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Archive for 2021

Comparative Suffering & Compassion

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 27, 2021

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Comparative Suffering & Compassion

We cannot selectively numb emotions, when we numb the painful emotions, we also numb the positive emotions.

– Brene Brown –

Comparative Suffering & Compassion

Measuring one’s suffering against that experienced by others is not an unusual tendency. The disproportionate degree of loss we have witnessed over the past year has left many struggling to make sense of where they fit into the whos-got-it-worse-hierarchy. When the world as we know it is undergoing tremendous and tumultuous shifts, how do we frame our blue days and broken hearts? In this article, writer and therapist Emily Barr explores the concept of comparative suffering and its antidote: compassion. { read more }

Be The Change

If interested, practice Loving-kindness meditation for a little while every day. If you haven’t tried it before, this site can help you get started. { more }

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21-Day Challenge (+ New Gandhi Series!)

Incubator of compassionate action.

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21 Day Compassion Challenge.
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After our global prayer circle in May, a seed for a 21-day interfaith compassion challenge emerged. Now, community members from 21 different faiths (including atheism) have come together to offer a daily prompt of unique practices of compassion. With compelling guest speakers, from the pioneering founder of URI Bishop William Swing to a group of Tibetan monks from Dalai Lama’s monastery in India(!) leading a collective chant, participants from 24 countries are readying for a sacred journey starting Oct 2nd. If you’d like to join, there’s still a few days left to join.
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gandhi_walk.png Commemorating Gandhi’s birthday, volunteers in India are launching a special “Law of Love” webinar series throughout the month. Building on the metaphor of “five fingers” of community, education, business, nonprofit and leadership sectors, we hope to explore nuances that draw a throughline from inner transformation to external impact. It starts with a very successful entrepreneur Vallabh Bhansali, who sits on the board of Mumbai’s stock exchange; Jayanti Ravi, who headed the education department of Gujarat and now leads Auroville; celebrity author Gary Zukav whose most recent book is titled Universal Human; Rani Bang, whose medical service in one of the most of poverty-stricken areas on the planet has become a global model, and Jerry White, a Nobel Peace Laureate! Following that series, all attendees will be invited to a “Gandhi Pod” to build on the dialogue in a peer-learning context. Do join us and share with your friends!
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TIDBITS FROM THE FIELD
group2.jpg Over the last few weeks, hundreds of you have joined and co-created wide-ranging pods from Education to Business to Living and Dying. The most recent “Laddership Pod“, requiring an intense 20 hours a week for an entire month, irrevocably touched its alumni and volunteers alike. In between, we hosted various “Pod Rooms” to deeply listen to each other’s stories; here’s a sampling of four videos:

  • Wounded Healers: lifelong advocate for racial and housing equity, youngest chaplain in Ivy League history, and author of six books, Chaz Howard tells stories that remake our idea of how change happens. #tears
  • Always Room for One More. For decades, Sister Lucy has been immersed in unconscionable suffering, and yet she radiates love and oozes joy. It is easy to see why even Pope Francis asked her for blessings. #bows
  • What the Whales Taught Me. Out in Alaska, almost out of nowhere, 40 whales surrounded her boat. They had come to teach her something. For the first time, Shay Beider shares four lessons whales can offer humans. #goosebumps
  • When I Met the Dalai Lama: In 2008, a freak accident on the Golden Gate Bridge left her with 17 broken bones, 9 surgeries and 7 weeks in coma. In one of our “Pod Rooms”, Grace Dammann shared a story that buoyed our spirits. #grace

group1.jpg Emergence never ceases to amaze. To encourage a podmate, Shaheen posted a link about a song by a Gandhian elder that her brother had recorded years ago; on another post, Ryan wrote about he had been wronged recently; to support him, in Vietnam, Linh picked up her guitar and spontaneously played an unforgettable rendition of that song: Game, Game, Game

That elder, Kanti-Dada, was a remarkable sculptor whose statue of Gandhi stands in Union Square in New York even today. He had one peculiar practice — he never signed his name on any of his art. To the question, “How do you know when a piece is complete?” he humbly replies, “When I know that I haven’t done it.”

Thank you for co-creating a field of sacred service.

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Place, Personhood & the Hippocampus

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 26, 2021

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Place, Personhood & the Hippocampus

Navigating becomes a way of knowing, familiarity, and fondness. It is how you can fall in love with a mountain or a forest.

– M.R. O’Connor –

Place, Personhood & the Hippocampus

“‘Place and a mind may interpenetrate till the nature of both is altered,’ the Scottish mountaineer and poet Nan Shepherd wrote in her lyrical love letter to her native Highlands, echoing an ancient intuition about how our formative physical landscapes shape our landscapes of thought and feeling. The word ‘genius’ in the modern sense, after all, originates in the Latin phrase genius loci — ‘the spirit of a place.'” In this post, Maria Popova delves into the themes of M.R. O’Connor’s book, “Wayfinding: The Science and Mystery of How Humans Navigate the World.” { read more }

Be The Change

GPS gives directions — but what does it take away? This excerpt from O’Connor’s book shares more. { more }

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A Case for the Porch

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 25, 2021

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A Case for the Porch

The extraordinary is waiting quietly beneath the skin of all that is ordinary.

– Mark Nepo –

A Case for the Porch

“Lately I’ve been trying to think like a porch. Trying to think between the natural and the human. Thinking how best to build during a climate crisis. I came across John Cage saying that progress in art “may be listening to nature.” He thought this activity could best play out on a porch, where we can hear nature’s symphony and then breathe our own masterpieces. Can we play our porches like instruments? So that we listen to but also learn from nature?” Charles Hailey shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Why read in the Anthropocene? This essayist draws on Hailey’s book, “The Porch: Meditations on the Edge of Nature,” to help answer that question. Read the essay here. { more }

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What Makes A Good Life?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 24, 2021

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What Makes A Good Life?

There isn’t time — so brief is life — for bickerings, apologies, heartburnings, callings to account. There is only time for loving — and but an instant, so to speak, for that.

– Mark Twain –

What Makes A Good Life?

What keeps us happy and healthy as we go through life? If you think it’s fame and money, you’re not alone but, according to psychiatrist Robert Waldinger, you’re mistaken. As the director of a 75-year-old study on adult development, he shares three important lessons learned from the study as well as some practical, old-as-the-hills wisdom on how to build a fulfilling, long life. { read more }

Be The Change

The Harvard Study of Adult Development tracked 724 men for 75 years. The 60 who are still alive show proof of what can bring us true happiness and satisfaction. Guess at their three major findings before you watch! { more }

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What Makes a Good Life?

This week’s inspiring video: What Makes a Good Life?
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Sep 23, 2021
What Makes a Good Life?

What Makes a Good Life?

What keeps us happy and healthy as we go through life? If you think it’s fame and money, you’re not alone – but, according to psychiatrist Robert Waldinger, you’re mistaken. As the director of a 75-year-old study on adult development, he shares three important lessons learned from the study as well as some practical, old-as-the-hills wisdom on how to build a fulfilling, long life.
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Where I’m From…

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 23, 2021

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Where I'm From...

The memories of childhood have a strange shuttling quality, and areas of darkness ring the spaces of light. The memories of childhood are like clear candles in an acre of night, illuminating fixed scenes from surrounding darkness.

– Carson McCullers –

Where I’m From…

Appalachian poet George Ella Lyon’s poem, “Where I’m From,” evokes the particular world of a particular childhood through a poem quilted from scraps and patches of memory… Memories of specific sights and sounds, objects, instructions, tragedies, and delights. It has been used in classrooms around the world as a prompt for people to write their own versions of, “Where I’m From.” More recently in response to the extreme divisions riddling our world, Lyon was inspired to start co-create the, “I Am From Project.” Because, in her words, “In such an atmosphere, how can we find our voices and make them heard? One avenue is through poetry, that heart-cry that comes to us in times of love and crisis.” Read her poem and learn more about this beautiful effort here. { read more }

Be The Change

Where are you from? Use Lyon’s poem as a springboard and weave together your own origin poem. For more inspiration, read the back story to the poem, and Lyon’s warm words of encouragement to anyone wishing to write their own version. { more }

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A Palestinian Woman Building Peace From the Bottom Up

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 22, 2021

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A Palestinian Woman Building Peace From the Bottom Up

Peace is not the absence of conflict but the presence of creative alternatives for responding to conflict – alternatives to passive or aggressive responses, alternatives to violence.

– Dorothy Thompson –

A Palestinian Woman Building Peace From the Bottom Up

Born in Jerusalem to respected Palestinian scholars and educators, Huda Abu Arquob’s great-grandfather was one of the many Muslim Palestinians who took in and protected Jewish residents of Hebron during the 1929 massacre. “That story has not been properly documented,” Huda says, “perhaps because it challenges the simplistic narrative of Palestinians and Israelis fighting for 3,000 years. I’ve felt throughout my life that is it important to challenge these false narratives and to try and change the way we look at the ‘Other’.” Based in Hebron, Huda Abu Arquob is the Regional Director of the Alliance for Middle East Peace (ALLMEP), a coalition and network of more than 130 civil society organizations working in Palestine and in Israel on conflict transformation, peacebuilding and nonviolent direct actions. She is also a recognized leader in grassroots initiatives focused on Feminist Inclusive Political Activism. She shares more in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Huda Abu Arqoub. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Prayer for Atheists

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 21, 2021

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Prayer for Atheists

The function of prayer is not to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays.

– Soren Kierkegaard –

Prayer for Atheists

“Legend has it that the physicist Niels Bohr had a horseshoe hanging above his door. A colleague asked him why, to which he responded, “It’s for luck.” The colleague then asked him if he believed in luck. Bohr reassured him that as a scientist he did not believe in luck. Puzzled, the colleague asked again why Bohr had the horseshoe hanging above his door. Bohr responded, “I’m told that you don’t have to believe in order for it to work.” William Irwin is a Professor of Philosophy, and author of ‘God Is a Question, Not an Answer: Finding Common Ground in Our Uncertainty.’ More in this essay. { read more }

Be The Change

“I don’t know where prayers go, or what they do…” So begins a poem by Mary Oliver. Listen to her reading it here. { more }

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A Life On The Ground

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
A Life On The Ground
by Parker Palmer

[Listen to Audio!]

2372.jpgQuestion: … the idea of having “a life on the ground”. Can you expand on what that means to you?

That brings back a really important moment in my journey with depression, and in my life journey. I was seeing this therapist about my depression, and he listened to me for quite a long time. And finally, after the seventh or eighth meeting, he said, “If I could mirror something back to you, Parker, it seems to me that you are imagining depression as the hand of an enemy trying to crush you” … which is indeed how it felt. But he said, “Would it be possible for you to image depression as the hand of a friend trying to press you down to the ground on which it’s safe to stand?” He was a very wise man and a good therapist. He didn’t give me a lecture; he just sort of planted that image with me. And I think he trusted that I could work with it, which I did. And we talked about it more in the subsequent weeks and months.

What I came to understand is this: I had been living ‘at altitude’, and I remember trying to identify the ways in which I had been doing that. I was living at altitude because of my ego, which wanted to be at the top of the tower. I was living at altitude because of my intellect, which wanted to think its way through everything, and you can’t think your way out of depression. I was living at altitude because of my high ethic, which wasn’t coming from inside of me; it was just a bag full of ‘oughts’ that were inherited from God knows where. And I was living at altitude because of some misunderstandings I had about spirituality being sort of a Superman “up, up and away” kind of thing.

Well, that’s a lot of altitude that I’ve just named. I was probably in the stratosphere at that point, where the oxygen is very thin. It’s not fit for human life. But the big point is that if you live ‘at altitude’ and you trip and fall, as we all do on a pretty regular basis, you have a long, long way to fall, and you might kill yourself.

Depression can sometimes be imagined, especially depressions that end in suicide, as falling a long, long way down. But if the spiritual quest is to get your feet on the ground, and the intellectual quest is to use your mind on the ground, and the ethical quest is to find those values that come up through your own root system, and you really keep working with your ego, to keep it from making you into a gas balloon, and you live on the ground, then you can fall down ten times a day and not kill yourself. You can get up, dust yourself off and proceed. And that image stayed with me in a really, really helpful way.

Years ago I studied the work of Paul Tillich, the great theologian, when I was in my 20s at Union Theological Seminary in New York, and was too young to understand what he was talking about. For Tillich, the image of God was ‘the ground of our being’. I think I understand now why those are important words. It’s groundedness that I think we’re all seeking; solid ground under our feet.

About the Author: Excerpted from this interview.

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A Life On The Ground
How do you relate to the notion that the goal of a spiritual quest is to get our feet on the ground? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to close the distance between you and the ground? What helps you be aware of your altitude?
susan schaller wrote: Such an apt description of the depression I used to fall into all my youth. Reminds me of a verse in the Tau te Ching about fear and hope being hollow, attached to ego/self: Whether we climb up the la…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: For me as a human being, all quests-intellectual, ethical, and spiritual- are important. Intellectual quest without being bound by ego is important for thinking and for processing my thoughts and emot…
David Doane wrote: I believe the statement that we are in the world but not of it. Being only grounded in the world you lose your spiritual groundedness and essence, you are consumed by the world and you lose (awareness…
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