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Archive for July, 2021

Mary Oliver: I Happened to Be Standing

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July 10, 2021

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Mary Oliver: I Happened to Be Standing

I don’t know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention…

– Mary Oliver –

Mary Oliver: I Happened to Be Standing

The poems of Mary Oliver seem like prayers that anyone can pray. Spacious and simple, expansive and ordinary, they don’t require us to believe in anything in particular. But they do ask us to pay attention to the fleeting and particular space of a moment we are living through, which she has touched so tenderly. Here you can listen to her reading one of her poems: “I Happened to be Standing.” { read more }

Be The Change

Poetry is such a key to opening the heart. Perhaps it would shift our understanding of self and world if we listened more to what poets are saying and a little less to the daily newscasts. Better yet, why not write a poem from your own heart.

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Letters to a Young Poet: Communing with Rilke’s Prophetic Musing

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July 9, 2021

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Letters to a Young Poet: Communing with Rilke's Prophetic Musing

For love is not about merging. It’s a noble calling for the individual to ripen, to differentiate, to become a world in oneself in response to another.

– Rainer Maria Rilke –

Letters to a Young Poet: Communing with Rilke’s Prophetic Musing

“A new translation of Rainer Maria Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet has been released in a world in which his voice and vision feel as resonant as ever before. In ten letters to a young person in 1903, Rilke touched on the enduring dramas of creating our lives — prophetic musings about solitude and relationship, humanity and the natural world, even gender and human wholeness. And what a joy it is to delve into Rilke’s voice, freshly rendered, with the translators. Krista Tippett, Anita Barrows and Joanna Macy have communed with Rainer Maria Rilke across time and space and their conversation is infused with friendship as much as ideas.” { read more }

Be The Change

How is love calling for you to ripen in this time? For more inspiration from Rilke, here is a short passage, “We Move in Infinite Space.” { more }

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July 2021 Newsletter

News from The Pema Chödrön Foundation
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Dear friends,

Please join us in wishing Pema a Happy 85th Birthday on July 14th!

We are delighted to take this opportunity to bring you up to date on Pema’s activities, and the activities of The Foundation. Thank you so very much for your support. With your help, Pema has been able to expand her reach to even more programs needing our help during these extremely challenging times.

                  Please consider making a donation in honor of Pema’s birthday!

News of Pema
Pema spent the winter months in retreat in Colorado this year. She has been fortunate to have remained safe and healthy throughout the pandemic, and of course, she hopes the same for each of you.

This month, Pema will be giving an online talk at Mangala Shri Bhuti on July 11th along with her teacher, Dzigar Kontrul Rinpoche. The talk will be available for viewing through August 10th.
Registration is available here.

Pema will spend the remainder of the year in Colorado and will hopefully return to Gampo Abbey in Nova Scotia early next year.

Projects We Support
Malezi School
Supporting at-risk communities

Pema is very committed to helping at-risk populations, and thanks to so many of you, The Pema Chödrön Foundation has been able to increase our giving in this area in 2021. We continue our grant support to Malezi School in Kenya, enabling them to provide breakfast and lunch daily to 220 undernourished children and 9 teachers, as well as now provide emergency food relief to the larger community during Covid.

Additionally, the foundation supports The Oscar Grant Foundation in Oakland, California, which works to help bridge the gap of distrust between individuals in at-risk communities and law enforcement. Pema and The Foundation also continue to support Homeboy Industries, Prison Mindfulness Institute, and Nonviolent Peaceforce, among several others. Please visit our website to learn more and consider making a contribution here.

Supporting Nuns

One of Ani Pema’s deepest aspirations is that Buddhist nuns are able to receive the full training and education required to fully realize the wisdom of the tradition and to carry it into the future. It is more vital than ever that these nuns receive the same education and support as monks, and Pema is making this a reality. Any donation that you could give to support Pema’s nuns projects would be appreciated tremendously. Read more about the nuns we support:

Tsoknyi Gechak Ling Nunnery
Karma Drubdey Nunnery in Bhutan
Monastic College of Surmang Dutsi Til
Sher Gompa

The Book Initiative

With your help, the Book Initiative continues to send thousands of Pema’s books at no cost to prisons, hospitals, counseling centers, homeless shelters, and individuals. Please contact us here to find out more and request books for organizations or individuals that would benefit.
Thanks to a grant from Donaldson Trust, and the support of many of you who have contributed to this project, our outreach continues to grow. Please consider supporting this wonderful program.
Planned Giving

As you prepare your will or trust, please consider including the Pema Chödrön Foundation. Your planned generosity will have a great impact for years to come, and insure that Pema’s work continues well into the future. Please contact Tim@PemaChodronFoundation.org for more information.

Pema Chodron Foundation Bookstore

When you purchase Pema’s books, CD’s, DVD’s and audio downloads from our on-line bookstore, all profit goes directly towards supporting Pema’s work. Shipping is free inside the US!
The Pema Chödrön Foundation Bookstore

Also, be sure to check out Pema’s new course offering entitled Igniting the Heart: Awakening Compassion to Transform Your World from Prajna Studios/Shambhala Publications.

The Essential Pema is a topical guide
through all of Pema’s teachings,
downloadable and free.

Gampo Abbey
Pema and The Board of The Pema Chödrön Foundation extend our deepest thanks for all of your support and interest in Pema’s work.

Visit our Website
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Pema Chodron Foundation | PO Box 770630, Steamboat Springs, CO 80477
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Mary Oliver: I Happened to be Standing

This week’s inspiring video: Mary Oliver: I Happened to be Standing
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Jul 08, 2021
Mary Oliver: I Happened to be Standing

Mary Oliver: I Happened to be Standing

The poems of Mary Oliver seem like prayers that anyone can pray. Spacious and simple, expansive and ordinary, they don’t require us to believe in anything in particular. But they do ask us to pay attention to the fleeting and particular space of a moment we are living through, which she has touched so tenderly. Here you can listen to her reading one of her poems: "I Happened to be Standing."
Watch Video Now Share: Email Twitter FaceBook

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Returning to the Village

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July 8, 2021

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Returning to the Village

The world will not be saved by old minds with new programs. If it’s saved, it will be saved by new minds with no programs at all

– Daniel Quinn –

Returning to the Village

For those of us who live in urban areas, what does returning to a life in the village really mean? What is the impulse that moves folks to reverse the direction of migration of their recent ancestors to the city? What can living on the land, growing your own food, and using your hands to make clothing and shelter offer souls hungering for a real connection to the Earth? Here, Hang Mai, a Vietnamese natural farmer and social entrepreneur, who together with her partner Chau Duong mid-wifes those wanting to make this transition to the village, reflects on this question. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join the upcoming Awakin Talk with Hang Mai and Chau Duong, natural farmers and community builders in rural Vietnam. RSVP here { more }

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100 Thank Yous

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July 7, 2021

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100 Thank Yous

Appreciation is a wonderful thing. It makes what is excellent in others belong to us as well.

– Voltaire –

100 Thank Yous

For a year and a half, artist Lori Portka painted her gratitude through individual pieces of art for 100 people who have made a difference in her life. In her effort to truly live a life of gratitude, Lori learned that gratitude grows, and grows, and grows. “The more that I focused on gratitude, the more I was grateful for.” This beautiful film captures Lori’s motivation and some of the reactions from the recipients of her gratitude at an emotional exhibition of the 100 paintings. “One person, one person can make such a difference.” { read more }

Be The Change

Is there someone that has made you feel grateful for something today? Think of your own special way to say “thank you” and do it soon.

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A Story Waiting to Pierce You

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July 6, 2021

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A Story Waiting to Pierce You

Each culture is just like a tree whose essence and whole potential are already contained in the seed.

– Peter Kingsley –

A Story Waiting to Pierce You

“A true encanto, an incantation, this book is pure music. It sings to the reader. This is the real thing. In each paragraph of the book, the Spirit is there. This is what the native people of the Americas have been trying to say, but were never permitted to. This song is the song of wisdom that we native people have not been allowed to sing.” These words by Joseph Rael (Beautiful Painted Arrow) are taken from the forward of Peter Kingsley’s acclaimed book, “A Story Waiting to Pierce You: Mongolia, Tibet, and the Destiny of the Modern World.” More in this insightful review. { read more }

Be The Change

Kingsley maintains that to approach oneness authentically, Western civilization must rediscover its own sacred origins and purpose. He shares more in this interview. Take a moment to reflect on your own relationship and approach to oneness. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Heart Is Not About Emotions

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Heart Is Not About Emotions
by Cynthia Bourgeault

[Listen to Audio!]

2502.jpg"Put the mind in the heart." From page after page in the Philokalia, that hallowed collection of spiritual writings from the Christian East, this same refrain emerges. It is striking in both its insistence and its specificity. As this ancient teaching falls on contemporary ears, it is inevitably heard through a modern filter that does not serve it well. In our own times the word “heart” has come to be associated primarily with the emotions (as opposed to the mental operations of the mind), and so the instruction will be inevitably heard as “get out of your mind and into your emotions” — which is, alas, pretty close to 180 degrees from what the instruction is actually saying.

Yes, it is certainly true that the heart’s native language is affectivity—perception through deep feelingness. But it may come as a shock to contemporary seekers to learn that the things we nowadays identify with the feeling life—passion, drama, intensity, compelling emotion—are qualities that in the ancient anatomical treatises were associated not with the heart but with the liver! They are signs of agitation and turbidity (an excess of bile!) rather than authentic feelingness. In fact, they are traditionally seen as the roadblocks to the authentic feeling life, the saboteurs that steal its energy and distort its true nature.

And so before we can even begin to unlock the wisdom of these ancient texts, we need to gently set aside our contemporary fascination with emotivity as the royal road to spiritual authenticity and return to the classic understanding from which these teachings emerge, which features the heart in a far more spacious and luminous role.

According to the great wisdom traditions of the West (Christian, Jewish, Islamic), the heart is first and foremost an organ of spiritual perception. Its primary function is to look beyond the obvious, the boundaried surface of things, and see into a deeper reality, emerging from some unknown profundity, which plays lightly upon the surface of this life without being caught there: a world where meaning, insight, and clarity come together in a whole different way. Saint Paul talked about this other kind of perceptivity with the term “faith” (“Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen”), but the word “faith” is itself often misunderstood by the linear mind. What it really designates is not a leaping into the dark (as so often misconstrued) but a subtle seeing in the dark, a kind of spiritual night vision that allows one to see with inner certainty that the elusive golden thread glimpsed from within actually does lead somewhere.

About the Author: Cynthia Bourgeault is an Episcopal priest, teacher, and retreat leader. Among her many books are The Meaning of Mary Magdalene and The Holy Trinity and the Law of Three. Excerpt above is adapted from this article.

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Heart Is Not About Emotions
How do you relate to the notion that the heart is not about emotions, but a space for a deeper spiritual perception? Can you share an experience of a time you gave primacy to a deeper perception over surface-level emotions? What helps you avoid the roadblocks to ‘the authentic feeling life’?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I appreciate the passage Heart Is Not About Emotions authored by Cynthia Bourgealt. According my understanding there are three kinds of perceptibility; mental, emotional, and spiritual. Mental and emo…
David Doane wrote: The mind is in us, in the whole. It’s we who say the mind is in the brain. Passion, and the liver, are valuable and important in staying alive. Faith ishaving passion about what is seen with the s…
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576.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

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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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On our website, you can view 17+ year archive of these readings. For broader context, visit our umbrella organization: ServiceSpace.org.

Spotlight On Kindness: Wisdom At Work

Much of our life our lives are spent working, and usuallyinclude partnering with others. At every position I’ve been in, the human dynamics have always been interesting to see. I have had the fortune of working in some great teams with a sprinkle of one or two challenging colleagues. I’m amazed by how much one individual can bring to a group. The ones dedicated to the collective goal, always looking at the bright side with humor, are such a joy to work with each day. Given the time we spend working, it’s a precious gift to grow together. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: Much of our life our lives are spent working, and usuallyinclude partnering with others. At every position I’ve been in, the human dynamics have always been interesting to see. I have had the fortune of working in some great teams with a sprinkle of one or two challenging colleagues. I’m amazed by how much one individual can bring to a group. The ones dedicated to the collective goal, always looking at the bright side with humor, are such a joy to work with each day. Given the time we spend working, it’s a precious gift to grow together. –Guri
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When the heavy rains kept him from roofing work, Bubba Martin stood in front of a Lowe’s Hardware store hoping to find a contracting gig to support his family. That is where he met Vernon Browning.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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The City Planting a Million Trees in Two Years
Hugs Mayor Yvonne Aki-Sawyerr is leading her city’s efforts to plant one million trees in two years, increasing the vegetation cover hugely by 50%. Here’s more on this massive undertaking in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
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In other news …
Emiliana Simon-Thomas, science director of the Greater Good Science Center, co-teaches a free, eight-week online course that “explores the roots of a happy, meaningful life.” In this article, How Power Corrupts Your Instinct for Compassion, she explains why power threatens our compassion — and what we can do about it.
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Leaf Seligman: On Redemption and Beautiful Scars

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July 4, 2021

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Leaf Seligman: On Redemption and Beautiful Scars

It is only in an uncondemned state that any of us can change.

– Leaf Seligman –

Leaf Seligman: On Redemption and Beautiful Scars

“As humans, we inevitably experience harm: we feel hurt, we get hurt, and we hurt others. We free ourselves from this experience not by imagining we can escape harm but knowing we can heal it–moving from wound to scar–and then learning to love the scars. This can, of course, be the work of a lifetime. Luckily, I have long loved scars. When I was four, I accidentally cut my left eye. As a result, a small scar formed directly under my eye and inside the eye, where the pupil stayed dilated with a keyhole in it. After I had the eye removed at twenty-one, a photographer I knew told me she wanted to record people’s scars, so I asked her to photograph me with my empty socket. It may be that at twenty-one I looked youthful, even radiant, but that one-eyed image of myself is my favorite photo; in fact it’s the only picture of myself where the subject feels beautiful.” Author, educator, and restorative justice practitioner Leah Seligman shares more in this powerful piece. { read more }

Be The Change

Join a special circle with Leaf Seligman this upcoming Wednesday, July 7th: The Magnificent Broken- Redemptive Healing Through Words. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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