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Archive for December, 2021

While I Yet Live

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December 10, 2021

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While I Yet Live

We stitch together quilts of meaning to keep us warm and safe, with whatever patches of beauty and utility we have on hand.

– Anne Lamott –

While I Yet Live

The quilters of rural Gee’s Bend, Alabama, many of whom are descendants of slaves, learned to quilt from their mothers and grandmothers. They also learned, sitting under the quilting table as small children, valuable life lessons, and the hopes and dreams their families had for them. Their brightly colored quilts speak of love, peace, joy, and the value of hard work. Like their mothers and grandmothers before them, they sing and pray, sharing their life stories, as they work together. Their quilts have been recognized as valuable forms of art and exhibited in museums. Books have been written about them and their quilts. And yet they are most proud when “you can feel the love” that is sewn into every one of these quilted masterpieces. { read more }

Be The Change

he quilters are aware that their lifetime is limited and they work to make the most of it. What is it that you most want to do while you yet live?

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Expanding U.S.-China Consciousness

This week’s inspiring video: Expanding U.S.-China Consciousness
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Video of the Week

Dec 09, 2021
Expanding U.S.-China Consciousness

Expanding U.S.-China Consciousness

This film chronicles a coming together of U.S. and China leaders in the consciousness and wellbeing sector, led by Mina Lee. At the heart of Mina’s life and work is the permission to be stretched by love. She is guided by the question of how to bridge cultural and intergenerational divides — the ways in which we dehumanize each other through misunderstanding, whether between investors and investees, business and non-business sectors, people living in the East and those in the West, and more specifically, China and the United States. Through honoring their shared life experiences they provide witness to the statement, "The only thing separating me from you is my idea of you."
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Metta Verse, Pods + New Website!

Incubator of compassionate action.

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Metta Verse.
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In Sanskrit, the word “metta” means loving kindness. As technology proceeds from screen refreshs to “you-will-also-like” algorithms to unending TV binging to now an immersive “metaverse”, it behooves us to ask — how do we amplify the “metta verse”, the song of love? And how does such an organizing principle move us from transactional to multi-dimensional to noble friendships?
2502.jpg After engaging with many powerful events in the last two months, a b-school professor summed up his transformation: “Completely unmoored and yet completely at home.” In October, during our “Law of Love” webinar series, Gary Zukav teared up telling us about a humble pair of socks on his altar — the gift of a full day’s earnings from a stranger. Metta verse. During the Laddership Pod, Linh spontaneously composed a song in a few minutes that sent shivers down our spine. Metta verse. Among the participants (from 58 countries!) in November’s Interfaith Compassion Pod was Debra, who profoundly shared her restaurant tips with a bartender. Indeed, the human heart unfailingly responds to the advances of selfless love.

While the pandemic’s constraints continued in 2021, it didn’t curtail our collective creativity. Just last week, we launched a new website that encompasses thousands of wisdom readings in numerous languages, 500+ interviews with thought leaders, and local communities around the globe. All powered by tens of thousands of volunteer hours, responding to an uncommon invitation: “WANTED: people willing to put in a lot of labor, receive no salary, work invisibly, give away the credit to others, and operate with a momentary team that will soon dissolve itself.” Why? Because metta verse.

Thank you for patterning this impulse — this song of kindness, poetry of magnanimity, dance of joy all rolled up into a reverberating echo of compassion.
UPCOMING PODS
ssp_61afbed89e458.gif Starts this Sunday! Inspired by Gandhi’s notion that ‘Law of Love’ is far more precise, subtle and powerful than even forces like gravity and electricity, we held a series of compelling conversations in October across “five fingers of a hand” that can collectively unlock this potential: community, education, business, nonprofit and leadership. That has now flowed into a week-long Gandhi Pod — with inspiring change-makers and some world-renowned scholars as guest speakers.
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giphy.gif 21-Day New Story Challenge! To begin 2021, we spontaneously hosted a 21-day challenge. It was so powerful for the participants that we did it again in February. And now we’re repeating it again to kick off 2022! Every day you will receive a question that invites you to reflect; but what makes it transformative is doing it in a community of kindred spirits. As the Native American proverb says, “It takes a thousand voices to tell a single story.”
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ssp_619abdc7c8b35.jpg New Year Resolutions? Instead of a typical resolution for self improvement, are you up for taking a service resolution that benefits others? (Thank you, Chaz!) And just as we have “project managers” in organizations, what if we become “practice managers” for each other’s intent? This year-long Pod started as an experiment in another Pod, but we figured we might as well invite other kindred spirits too!
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INSPIRING TIDBITS
In the last Laddership Pod, podmates wrote 3504 pages of reflections. And Becca did something exceptional — she put together her favorite phrases from 150 interactions into an epic collage! #Wow

Tibetan monks from a 3000-person monastery in India graced one of our calls with a 30 minute Great Compassion chant, that left many with an out-of-mind experience. #Bow

In a recent Awakin Circle, 8-year-old Afton stunned us with poetry on the meaning of love while, on KindSpring, we learned about middle school perfection. #YouthRock

Nipun’s interview last week with a popular podcast: Buddha at the Gas Pump

The inspiring story of Chuck Collins: “At the age of 26, I had three or four times as much money as all the residents of the Bernardston mobile home park combined.” So he gave it all away, and is now asking his peers to do the same. Join Chuck on Saturday’s call.

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KEEPER OF THE FLAME
In a recent Pod, Lorin shared this beautiful story:

We used to live in Uganda. One time, we went camping in a nearby forest but hadn’t brought firewood; so we walked a mile to a nearby village and bought some. Half hour later, as we sat down to cook dinner, a boy from that village, from that family we had bought the fire from, came walking out of the forest towards us. He was probably eight and he was carrying something — a little scrap of metal that he was protecting. He was blowing on it because what he had brought us was an Ember from his fire. The family that sold us the firewood was worried that we wouldn’t be able to light our fire because in that village, they didn’t use matches and lighters — they light each fire from the embers of their neighbor. And so this boy had figured out where we were, had walked to us and had protected this ember just to help light our flame.

Thank you, all, for being a keeper of each other’s flames.

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Her Imagination is a Beautiful Garden

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 9, 2021

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Her Imagination is a Beautiful Garden

May the sun bring you new energy by day,
May the moon softly restore you by night,
May the rain wash away your worries,
May you walk gently through the world
And know its beauty all the days of your life.

– Apache Blessing –

Her Imagination is a Beautiful Garden

“My winter garden is quiet and lovely, with snow piled onto the shrubs and outlining the trees. For me, this is a time for resting and reflection, reading, drawing, and planning next year’s garden. Gardening has always been a part of my life. As a child, I spent summers playing in my grandfather’s stately and formal garden in Rochester, New York, where my great grandfather had managed the Ellwanger and Barry Nursery. Composed of a staggering 650 acres, this was the largest nursery in North America at the time.” Artist and writer Helen Stewart shares more from her unusual life journey in this reflective essay filled with photographs from her magical garden, where she only plants what she wishes to paint… { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Helen’s work and enjoy more glories from her garden here. { more }

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Time to Shed Our Skins

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 8, 2021

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Time to Shed Our Skins

Music is the language of the spirit. It opens the secret of life bringing peace, abolishing strife

– Kahlil Gibran –

Time to Shed Our Skins

Nils Kercher and Kira Kaipainen are life partners and unique world musicians who simultaneously draws listeners into the stark realities of our greater world, while also drawing them inward into the dazzling potentials of the human spirit. Theirs is a music that believes deeply in our fundamental interconnection, and the capacity we have to heal together. In the music they create together, the intensely personal mingles with the political, and universal truths are gleaned from local realities. Many of their themes have a raw intensity to them, and yet at the same time are infused with lightness, confidence and hope. Their latest music video, ‘Time to Shed Our Skins,’ is a beautiful example of this. Watch the video and read its moving backstory here. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join a special circle with Nils and Kira this Sunday,and hearstories, music and reflections from their journey. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Exhausting Quest For Perfection

About perfection, Brene Brown shares that, “Living in a society that floods us with unattainable expectations around every topic imaginable, putting down the perfection shield is scary. Finding the courage, compassion and connection to move from “What will people think?” to “I am enough,” is not easy. But however afraid we are of change, the question that we must ultimately answer is this: What’s the greater risk? Letting go of what people think — or letting go of how I feel, what I believe, and who I am?” This week’s stories explore further.

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“There is no way to genuinely, powerfully, truly love yourself while crafting a mask of perfection.” –Vironika Tugaleva
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Editor’s Note: About perfection, Brene Brown shares that, “Living in a society that floods us with unattainable expectations around every topic imaginable, putting down the perfection shield is scary. Finding the courage, compassion and connection to move from “What will people think?” to “I am enough,” is not easy. But however afraid we are of change, the question that we must ultimately answer is this: What’s the greater risk? Letting go of what people think — or letting go of how I feel, what I believe, and who I am?” This week’s stories explore further.
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
In this love story, an Alzheimer’s patient asks his wife to marry him after falling in love with her for a second time. The heart remembered through sickness and health, even when the mind forgot.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
A 13-year-old reflects on her unexpected encounter with another Middle School student. And how that taught her to love and accept herself as she is.
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Stop Trying To Be Perfect
Hugs In this eloquent Spoken Word, Prince Ea challenges the constant pressures of our times and encourages us to reflect deeply on our relationship to perfection.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Author and Professor Brene Brown talks about our exhausting and unrelenting quest for perfection. Why we get sucked into it, what it is, and what it’s not. The full article HERE.
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Tell Them What We Have Learned Here…

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 7, 2021

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Tell Them What We Have Learned Here...

We should be willing to act as a balm for all wounds.

– Etty Hillesum –

Tell Them What We Have Learned Here…

“There has been an emerging awareness of a body of work that arose during the Second World War. Fragments of it have been known for some years to disparate groups of academics and their students, but it is as if now, in the 21st century, these writings are forming themselves into a body, steadily enjoining us to give them our attention. The group has become known as the ‘Death Cell Philosophers’ and includes, among others, such writers as Simone Weil, Etty Hillesum, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Edith Stein […] these people did not know each other; it is possible that Edith Stein and Etty Hillesum crossed paths at Westerbork transport camp, but if so no record of their meeting has been found. But all were concerned, in diverse ways, to document transformation as it happened to them in the crucible of mid-20th-century Europe, in the years 193245, and to pass on what they had learnt. The form these writings took was neither memoir in the usual sense, nor history, nor fiction; possibly the word ‘chronicles’ could help to describe these records of passage, of change from one state to another, in the context of the extreme pressure that came with the war.” Martha Cass shares more about this remarkable group of 20th-century thinkers… { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Etty Hillesum and her inspiring life and spirit here. { more }

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When I Say I Know You

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
When I Say I Know You
by J. Krishnamurti

[Listen to Audio!]

2530.jpgWhen I say I know you, I mean I knew you yesterday. I do not know you actually now. All I know is my image of you. That image is put together by what you have said in praise of me or to insult me, what you have done to me – it is put together by all the memories I have of you – and your image of me is put together in the same way, and it is those images which have relationship and which prevent us from really communing with each other.

Two people who have lived together for a long time have an image of each other which prevents them from really being in relationship. If we understand relationship we can co-operate but co-operation cannot possibly exist through images, through symbols, through ideological conceptions. Only when we understand the true relationship between each other is there a possibility of love, and love is denied when we have images. Therefore it is important to understand, not intellectually but actually in your daily life, how you have built images about your wife, your husband, your neighbor, your child, your country, your leaders, your politicians, your gods – you have nothing but images.

These images create the space between you and what you observe and in that space there is conflict, so what we are going to find out now together is whether it is possible to be free of the space we create, not only outside ourselves but in ourselves, the space which divides people in all their relationships.

Now the very attention you give to a problem is the energy that solves that problem. When you give your complete attention – I mean with everything in you – there is no observer at all. There is only the state of attention which is total energy, and that total energy is the highest form of intelligence. Naturally that state of mind must be completely silent and that silence, that stillness, comes when there is total attention, not disciplined stillness. That total silence in which there is neither the observer nor the thing observed is the highest form of a religious mind. But what takes place in that state cannot be put into words because what is said in words is not the fact. To find out for yourself you have to go through it.

Every problem is related to every other problem so that if you can solve one problem completely – it does not matter what it is – you will see that you are able to meet all other problems easily and resolve them. We are talking, of course, of psychological problems. We have already seen that a problem exists only in time, that is when we meet the issue incompletely. So not only must we be aware of the nature and structure of the problem and see it completely, but meet it as it arises and resolve it immediately so that it does not take root in the mind. If one allows a problem to endure for a month or a day, or even for a few minutes, it distorts the mind. So is it possible to meet a problem immediately without any distortion and be immediately, completely, free of it and not allow a memory, a scratch on the mind, to remain? These memories are the images we carry about with us and it is these images which meet this extraordinary thing called life and therefore there is a contradiction and hence conflict. Life is very real – life is not an abstraction – and when you meet it with images there are problems.

Is it possible to meet every issue without this space-time interval, without the gap between oneself and the thing of which one is afraid? It is possible only when the observer has no continuity — the observer who is the builder of the image, the observer who is a collection of memories and ideas, who is a bundle of abstractions.

When you look at the stars there is you who are looking at the stars in the sky; the sky is flooded with brilliant stars, there is cool air, and there is you, the observer, the experiencer, the thinker, you with your aching heart, you, the center, creating space. You will never understand about the space between yourself and the stars, yourself and your wife or husband, or friend, because you have never looked without the image, and that is why you do not know what beauty is or what love is. You talk about it, you write about it, but you have never known it except perhaps at rare intervals of total self-abandonment. So long as there is a center creating space around itself there is neither love nor beauty.

When there is no center and no circumference then there is love. And when you love you are beauty.

About the Author: Excerpted from Freedom from the Known.

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When I Say I Know You
How do you relate to the notion that ‘so long as there is a center creating space around itself, there is neither love nor beauty’? Can you share a personal story of a time when you entered a state of attention where there was neither the observer nor the thing observed? What helps you look without an image?
wrote: How do we see ourselves and others in relationship without the psychological lenses of the past and the future, the images of myself and others, is a challenge for realizing love and beauty. If I vie…
David Doane wrote: We do a lot of relating image to image, not person to person. I do believe love is denied when we relate images. I think Krisnamurti is referring to the center as the real self, and I create space a…
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Some Good News

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Global call with Chuck Collins!
601.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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Born On Third Base

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 6, 2021

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Born On Third Base

Some people were born on third base and go through life thinking they’ve hit a triple.

– Barry Switzer –

Born On Third Base

At age 26, a powerful experience defined multi-millionaire Chuck Collin’s path. Realizing that “there was no rationale that could justify this disparity” whereby his inherited wealth was increasing through no sweat of his own, but wages were going down for so many, he decided to give away his wealth. “I wrote my parents a letter thanking them for the tremendous opportunities this wealth made possible. And I explained that while having the money was a boost in helping pay for my education, it was now a barrier to my making my own way in the world. I intended to pass the wealth on.'” Chuck signed the paperwork to transfer all the funds in his name to four grant-making foundations, maintaining no financial cushion or ‘rainy day’ fund for himself. Today Chuck is a storyteller, writer, researcher, and campaigner working to reverse the extreme inequalities of wealth and power — and heal the social and ecological harms resulting from societal inequities. Since 2006, he has been Director of the Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies where he co-edits Inequality.org. What follows is an excerpt from his book, “Born on Third Base.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join an Awakin Call this Saturday with Chuck Collins. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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How An Apple Tree Transformed My Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 5, 2021

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How An Apple Tree Transformed My Life

Trees are sanctuaries. Whoever knows how to speak to them, whoever knows how to listen to them, can learn the truth.

– Herman Hesse –

How An Apple Tree Transformed My Life

“I was in between creative projects and feeling the need to do something more dynamic with my energy than sitting at the computer sending and receiving emails, so I followed an impulse to a local biodynamic farm and got a job picking apples during the last six weeks of harvest. The notion was quite romantic initially…I’d spend my days wandering the orchard rows connecting with my Muse, and my evenings writing to my heart’s content. The first few days were pretty exciting –driving tractors, climbing trees, embracing the daily challenge of filling three big apple crates with 2,000 apples each before sunset. But by day four…I’m pretty sure I hated it.” Over the following days and weeks Chip Richards would experience a series of quiet transformations… { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to reflect on your own transformative experiences in nature.

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DailyGood is a volunteer-run initiative that delivers “good news” to 242,979 subscribers. There are many ways to help. To unsubscribe, click here.

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KindSpring // KarmaTube // Conversations // Awakin // More

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