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Archive for 2021

Mother Trees In A Wood Wide Web

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Mother Trees In A Wood Wide Web
by Suzanne Simard

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2518.jpgElders fill a special role in any community, having earned the
respect of the tribe for their life-long wisdom, knowledge, and
teaching. They help link individuals to the broader community
as a whole, and connect the past with the future. Not all old
individuals are elders, nor are all elders old. In my family, grandmothers and grandfathers usually filled the role of elders, although certain individuals, like my daughters, were born with wisdom beyond their years, connecting the family through the ages.
This wisdom emerges from lives lived before them over many
generations.

In my life’s work in the forest, I have learned that elders of many species, including humans, also connect the forest, providing an adaptive genetic scaffolding for change and resilience among the whole community. In the forest, the foundational species are the trees, and the elders of this foundation are the biggest and oldest trees. Elder trees provide an anchor for the diverse structure of the many-sized trees in their neighborhoods. These elders are important not just as habitat for the many plant, animal, fungal, and microbial creatures that live in the forest, but also the people who depend on the woods for their cultures
and livelihoods.

A single elder Douglas fir tree, for example, can be connected to hundreds of other trees, either of the same or different species, by the sheer magnitude of its massive root system and diverse fungal community. These subterranean connections form a mycorrhizal network, now known colloquially as the “Wood Wide Web,” with a topology similar to that of neural networks, stream networks in watersheds, and the internet. In the Wood Wide Web, trees can be thought to serve as the nodes of the network, while fungi act as the vertices.

The Wood Wide Web is a busy network, where […] elder trees are able to recognize neighbors that are genetically related, or that are kin, and they can send more or less resources to other trees to either favor or disfavor them, depending on the safety of the environment. I have taken to calling these elders “Mother Trees” because they appear to be nurturing their young. Mother Trees thus connect the forest through space and time, just like elders connect human families across generations.

About the Author: Suzanne Simard is a Canadian scientist, professor and author various books. Excerpted from this article.

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Mother Trees In A Wood Wide Web
How do you relate to the connecting and nurturing role of elders, be they humans or trees? Can you share an experience of a time you became aware of an entire ecology beneath the visible nodes? What helps you be a nourishing elder that sustains others?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I like the difference between oldindividualsand elders as shown by the author Suzzane Simard. As the author says not all individual are elders nor all elders are old. The marking sign of an elder is w…
David Doane wrote: If elders is defined as those having "lifelong wisdom, knowledge, and teaching," then elders are very likely to provide a valuable connecting and nurturing role,being of great benefit to eve…
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Some Good News

• Mizuko Kuyo: A Unique Japanese Grieving Ritual
• The Difference Between Healing & Curing
• Getting Back in Time

Video of the Week

• Blessings

Kindness Stories

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A Quite Interesting Approach to Education

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 4, 2021

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A Quite Interesting Approach to Education

Can you walk on water? Then you have done no better than a straw.
Can you fly through the air? You have done no better than a bluebottle.
Conquer your Heart, and then you may become someone.

– Abd Allah Ansari –

A Quite Interesting Approach to Education

John Lloyd is the television producer and presenter of some of the most renowned UK comedies in recent decades, including Blackadder and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. In 2002, he made the pilot of “QI” (an acronym for “Quite Interesting”), a popular show which is now in its 18th series on the BBC. “When I started QI, only about five per cent of people that I talked to understood what it was really getting at. They said: “Oh, it’s a game”, but I would say: “No, it’s a principle”. The principle at the core of QI is that literally everything in the universe without exception is interesting — if looked at long enough or closely enough or from the right angle. This is a philosophy that really works. Over and over again we have proved that something that looks dull is not dull. It works for anything — any country, any fruit, any town, any house, any person.” He shares more in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Try looking closely at something today, that in your typical frame of mind, you would find uninteresting or utterly trivial. See what happens if you examine it “long enough or closely enough, or from the right angle.”

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Mizuko Kuyo: A Unique Japanese Grieving Ritual

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October 3, 2021

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Mizuko Kuyo: A Unique Japanese Grieving Ritual

So it’s true, when all is said and done, grief is the price we pay for love

– E.A. Bucchianeri –

Mizuko Kuyo: A Unique Japanese Grieving Ritual

When parents lose a child, there are rituals to mark their grief — holding funerals, sitting shiva, bringing casseroles. But when that loss happens before birth, it often isn’t marked. Sometimes, it’s barely even mentioned. It’s different in Japan, which has a traditional Buddhist ceremony that some US Americans are adopting as their own. Called ‘mizuko kuyo’, which could be translated to ‘water baby memorial service’, this ritual originated in Japan post WWII, and draws on the idea that life is like water, a fluid resource with no beginning or end. This NPR piece shares more. { read more }

Submitted by: Gayathri Ramachandran

Be The Change

What rituals could you gently adapt/adopt to grieve what has been lost in your life? While you contemplate this, here is a poem by Barbara Crooker that evokes the raw tenderness of irreplaceable losses { more }

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The Difference Between Healing & Curing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 2, 2021

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The Difference Between Healing & Curing

If you restore balance in your own self, you will be contributing immensely to the healing of the world.

– Deepak Chopra –

The Difference Between Healing & Curing

“In my thirty years of working with cancer patients, I’ve seen a profound distinction between curing and healing. Curing is what a physician seeks to offer you. Healing, however, comes from within us. It’s what *we* bring to the table. Healing can be described as a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual process of coming home.” The founder of Commonweal, Dr. Michael Learner shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

“Already Free” is a new documentary that traces the transformative healing journeys of two individuals through the practice of a particular form of Qi Gong. You can watch it here. { more }

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How Do You Be?

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October 1, 2021

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How Do You Be?

Biologically, physiologically, we are not so different from each other; historically, as narratives–we are each of us unique.

– Oliver Sacks –

How Do You Be?

“‘How are you?’ Back before the pandemic, when you and I would greet other people by asking this question, we usually didn’t expect or desire a real answer. If we got one, it had better be brief, and not too grim or involved. We weren’t up for longwinded or dreary responses. That’s not how the game was played. The pandemic might have altered our customary ‘How are yous?’ a bit. It might have made them less superficial, and more sincere. Those three words definitely mean more to me now than they used to. How about you?” Phyllis Cole Dai shares more in this thoughtful piece. { read more }

Be The Change

“How do you be?” Consider the question for yourself, in the light of Phyllis Cole-Dai’s post. For more inspiration, join a 21-Day Interfaith Compassion Challenge that starts this weekend. More details here. { more }

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Blessings

This week’s inspiring video: Blessings
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Video of the Week

Sep 30, 2021
Blessings

Blessings

Poet David Whyte takes us with him on a visual journey across the Irish countryside with this reading of his poems which bless both sound and light. The soul-touching music composed by Owen Ó Súilleabháin accompanies this journey in which sounds and sights provide ways of knowing that "I am here". Each day blesses us with original music and the light through which everything becomes an eye to everything else.
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The Wisdom of Salmon

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September 30, 2021

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The Wisdom of Salmon

Wherever love is, I want to be, I will follow it as surely as the land-locked salmon finds the sea.

– Jeanette Wiinterson –

The Wisdom of Salmon

What can salmon teach us about sustainability in a complex environment? Marine biologist Alexandra Morton shares startling new research that lets us decode the information stored in a salmon’s immune system. The data reveals where we’re harming the fish, the ocean, and ourselves — ultimately revealing lessons for how humans can thrive on this planet without destroying it. { read more }

Be The Change

Listen to the wisdom the natural world is sharing about how to thrive as part of the environment you live in.

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Calling Team Earth

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September 29, 2021

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Calling Team Earth

All is connected… no one thing can change by itself.

– Paul Hawken –

Calling Team Earth

“Paul Hawken is a world-renowned environmentalist, activist, and author. His works include Blessed Unrest, Drawdown, and Sustainable Revolution. In this episode of Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon speaks with Paul about the call to action in his newest book, Regeneration: Ending the Climate Crisis in One Generation. Paul and Tami discuss the accelerating effects of climate change and how global society might respond. Paul comments on the lack of public engagement with the situation, emphasizing that old and entrenched human behavioral patterns wont solve the problem. Tami and Paul talk about the nature of social change, resources for everyday climate action, and the fascinating climate-shifting possibilities of the Azolla fern. Finally, they speak on the importance of staying active and joyous even when the scale of the crisis feels overwhelming.” { read more }

Be The Change

Join upcoming calls with an inspiring line-up of change-makers in this “Law of Love” series honoring Mahatma Gandhi’s birthday. { more }

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Getting Back in Time

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September 28, 2021

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Getting Back in Time

When we are being, not only are we collaborating with chronological time, but we are touching on kairos and are freed from the normal restrictions of time.

– Madeleine L’Engle –

Getting Back in Time

“Time has a hold on us, there is no escaping it. Sometimes it can seem to govern our lives: we’re pressed for it; we don’t have any; it’s running out. We need to be on time and in time. At other ‘times’ we can find we have got time on our hands — or better, the ease of having all the time in the world. It is such a vital aspect of our lives that telling the time is one of the first skills we teach our children. However, after the early years of primary school, and despite its ever-presence and undoubted significance, time disappears from the curriculum.” In this thoughtful essay, Richard Gault explores the difference between clock time, and the Greek notion of ‘kairos’, or ‘knowing the right moment,’ and surfaces ways in which technology has radically altered our relationship to time. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this On Being interview with Richard Rohr, “Living in Deep Time.” { more }

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The World Feeling And The Soul Feeling

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The World Feeling And The Soul Feeling
by Anthony de Mello

[Listen to Audio!]

2515.jpgFor what will it profit a man, if he gains the whole world and forfeits
his life? —Matthew 16:26

Recall the kind of feeling you have when someone praises you, when you are approved, accepted, applauded. And contrast that with the kind of feel­ing that arises within you when you look at the sun­set or the sunrise or Nature in general, or when you read a book or watch a movie that you thoroughly enjoy. Get the taste of this feeling and contrast it with the first, namely, the one that was generated within you when you were praised. Understand that the first type of feeling comes from self-glorification, self-promotion. It is a worldly feeling. The second comes from self-fulfillment, a soul feeling.

Here is another contrast: Recall the kind of feeling you have when you succeed, when you have made it, when you get to the top, when you win a game or a bet or an argument. And contrast it with the kind of feeling you get when you really enjoy the job you are doing, you are absorbed in, the action that you are currently engaged in. And once again notice the qualitative difference between the worldly feeling and the soul feeling.

Yet another contrast: Remember what you felt like when you had power, you were the boss, peo­ple looked up to you, took orders from you; or when you were popular. And contrast that worldly feeling with the feeling of intimacy, companionship—the times you thoroughly enjoyed yourself in the com­pany of a friend or with a group in which there was fun and laughter.

Having done this, attempt to understand the true nature of worldly feelings, namely, the feelings of self-promotion, self-glorification. They are not nat­ural, they were invented by your society and your culture to make you productive and to make you controllable. These feelings do not produce the nour­ishment and happiness that is produced when one contemplates Nature or enjoys the company of one’s friends or one’s work. They were meant to produce thrills, excitement—and emptiness.

Then observe yourself in the course of a day or a week and think how many actions of yours are performed, how many activities engaged in that are uncontaminated by the desire for these thrills, these excitements that only produce emptiness, the desire for attention, approval, fame, popularity, success or power.

And take a look at the people around you. Is there a single one of them who has not become addicted to these worldly feelings? A single one who is not controlled by them, hungers for them, spends every minute of his/her waking life consciously or unconsciously seeking them? When you see this you will understand how people attempt to gain the world and, in the process, lose their soul. For they live empty, soulless lives.

And here is a parable of life for you to ponder on: A group of tourists sits in a bus that is passing through gorgeously beautiful country; lakes and mountains and green fields and rivers. But the shades of the bus are pulled down. They do not have the slightest idea of what lies beyond the windows of the bus. And all the time of their journey is spent in squabbling over who will have the seat of honor in the bus, who will be applauded, who will be well considered. And so they remain till the journey’s end.

About the Author: Anthony De Mello was a Jesuit priest. Excerpt above from ‘The Way to Love‘, a compilation of final contemplations.

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The World Feeling And The Soul Feeling
How do you relate to the distinction between the worldly feeling and the soul feeling? Can you share an experience of a time you were able to see the distinction clearly? What helps you avoid getting addicted to worldly feelings?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: I like the way Anthony De Mello shows the contrast between WorldlyFeeling and Soul Feeling. Soul feeling arises from within us. is characterizedby joy, intimacy, nourishment, and fulfillment. No body …
David Doane wrote: What makes a feeling a soul feeling or a worldly feeling isn’t whether or not a person gets praise or applause or whether or not a person succeeds or wins, or whether or not a person has power. Wh…
Share/Read Your Reflections
Awakin Circles:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and rippled out as Awakin Circles in 80+ living rooms around the globe. To join in Santa Clara this week, RSVP online.

RSVP For Wednesday

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597.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

About
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.

Forward to a Friend

Awakin Weekly delivers weekly inspiration to its 93,144 subscribers. We never spam or host any advertising. And you can unsubscribe anytime, within seconds.

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

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