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Archive for 2021

Wholeness, Timelessness & Unfolding Meaning

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 20, 2021

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Wholeness, Timelessness & Unfolding Meaning

Ultimately, all moments are really one, therefore now is an eternity.

– David Bohm –

Wholeness, Timelessness & Unfolding Meaning

In this interview, conducted two years before his passing, influential physicist-philosopher David Bohm discusses his insight into “the essential unbroken wholeness of the universe: the timeless order which lies behind physical phenomena, and the importance of the imagination for giving a meaningful understanding of reality.” { read more }

Be The Change

Watch clips from “Infinite Potential,” a recent documentary that explores the mystery of consciousness and Bohm’s revolutionary ideas. { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Cultivate Good Heart, Not Clever Mind

“We have enough clever minds. We need more good hearts,” Robert Thurman often said. A clever mind can help us dissect, but it takes a good heart to bind the pieces together into an inspired mosaic. Today’s newsletter features those good hearts, from a delivery man who saves his salary to build a library in Ghana to a high-school student who won our kindness contest and helps build a bridge between generations. Enjoy! –Guri

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Editor’s Note: “We have enough clever minds. We need more good hearts,” Robert Thurman often said. A clever mind can help us dissect, but it takes a good heart to bind the pieces together into an inspired mosaic. Today’s newsletter features those good hearts, from a delivery man who saves his salary to build a library in Ghana to a high-school student who won our kindness contest and helps build a bridge between generations. Enjoy! –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Isaac Oduro was saddened to see the state of his former elementary school during a visit to his home country. He works as a delivery driver seven days a week to create a library in Ghana.
Read More
Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
Jacob, a freshman in High School, created an organization where “people from all across the globe send anonymous letters filled with kindness and joy” to nursing homes and senior centers.
Read More
Inspiring Video of the Week
Serve all
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Why We Do What We Do
Hugs In this riveting TED talk, Tony Robbins dives into what motivates us to take action. He invites us to explore our web of needs, beliefs, and emotions to make informed choices.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
Dr. Srikumar Rao, a professor at Columbia Business School and the Founder of the Rao Institute, shares this thought-provoking and reflective piece: Cultivate Good Heart, Not Clever Mind.
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Death Doulas Provide End of Life Aid

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 19, 2021

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Death Doulas Provide End of Life Aid

Grief and joy and love — it’s all part of the same spectrum. I’m grieving because I loved someone so much.

– Maryanne O’Hara –

Death Doulas Provide End of Life Aid

“The word ‘doula’ comes from the Greek word meaning “woman who serves,” though most people associate it with someone who helps during birth to usher in life. In recent years, however, more people have come to recognize the need for as much assistance at the end of life as the start, part of the so-called death positivity movement that is gaining momentum in the United States and other countries. The movement, popularized by the mortician and writer Caitlin Doughty, encourages open discussion on death and dying and people’s feelings on mortality.” This piece from the New York Times shares more. { read more }

Submitted by: Birju Pandya

Be The Change

For more inspiration read this interview Frank Ostaseksi: Lessons to the Living from the Dying. { more }

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Between Grit and Grace

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 18, 2021

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Between Grit and Grace

Every day I make a choice to transcend the negative and use every moment that there is breath in this body to positively impact the world around me.

– Preethi Srinivasan –

Between Grit and Grace

Preethi Srinivasan captained the under-19 Tamil Nadu women’s cricket team to national championship in 1997, won a gold medal in swimming at national level, and was an internationally renowned student academically. At the age of 19, an accident left her paralyzed from the neck down. What followed over the next 2 decades is a journey of untiring grit and grace. Today, Preethi is co-founder of Soultree, the only organization in India committed to the long term holistic rehabilitation of women with spinal cord injuries… { read more }

Be The Change

Join a conversation with Preethi this weekend. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 17, 2021

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Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest

The question is not ‘Can you make a difference?’ You already do make a difference. It’s just a matter of what kind of difference you want to make during your life on this planet.

– Julia Butterfly Hill –

Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest

The ancient forests of the Pacific Northwest are home to giant old-growth trees, and many secrets, which science is just beginning to understand. These forests are our best climate change allies, storing huge amounts of carbon and retaining water, protecting communities from droughts, floods, and wildfires. But these forests are at risk of disappearing. In British Columbia on First Nations territory, a small band of forest defenders are risking life and liberty to protect some of the last remaining ancient forests. { read more }

Be The Change

Listen to an interview from 2020 with Joshua Wright, one of the Fairy Creek Forest defenders.
{ more }

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Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest

This week’s inspiring video: Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest
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Video of the Week

Sep 16, 2021
Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest

Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest

The ancient forests of the Pacific Northwest are home to giant old-growth trees, and many secrets, which science is just beginning to understand. These forests are our best climate change allies, storing huge amounts of carbon and retaining water, protecting communities from droughts, floods, and wildfires. But these forests are at risk of disappearing. In British Columbia on First Nations territory, a small band of forest defenders are risking life and liberty to protect some of the last remaining ancient forests.
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I Am the Triangular Window in a Mud Hut

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DailyGood News That Inspires

September 16, 2021

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I Am the Triangular Window in a Mud Hut

The world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting —
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.

– Mary Oliver –

I Am the Triangular Window in a Mud Hut

“I have overheard pale-skinned visitors to this refugee camp speak of windows as large as a cow and covered by glass that slides wide open. Those stories sound absurd. Such windows would be completely impractical! We Dinka windows allow in some air, of course; but first and foremost, we are designed for safety and comfort. Look at my size and shape: a triangle smaller than a cracked plate.” In this beautifully crafted post, meet a Dinka window in South Sudan and be quietly transformed by what it has to teach you. { read more }

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Learn more about the inspiring work being done by Mercy Beyond Borders, in South Sudan and other regions of extreme poverty in our world. { more }

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What Buddhism Taught Me: A Sri Lankan Christian’s Reflections

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September 15, 2021

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What Buddhism Taught Me: A Sri Lankan Christian's Reflections

If we are to respect others’ religions as we would have them respect our own, a friendly study of the world’s religions is a sacred duty.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

What Buddhism Taught Me: A Sri Lankan Christian’s Reflections

“Growing up Christian in predominantly Buddhist Sri Lanka, I learned early that there was much to be gained from the study of Buddhism. The teachings of the Buddha sometimes challenged my assumptions about Christianity, and at other times they illuminated and clarified the words and stories of Jesus. ” Shanta Premawardhana shares three teachings from Buddha that enriched his own faith. { read more }

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Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Shanta Premawardhana, “Learning From Society’s Margins.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Working to Welcome and Resettle Afghan Refugees

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September 14, 2021

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Working to Welcome and Resettle Afghan Refugees

We have a legal and moral obligation to protect people fleeing bombs, bullets and tyrants, and throughout history those people have enriched our society.

– Juliet Stevenson –

Working to Welcome and Resettle Afghan Refugees

“We’ve had 5,300 people sign up to be volunteers. That’s beyond a record for us. We typically work with about 350 volunteers a year. We have more people who want to volunteer than we have things for volunteers to do at this point. But we’re so grateful for all these people who want to step in and help.” A number of different organizations are helping resettle the over 20,000 Afghan refugees who have recently landed in the United States. NPR speaks with the CEO of one such non-profit here. { read more }

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Learn more about ways you can help support Afghan refugees here. { more }

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We Are All Beggars

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
We Are All Beggars
by Chaz Howard

[Listen to Audio!]

2513.jpgA lived theology of the bottom does not see the world through good and evil lenses. This is not a denial of the existence of evil, rather it is believing that evil is something that is done by people. People are not bad, they just sometimes do bad things. And all bad things have a source – soil from which they emerge.

As a seminarian, I met a young poet named Anne Marie who once penned in a poetic letter she shared with me; “Fear is the garden of sin.” Over time to that I’ve come to add “hurt” as well, for the wounded heart is often a source for great compassion or great violence.

Knowledge that those around us who are doing wrong, do so for a reason, should allow us to see and appreciate their humanity and their potential to be redeemed.

It’s radical to believe in the potential for redemption. A person who robs stores and/or deals drugs is not an evil person. Perhaps it was life circumstances, mental health, fear, a lack of options, a lack of education that led them to this point in their lives. Hopelessness, desperation and the feeling of being dehumanized can take an individual to depths that they did not know they possessed.

The humility and strength of character that one must feel in order to bring themselves to pan handle or beg for money or for food is something deeply foreign to most of us. If it were not hard enough to have to extend one’s hand and beg for scraps, the experience of being ignored by people who have the means to change your life is heartbreaking. And those who stop often give you only a few coins, never touching your hand, never looking you in the eyes, never asking your name. Over time for some this is just too much. One’s voice get’s louder. They throw away politeness and no longer care about how they look. And the hurt of dehumanization and the fear of starving, soon bears a bitter fruit.

Ahhh, now that the beggar is “loud and aggressive” we at last see him or her – only long enough to remove them from the previously peaceful space.

A theology of the bottom can understand what the bottom can do to a person. Not in a patronizing sense, but in a humanizing one, recognizing that all of us are in process. All of us are beggars with hands extended, though we may reach for different things.

The great reformer Martin Luther’s final written words speak to this.
“Wir sind bettler. Hoc est verum.” “We are all beggars – this is true.”

About the Author: Chaz Howard is a chaplain at UPenn. Excerpt above from this book, Bottom.

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We Are All Beggars
How do you relate to the notion that we are all beggars? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of what the bottom can do to a person? What helps you retain empathy when hurt?
R wrote: It’s a hard hitting passage. Precisely because there is so much truth to what is being said. Feel sadness and a sense of dejection. Will sit with it to see what emerges….
Jagdish P Dave wrote: There have been times when I have been deeply hurt. And there have been times in my life when I have hurt others too. Such experiences have made me realize that we all have the potential to hurtoursel…
Naren Kini wrote: Lessons from a begging bowl Tribute to my Teachers. As I am continually learning the lesson of Sharanagati(surrender), I give everything over to my Master’s/Teacher’s/God’s hand. Sharanaga…
David Doane wrote: Being beggars is one way we deal with not having and not being able to get, or think we can’t get, what we need or want. At such times, a person is likely feeling powerless and/or desperate. The p…
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