Laddership. It’s been inspiring not just to see hundreds of folks engage so deeply, but to see dozens of alumni volunteering for new pods you’ll see below.
Thank you for all your stories.
UPCOMING PODS
large.jpg When about asked his superpower, Bruce Lee said, “Be water — take the shape of the container you’re in.” In designing our personal or social lives, or even systems, what if we asked: what would water do? What does it mean to have a fluid mind? What structures and patterns facilitate flow? Join for a unique, 7-day pod with Richard Whittaker, around water.
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2454.jpg “Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire,” William Yeats once wrote. What does it mean to ignite that intrinsic motivation in our classrooms, particularly with the increased adoption of online courses? If we ultimately teach who are, who must we be to create a compassionate classroom? How do we transform the broadcast model of teaching to a co-creative “many to many” model?
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2481.jpg Buddha classified four specific virtues as boundless — kindness, equanimity, joy and compassion. To reach that potential, though, requires crossing its subtle “near enemies”. By popular demand, two monks (Jin Chuan and Jin Wei) are offering this pod for the third time!
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2477.jpg Ever found yourself contemplating on how might your “livelihood” support your wellbeing and also be a tool for contributing positively to the society? Ever wondered how you may integrate your work life more deeply with values? Join some inspired folks from the corporate world for this much needed exploration.
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UPCOMING CONVERSATIONS
Recent Awakin Calls featured Aqeela Sherrills’ uncommon insights into transforming urban war zones as a heart-centered activist; Parvathy Baul’s deep-dive into her profound “honey gathering” tradition of music; Don Berwick on his 30 years of experience in health-care. Explore the archives.

568.jpgComing up: a conversation with James O’dea and Nipun Mehta. From front-line activism in violent conflict zones to leading organizations like Amnesty International, Seva Foundation and IONS to authoring several books and writing the foreword to pioneering books like Untethered Soul, James is a mystic activist. In dialogue with Nipun, they will discuss the bridge of conscious activism and active consciousness. James writes, “Today stress denotes something negative but hundred years ago, it was neutral. For the poet, stress is language, for the composer, stress is musical notes. Stress is just the channeling of energy in a particular direction.”

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RECENT INSPIRATION …
Despite the pandemic, Awakin Circles continue on. In a recent Santa Clara circle, Theresa shared a compelling encounter:

theresa-cell-phone-lights.jpg One time, I was giving a presentation to a bunch of strangers, and power went out. The hall went pitch black, I was red from embarassment. Without light or working microphone, I didn’t know what to do. Somehow, I decided to continue my speech. It was really ridiculous, to speak in crowded, dark room without any windows, but I kept going. Then, all of a sudden, a man in the back put up his phone, and turned on his flashlight. Two more people. Three. Then, the whole audience of people come on, and everyone was shining their light of their phone on us. It lit up the whole hall. It was the most beautiful scene — a feeling that we’re all in this together. That it’s not anyone’s fault, we’re just all here, and we’re all supporting each other. The most beautiful feeling of love from strangers I’ve ever experienced.

Thank you, each one of you, for adding your light to the whole.
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Our Memories of Water

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 24, 2021

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Our Memories of Water

Water flows from high in the mountains
Water runs deep in the Earth
Miraculously, water comes to us,
And sustains all life.

– Thich Nhat Hanh –

Our Memories of Water

“I began asking friends if they had any memorable experiences with water. I was surprised by the blank looks I got. Like almost everyone else, ordinarily my relationship with water was unremarkable–like our relationship with air and sunshine. If instead, I’d started asking people, “Do you have any really memorable experiences of breathing air?” I’d probably have gotten even stranger looks. I have to laugh, even thinking about it. But we all have deep, buried memories when our earlier contacts with water were still full of wonder and some inexpressible meaning.” In the following piece, Richard Whittaker offers glimpses into his own memories of water, and evokes the personal, as well as the profoundly universal aspects of this elemental force. { read more }

Be The Change

Take some time to think back about your most memorable experiences with water. Perhaps you’d like to participate with others in a virtual exploration: “What Would Water Do?” More details here. { more }

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The Gift of Ecological Humility

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 23, 2021

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The Gift of Ecological Humility

I love to think of nature as unlimited broadcasting stations, through which God speaks to us every day, every hour.

– George Washington Carver –

The Gift of Ecological Humility

“In my early 20s, I apprenticed myself to the The Queen Mothers of Kroboland in Ghana with the hope of understanding more about my cultural heritage. Early one morning, I arrived at the compound of Paramount Queen Mother Manye Nartike, who was particularly animated by a rumor she had heard about our diasporic practices in relation to land. In disbelief she admonished me, ‘Is it true that in the United States, a farmer will put the seed into the ground and not pour any libations, offer any prayers, sing, or dance, and expect that seed to grow?’ Met with my ashamed silence, she continued, ‘That is why you are all sick! Because you see the Earth as a thing and not a being.'” { read more }

Be The Change

Look out your window. Right now, here in this moment, what is being broadcast to you?

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Awakin Weekly: If There Is No Self, Whose Arthritis Is This?

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
If There Is No Self, Whose Arthritis Is This?
by Sylvia Boorstein

[Listen to Audio!]

2454.jpg"If there is no self, whose arthritis is this?" is one of a list of a dozen questions that have been appearing regularly in my email. I think it’s the choice of arthritis, out of all the ills of the world, which makes this particular statement funny. It’s also mildly mocking, making a joke out of the understanding of selflessness. Since mocking is derisive, it occurs to me each time I read it, and chuckle, that perhaps I am being spiritually incorrect. I think, though, that it isn’t a joke about dharma: it’s a joke about jumbling vocabularies. Un-jumbled, in their own contexts, self and no-self, no ego and strong ego, are completely understandable.

Twenty-five years ago, when I began my mindfulness practice, I remember hearing my teachers describing the "three characteristics of experience" as the insights that I needed to directly encounter in order to liberate my mind from its habits of greed, hatred and delusion. The insight about impermanence seemed reasonable to me. I saw how things were always changing, that time passed, how the impact of an event changed with the passage of time. Suffering made sense to me too. I understood, at least intellectually, the pain of craving. I did not understand what no permanent self meant. "My teachers are wrong," I thought. "Who is it, in here, having this whole life happen to them, if not me? This is my body and my thoughts and my story." I remember being quite sure that I was right and my teachers were wrong, but I liked everything else about dharma so much I decided I could leave it an open question.

In addition to my own felt sense of, "There is so someone in here who owns this story," I had my training as a psychologist. I believed, and I still do, that a strong sense of differentiated ego — "This is me. These are my skills. I use them competently in a world full of other people. I can take care of myself" — is a vital part of healthy emotional development. "I am me, separate from you," is the awareness that is crucial to the formation of a sense of morality. "I undertake the precept to refrain from harming living beings," requires an understanding of beings other than ourselves, beings who, like ourselves, experience suffering. And being able to say, "I am his mother," or, "I will teach your class next Tuesday," or, "This is where I live," is useful. Those "I – s" are not problems. They’re the ego-equipment with which we manage our lives. They describe situations, not a separate, unchanging entity.

The "I" that is a problem is a storytelling "I" that isolates and traps itself in suffering.

Here’s an example. I said to my husband during a period when we were both studying with a teacher who emphasized non-dual awareness, "I am so angry at so-and-so. I can’t believe what she said about me." He said, "Where is the ‘I’ that is angry?" So I got angry at him. I said, "You and I both know that there is no ‘I’ here and no ‘I’ there. But anger exists! Suffering exists!" Had I not been upset, I might have seen that the solid, enduring ‘I’ I had put in place with the story—"I can’t believe she said that about me"—was causing my ongoing pain. It constructed an ‘I’ who had been humiliated, who now suffered. "I – s" with needs—any kind of needs—are suffering "I – s". They arise with any discomfort. They aren’t mistakes or spiritual flaws: they are clues that something needs attention. They disappear when the mind and the body are comfortable. They, like everything else, are impermanent, empty of self, arising and passing away according to conditions.

At a talk the Dalai Lama gave some years ago, a young man said, "I have a very hard time meditating. I keep thinking that I am not worthy of happiness, that I don’t deserve it." Apparently, the Dalai Lama leaned forward and responded in an uncharacteristically strong, correcting voice. "You are wrong!" he said. "Every being is a beautiful expression of nature. How much more so a being with a precious human birth, one with a capacity for wisdom and compassion."

There is no self, but there are precious lives.

About the Author: Excerpted from here. Sylvia Boorstein is an American author, psychotherapist and Buddhist teacher.

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Latest Community Insights New!
If There Is No Self, Whose Arthritis Is This?
How do you relate to the notion of the storytelling “I” that isolates and traps itself in suffering? Can you share an experience of a time you were able to recognize and move beyond the storytelling “I”? What helps you stay aware of the storytelling “I” without losing your healthy emotional vitality?Â
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Who am I is a perennial inquiry made in all wisdom traditions. Is there oneness underlying manyness? Is there unity underlying diversity? What causes suffering? Who is suffering? Is there something ev…
David Doane wrote: There is "I" that is a story initiated by environmental conditioning and created to a great extent by me. It’s what I use to interact with the world. Storytelling I sees I as separate, e…
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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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Discovering Poetry En Route to Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 22, 2021

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Discovering Poetry En Route to Life

Poetry is life distilled.

– Gwendolyn Brooks –

Discovering Poetry En Route to Life

“Poetry, my father quoted it frequently, my grandmother collected it in scrapbooks –cards from friends, I memorized snatches of it in school. Poetry really came to me as a young father when my family and I needed to move across the country away from our best friends. It was an unsettled, lonely. time and I started taking walks in the evening to relax. It was spring. Lemon blossoms. Amazingly, I felt something in me wanting to flow out and dance– and words– short poems tumbled out of me. I was surprised, encouraged, and felt happily hooked. Then one day I serendipitously discovered another poet, and then a small community of poets. For the next 25 years I shared poetry with them. Poetry is a discovery I have made on my way to finding my life.” Jim Glaser shares a few of his thoughtful poems here. { read more }

Be The Change

Do you have favorite poems of your own — or other people’s, that have helped you find your way on life’s journey? If so inspired, share them with others.

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