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Archive for October, 2021

Singing: Most Companionable of Arts

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October 24, 2021

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Singing: Most Companionable of Arts

Let us go singing as far as we go: the road will be less tedious.

– Virgil –

Singing: Most Companionable of Arts

“Singing is able to touch and join human beings in ways few other arts can. Alice Parker is a wise and joyful thinker and writer on this truth, and has been a hero in the universe of choral music as a composer, conductor, and teacher for most of her 90 years. She began as a young woman, studying conducting with Robert Shaw at Juilliard, and collaborated with him on arrangements of folk songs, spirituals, and hymns that are still performed around the world today.” More in this interview from On Being. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration check out Eric Whitacre’s Virtual Choir? { more }

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Old Growth: The Best Writing About Trees

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October 23, 2021

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Old Growth: The Best Writing About Trees

I’m always astonished by a forest. It makes me realize that the fantasy of nature is much larger than my own fantasy. I still have things to learn.

– Gunter Grass –

Old Growth: The Best Writing About Trees

To celebrate the release of “Old Growth,” — an anthology released by Orion Magazine– of essays and poems about the lives of trees, Robin Wall Kimmerer held a conversation with Robert Macfarlane and David Haskell. The trio of celebrated nature writers discussed the legacy of trees in deep time, that they each detail in their most recent books, Braiding Sweetgrass, Underland, and The Song of Trees, respectively. They explore the personhood of trees, root communities, and the ways to nurture our canopies. Watch the recording here. Together, they discussed the idea of the { read more }

Be The Change

Hear more from David Haskell in this in-depth interview, “Interconnections Between People and Trees.” { more }

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For Love of Nectar: The Dazzling Sunbirds of India

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 22, 2021

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For Love of Nectar: The Dazzling Sunbirds of India

A bird is three things: Feathers, flight and song, And feathers are the least of these.

– Marjorie Allen Seiffert –

For Love of Nectar: The Dazzling Sunbirds of India

When the sun is out in India, and if one is lucky to have access to a dense patch of native trees in flagrant, fragrant bloom, one is quite likely to see darting sunbirds. Sunbirds are to India what hummingbirds are to the Americas. Small birds with curved beaks that guzzle flower nectar. Dressed in an astounding colour palette that include hues as vivid as metallic green, lime yellow, deep hibiscus red and/or iridescent jaamun purple. Pollinators and insect feeders, sunbirds are a natural gardener’s dream-come-true: a sign of a healthy, thriving, polyculture garden. Read on for a gorgeous photo-essay on the dazzling sunbirds of India. { read more }

Submitted by: Gayathri Ramachandran

Be The Change

Take a walk threaded through your neighbourhood shrubbery or trees, when the sun is out and shining gently. Can you hear and/or see any birds whose vocal feats enchant your aural landscape? For at least a few minutes, nourish your soul with this experience

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A Better Place – Playing for Change

This week’s inspiring video: A Better Place – Playing for Change
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Oct 21, 2021
A Better Place - Playing for Change

A Better Place – Playing for Change

Musicians from around the world come together in song to speak up for equality and social justice. Whether they are performing from backyards, city street corners, by the oceanside, or in a park, they all give voice to the rights of people everywhere to live in freedom, dignity and peace. "If you feel it, through the music, we can make this world a better place."
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The Art of Engagement

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 21, 2021

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The Art of Engagement

Woods and fields are a table always spread.

– Henry David Thoreau –

The Art of Engagement

Alice Fox manages a plot of land that provides her with food for her body, materials for her art, and sustenance for her spirit. Sustainability underpins all of her work. She looks closely at everything she finds on this plot of land, engaging with it, finding ways to utilize it or at the very least to appreciate it. By noticing the detail in everything she discerns the possibilities it offers. This personal engagement with her surroundings and the art she creates from them are a celebration of the natural world in which she finds herself. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a leisurely walk in your community, noticing details that you may have missed. Are there things being discarded that have potential for use if you see them with new eyes?

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Beauty & Science: A Conversation with Edward Johnson

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October 20, 2021

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Beauty & Science: A Conversation with Edward Johnson

Tolstoy wrote with the precision of the artist and the passion of the scientist.

– Vladamir Nabokov –

Beauty & Science: A Conversation with Edward Johnson

Dr. Edward Johnson, a distinguished research scientist, died earlier in 2021. His fundamental work in molecular cell biology opened new fields of study, contributed to the work of two Nobel laureates and has been important in the understanding and treatment of a range of diseases and neurologic disorders. On the occasion of a weeks getaway in Jemez Springs, New Mexico, in an impromptu conversation, he spoke of the essential role that passion, creativity and beauty play in fundamental discoveries in science. It was not what Id expected, says Richard Whittaker, looking back in gratitude for this remarkable conversation that took place well off the beaten path. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out Richard Feynman’s soliloquy on how science can enrich our experience of life without detracting from its mystery or beauty. { more }

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Inhabiting the Ground of Being

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October 19, 2021

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Inhabiting the Ground of Being

It’s paradoxical and it’s fantastically benevolent that we can feel deeply in contact with the world around us as, and really only as, we cultivate that deep contact within ourselves.

– Judith Blackstone –

Inhabiting the Ground of Being

“The Realization Process is a way of uncovering an experience of this very subtle consciousness that we actually can experience pervading our whole body. We experience that and we transcend that individuality at the same time. We experience oneness, this ground of being, pervading our own body, and everything around us. So, in other words, our consciousness becomes subtle enough to pervade all of the content of our experience. And it pervades inside and out. And in doing that, it reveals and helps us access and release the psychologically-based constrictions, the trauma-based constrictions in our body. In doing that it helps get to the core of our being, to the source of our love, to our greatest openness of emotional responsiveness, our greatest fluidity of our thoughts, and so forth. This consciousness is a disentangled aspect of ourselves. So, when we know ourselves as fundamental consciousness, all of the contents of experience move more fluidly.” Judith Blackstone, founder of the Realization Process and author of “Trauma and the Unbound Body shares more in this interview. { read more }

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Join an upcoming conversation with Roberta Tachi, a senior teacher of the Realization Process: “Integrating Body & Mind”. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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The Balancing Force

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Balancing Force
by Swami Krishnananda

[Listen to Audio!]

2519.jpgThe type of security and protection that we expect in this world of human beings is based on the humanly conceived notion of what is good and necessary for the welfare of all people. But God [Dharma] cannot be equated with human notions of any kind, and the human notion of welfare and good need not necessarily be the same as the divine vision of what is good and what is true well-being. Therefore, the insight of the ancient masters visualised the great power of divine protection as a threefold activity, designated in Hindu religious parlance as Durga, Lakshmi and Saraswati.

The creation of the world is a threefold process taking place at the same time. Something originates, something is maintained in a particular position, and it gets transmuted into a condition which is the purpose of this very process. The universe is not a static, stale existence. It is a movement towards God. The universe is the path which living beings tread in the direction of the achievement of their union with the Maker of all things. The universe is a movement; it is a process, which, naturally, is not stasis, and it is not merely dynamis. It is not mere activity or motion; it is not mere position in a particular spot of space. It is a balancing of these two processes: stasis and dynamis. In scientific parlance there is no concept of this balancing of stasis and dynamis — Tamas and Rajas.

We have the science of kinetics, and the science of the fixity of things, called stasis, but there [needs to be] another thing — sattva, balance of these forces.

We maintain a position as an identical individual in our own personalities, notwithstanding the fact that we are continuous rivers that flow. We maintain ourselves in an apparent position, while we are a moving process. We have grown from the embryo to this adult condition of our mature bodily existence by a process of utter transformation and a perpetual rejuvenation, a coming and going of living cells in the body. The origination, the maintenance and the destruction of many living organisms have gone to constitute this bodily personality of ours.

Thus, there is both activity and fixity, but there is also an awareness of this process. It is not merely mechanical action that is taking place in the universe. We are sometimes told, in the language of classical science, that the world is like a huge machine, and it works systematically, like a computer or a kind of arrangement of parts, which are modeled or patterned in such a way that the pattern of the arrangement of the machine’s parts can decide the nature of its activity and also the output of its operation.

But though, in its visible form, the world appears to work like a machine, and there is a connection of the past with the future through the present, there is a transcendent element in the world. It is non-mechanistic, finally. From the point of view of biological studies, our body may be determined by the laws of biology; thus, we may say our body is a machine and it is mechanistic. Also, from the point of view of one type of psychological study, our mental activity also can be considered to be mechanistic in its operation. Nevertheless, we are none of us a machine. There is an element in us which surpasses the mechanical activity of the body as well as of the mind.

Fixity and action ("tamas" and "rajas"), are balanced by sattva, which is not actually one of the properties. It is a transcendent property. It balances the action and the operation of both tamas and rajas. Hence, it is inclusive of whatever is worthwhile and meaningful in the activities of both.

About the Author: Excerpted from this article around the Indian festival of Navratri.

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The Balancing Force
How do you relate to the notion of sattva? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced the balancing of stasis and dynamis? What helps you make space for balance?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: The world we live in and also our life has three qualities: tamas, rajas, and sattva.Tamas makes us passive-static, rajas makes us active-dynamic and sattvacreates a balance. When I go to the extremep…
David Doane wrote: I think the primary balance is the balance of all forces in creation, not the balancing of action and fixity. There is no fixity. Everything is always changing, often in balance and sometimes not. Whe…
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Some Good News

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Kindness Stories

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A River Reawakened

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October 18, 2021

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A River Reawakened

Where do we even start on the daily walk of restoration and awakening? We start where we are.

– Anne Lamott –

A River Reawakened

“In September 2011, I stood on a river overlook with children from my daughters elementary school, all of us transfixed by a giant jackhammer pounding cement to rubble. Below us, a waterfall raged through the first notch carved in the Lower Elwha Dam, as dust rose in the September sunshine, drifting over Douglas fir and cedar crowns. Trees were the only spectators old enough to remember when the Elwha River ran free, a century earlier. The rest of us stood in awe, watching the worlds largest dam removal to date, feeling time start to spin in reverse.” { read more }

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For another inspiring story of restoration, watch “How Wolves Restore Rivers.” { more }

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Soul Biographies: Nic Askew

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October 17, 2021

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Soul Biographies: Nic Askew

When you change the way you see people, your experience of people changes.

– Nic Askew –

Soul Biographies: Nic Askew

Creator of Soul Biographies, Nic Askew’s life took an unexpected turn in 2005 when a lucid daydream to pick up a film camera and use it in a profound fashion consumed him and dissolved any internal doubt. He describes this moment as one of “knowing” what he just had to do, as opposed to “believing” or “wanting” something.
Since that day, Nic has used this camera to capture bare human presence, taking his film subjects beyond the experience of mind –and into their inner, wiser, more intuitive and intelligent world. Through a nearly two-decade journey in explorative film, he has discovered that there is a profoundly simple way to be together with someone and begin to capture them — which is not an interview, but an Inner View. More about his life and work here. { read more }

Be The Change

Join an Awakin Call with Nic Askew next Saturday, “Witnessing Without Map or Conditions.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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