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Archive for December, 2021

‘New Day’s Lyric’: Amanda Gorman

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December 31, 2021

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'New Day's Lyric': Amanda Gorman

So let us not return to what was normal,
But reach toward what is next.

– Amanda Gorman –

‘New Day’s Lyric’: Amanda Gorman

As 2021 draws to a close, poet Amanda Gorman has released a new poem. In her words, this poem was created to, “celebrate the new year and honor the hurt & the humanity of the last one.” The poem begins with these words: “This hope is our door, our portal…” You can read the whole poem here. { read more }

Be The Change

If you feel inspired to, carve out some time today to write your own poem, prayer, reflection or meditation – looking back on the year that has been, and forward to the year that will be.

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The Truelove by David Whyte

This week’s inspiring video: The Truelove by David Whyte
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Video of the Week

Dec 30, 2021
The Truelove by David Whyte

The Truelove by David Whyte

Poet and philosopher David Whyte reads his poem The Truelove. Through this reading we see how our own beliefs about what we think we deserve can limit us, and how daring to broaden our sense of what is possible can liberate us beyond what we can even imagine. It takes faith to acknowledge possibilities, to say yes to life and to love, to give ourselves permission to experience happiness.
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Love: Life’s Greatest Gift

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 30, 2021

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Love: Life's Greatest Gift

Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere.
They’re in each other all along.

– Rumi –

Love: Life’s Greatest Gift

“Love is life’s greatest gift. We seek for love, and yet it is all around and within us. It belongs to the oneness of life, to every dewdrop on every leaf, to the spider spinning its web, the child looking at the stars. If we open our senses and open our hearts, we can feel its presence. Love is life speaking to us of its real mystery. And in that conversation so many things can happen, so many miracles can be born, the small unsuspecting miracles that we often do not notice–like momentary sunlight from behind a cloud, a flower where a seed unexpectedly sprouted, a smile from a stranger. Despite all of its distortions, pain, and suffering, this world belongs to love, just as each of us belongs to love. And just to know that we are part of this love is enough.” Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee shares more in this passage that equates learning to love with learning to live. { read more }

Be The Change

As you go through your day today, experiment with looking at everything and everyone that you encounter, as belonging to love.

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Spotlight On Kindness: A Conspiracy Of Kindness

Have you ever spent time searching for just the right present to give someone? And once you land on that perfect gift, your heart fills up with so much joy at the thought of giving it to them. You genuinely start to understand how it is in giving that we receive. The only thing sweeter could be if you had a co-conspirator in your search. Perhaps that’s why we love throwing a good surprise party. This week’s stories highlight strangers that love a good conspiracy of kindness. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: Have you ever spent time searching for just the right present to give someone? And once you land on that perfect gift, your heart fills up with so much joy at the thought of giving it to them. You genuinely start to understand how it is in giving that we receive. The only thing sweeter could be if you had a co-conspirator in your search. Perhaps that’s why we love throwing a good surprise party. This week’s stories highlight strangers that love a good conspiracy of kindness. –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Karen DeBonis has a particular process she uses when doing random acts of kindness. And thus far, no one has ever refused her offer. In this HuffPost article, she shares the lessons she has learned.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
Mindy’s dad was in home-hospice care during the holidays, confined to a bed facing the neighbor’s pine tree. Upon learning this, the neighbors decorated their tree so he could enjoy the lights.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
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Michigan neighbors build memories at ice rink
Hugs Last February, Scott Chittle felt the community needed a safe place to gather. He took it upon himself to build a skating rink for the kids in his neighborhood. Watch his uplifting story on CBS news.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
On a flight from Seoul to DC, Kristin Pedemonti sat next to an 89-year-old woman who did not speak her language. Throughout the flight, she learned that when there is no language, you can still speak kindness. Here’s their beautiful exchange.
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Next Week’s Pods (+ 26 stories!)

Incubator of compassionate action.

‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

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New Year, New Practices.
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As we were looking at Pod engagement in the last year, a number stood out: 41 thousand. That’s the number of hours that volunteers contributed. For every hour that a podmate puts in to harvest the fruits, another volunteer matches that to quietly till the soil. Together, it yields a field of emergence with unending moments of transformation. And when it all happens without a price tag, priceless gratitude circulates. Thank you for 2021.

To kick off 2022, we wanted to inform you of a couple upcoming Pods:

ssp_61cbf6e2031d2.jpg Jan 2nd, NEW STORY POD: What’s a new story you want to step into? For 21-days, you get a unique prompt everyday to share a story from your life, with kin from 24 countries doing the same. First week explores roots, second week dives into the present, and final week looks over the horizon. To top it off, some renowned guest speakers — author Charles Eisenstein, keeper of indigenous folk-tales Wakanyi Hoffman, and story-teller Brian Conroy. Join here.

Jan 8th, PRACTICE POD: Around New Years, we often say, “I set this resolution for myself”. But what if re-orient that from me to we? Specificially, (a) make a service resolution: might we arrive at self-improvement by serving others? (b) practice in community: might we go farther together? (c) cultivate deep ties: might we rise from me-to-me transactions to we-to-we web of relations to beyond-we noble friendships? Explore our first year-long Pod.

Thank you for your heart of service.
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P.S.
Last summer, among our interns was Alakh. When the 13-year-old discovered that his mentor, Brian Conroy, was a story-teller, he recorded his short stories. Check out the collection of 26 stories: Light That Never Dies!

Just last week, we finished a powerful Gandhi Pod. Below was the final reflection of a podmate from Canada:

When I turned 40, a dear friend who was 12 years my senior, asked me what I knew for certain. I told him that I’d have to get back to him on that. Three months later, we were sitting together again and I brought his question back up and he smiled.

“So what do you know for certain?” he asked again.

My answer: “We’re all in this together, alone, doing the best we can with what we have at any given point in time.”

He smiled a knowing smile.

In 17 years since that question, I’ve remembered and forgotten my answer more times than I care to remember or than I could count.

I’ve forgotten that I am in this life and on this planet with everyone else and yet I have focused on the alone part, because I believed that illusion more powerfully than the “we’re all in this together” aspect. That has allowed me to shrink and stay “safe” — or so I thought.

This week and my participation in this Gandhi Pod has been one of the most blessed experiences in my life! I didn’t know what to expect other than “an experience” and I came in with an open heart and mind.

Over this last week I have been humbled by the delta that I’ve found between where I am today and where I want to be. I’ve gotten — and lived — smaller over the years, shrinking into the shadows, not wanting to bother anyone or be an inconvenience.

I believed that an automatic conflict must take place to go “against the grain”. I don’t hold that as a truth anymore. Love is the way, for others and myself.

In my Pod Profile, I wrote that we’re all in this together. As I write the same line today, I’m blown away by how that simple statement was actually a foreshadowing of my rebirth into the now.

I’m not certain exactly what my future looks like right now — but I do know that it is LOVE.

ServiceSpace is a unique incubator of volunteer-run projects that nurture a culture of generosity. We believe that small acts of service can nurture a profound inner transformation that sustains external impact. To get involved, you can subscribe to our newsletters or create an account and complete our 3-step process to volunteer.
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Maple Syrup: Taste of Wonder

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 29, 2021

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Maple Syrup: Taste of Wonder

What good is the warmth of summer, without the cold of winter to give it sweetness?

– John Steinbeck –

Maple Syrup: Taste of Wonder

“But sometime in February, just when we grew restless and a little weary from the lack of color all winter, from the scarves, boots, shovels, and crockpot stews, we’d feel the flurries of my favorite type of snow: a sugar snow, thick and heavy, hugging the base of the sugarbush–what a forest of sugar maples made for tapping is called–while keeping the roots cool enough that they don’t start developing leaves just yet…” What follows is an excerpt from writer Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s “Taste of Wonder” column. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to reflect on what sweetens your own experience of literal or metaphorical winter?

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Beyond 5 Sense Based Humanity?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 28, 2021

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Beyond 5 Sense Based Humanity?

We are built out of very small stuff, and we are embedded in a very large cosmos, and the fact is that we are not very good at understanding reality at either of those scales.

– David Eagleman –

Beyond 5 Sense Based Humanity?

Neuroscientist David Eagleman expertly “decodes the mysteries of the tangled web of neurons and electricity that make our minds tick — and also make us human. ‘Our experience of reality,’ says Eagleman, ‘is constrained by our biology.’ His research into our brain processes has led him to create new interfaces to take in previously unseen information about the world around us. Read this overview of Eagleman’s intriguing talk.” { read more }

Be The Change

The implications of technology that extends us beyond our 5 senses are hard to fathom. Meanwhile take a moment to appreciate the sheer ingenuity and poetry of our existing faculties through this post, “Diane Ackerman on the Secret Life of the Senses.” { more }

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Love Is Not A Feeling, It’s An Ability

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Love Is Not A Feeling, It’s An Ability
by bell hooks and Sharon Salzberg

[Listen to Audio!]

2534.jpgbell hooks: It fascinates me that while we are so obsessed with romance, many of us are turned off by the practice of love.

When you tell someone that there’s really a practice—a way that many of us, especially those from dysfunctional backgrounds, can learn what it is to love—they are hesitant to fully accept that. Sharon, when you express your conviction in our innate capacity to love, I’m not sure many people really believe in that.

Sharon Salzberg: Well, why would we, really? (laughter) There’s a line from an old Steve Carell movie, Dan in Real Life: “Love is not a feeling. It’s an ability.” […] Love is inside me. Other people might awaken it or threaten it, but as a capacity, it’s mine. That was incredibly liberating and also a little daunting. Because—and here’s the big question—if it’s an ability, does that mean it’s my responsibility to try to cultivate it, even in difficult circumstances?

bell hooks: Anytime we do the work of love, we are doing the work of ending domination. In a culture of domination, it’s extremely hard to cultivate love or to be love. At this moment in our nation, there’s so much disrespect afloat. Respect comes from a word meaning to look at. Right now, we are not looking at one another with loving-kindness, with compassion. […]

These days, I feel fear and uncertainty in my relationship to strangers. So I struggle every day now with how to love the stranger. How do I love people who are beaming a lot of hate in my direction? That’s a really crucial national question right now. How can we return ourselves to a place of loving-kindness?

Sharon Salzberg: […] Over the years that I’ve taught loving-kindness, I’ve encountered many people who are skeptical about the whole thing. “If I were to develop a more loving heart,” they think, “I’d have to give more money, I wouldn’t take a stand, I wouldn’t protect myself, I’d just sort of smile.”

If we think that’s what love means, what a degraded notion of love we’ve come to! There’s something empowering in recapturing the word “love” as something strong and unafraid.

bell hooks: That’s part of the power of Martin Luther King Jr. that we’ve kind of lost. He talked about love as a transformational source. It’s come down to us as a sort of a watered-down version of “Love your neighbor as yourself,” not as an empowering force that changes everything. I love Dr. King’s book Strength to Love, in which he talks about the courage it takes, in the midst of domination, to decide to love.

That’s a commitment many of us would rather not deal with. How do we make that commitment? How do we start to love? We’re in such a climate of hate right now. We’re seeing diminishing acts of kindness and love because fear of the stranger has been so deeply cultivated in us. Breaking down that us-and-them binary is part of the work of love. […] Our innate capacity to love is like a seed in the soil. What do we need to do to activate that seed, to make it capable of blossoming? It’s not enough just to know that the seed is in the soil.

Sharon Salzberg: Yes. Without our effort, it will not grow and spread. But I agree that we have unguarded moments of profound connection and they’re not strategic. They don’t even have to be with a human being or fall within the standard picture of a relationship. We can love life or nature. We can be struck with gratitude and awe, have great moments of connection, without another person involved.

It’s true we can be harsh judges of others and of ourselves. We always need to look at both the stories others tell about us and the stories we tell ourselves. Part of what makes us feel incomplete is not noticing that we are loving people, that we have great capacity to love. Love is not a scarce resource.

About the Author: Excerpted from here.

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Love Is Not A Feeling, It’s An Ability
How do you relate to the notion of our capacity to love being like a seed in the soil, needing effort to grow? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to discover love as an ability in yourself, not beholden to your circumstances? What helps you return yourself to a place of loving-kindness even when hate is beamed in your direction?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We are born with a capacity to love. It is like a seed in the soil. And the seed needs to be watered to grow. When a child is born, that child has an innate capacity to love. The child needs to be nur…
David Doane wrote: Our effort is important in the growth of our capacity to love. One effort that enhances love is accepting that we are one, which makes love of ‘the other’ love of self, and turns ‘us vs them’ into si…
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Why Adults Lose the Beginner’s Mind

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December 27, 2021

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Why Adults Lose the Beginner's Mind

Adults often assume that most learning is the result of teaching and that exploratory, spontaneous learning is unusual. But actually, spontaneous learning is more fundamental.

– Alison Gopnik –

Why Adults Lose the Beginner’s Mind

“We spend so much time and effort trying to teach kids to think like adults. A message of Gopnik’s work and one I take seriously is we need to spend more time and effort as adults trying to think more like kids.” This wide-ranging conversation between Ezra Klein and psychology professor Alison Gopnik discusses how children think, the value of play and the pivotal difference between ‘spotlight’ consciousness and ‘lantern’ consciousness, as well as the impact of different types of meditation on the brain and more. { read more }

Be The Change

In “Vulnerable yet Vital” Gopnik makes the case that, “The dance of love and lore between grandparent and grandchild is at the centre, not the fringes, of our evolutionary story.” You can read the essay here. { more }

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Atlast of the Heart

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December 26, 2021

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Atlast of the Heart

We have to belong to ourselves as much as we need to belong to others. Any belonging that asks us to betray ourselves is not true belonging.

– Brene Brown –

Atlast of the Heart

“Researcher, academic and best-selling author Brene Brown has spent the last two decades studying courage, vulnerability, shame and empathy. Her TEDx talk, “the power of vulnerability”, is one of the top five most viewed TED talks in the world with more than 50 million views.In her sixth and newest book, Atlas of the Heart, she takes us on a journey through 87 of the emotions and experiences that define what it means to be human.” { read more }

Be The Change

You can listen to Brene Brown sharing more about The Atlas of the Heart in this interview. { more }

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