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Archive for 2021

Probable Impossibilities

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 14, 2021

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Probable Impossibilities

Life in our universe is a flash in the pan, a few moments in the vast unfolding of time and space in the cosmos…A realization of the scarcity of life makes me feel some ineffable connection to other living things.

– Alan Lightman –

Probable Impossibilities

“In Probable Impossibilities: Musings on Beginnings and Endings, the poetic physicist Alan Lightman sieves four centuries of scientific breakthroughs, from Kepler’s revolutionary laws of planetary motion to the thousands of habitable exoplanets discovered by NASAs Kepler mission, to estimate that even with habitable planets orbiting one tenth of all stars, the faction of living matter in the universe is about one-billionth of one-billionth: If all the matter in the universe were the Gobi desert, life would be but a single grain of sand.” Maria Popova shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Lightman and his work here. { more }

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Her Art Informed Science: Maria Sibylla Merian

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 13, 2021

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Her Art Informed Science: Maria Sibylla Merian

The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.

– Albert Einstein –

Her Art Informed Science: Maria Sibylla Merian

“I am an insect ecologist and a field biologist; Maria Sibylla Merian’s work forms the very foundations of my discipline. Yet I am ashamed to confess that until relatively recently I was unaware of the magnitude of Merian’s contribution to biology. It has only been in the last few decades that recognition for her scientific contributions has had a resurgence.” Learn more about this remarkable woman whose art informed science here. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about “The Girl Who Drew Butterflies,” a beautiful book written for young readers, about Merian’s life and contributions. { more }

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How to Write Love

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 12, 2021

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How to Write Love

The medicine of writing–and the medicine of robins and fungal filaments and stars and acorns–is the understanding that we’re all made of the same material.

– Sarah Sentilles –

How to Write Love

“Stranger Care is Sarah Sentilless heartbreaking, heart-expanding account of her relationship with her foster daughter, Coco–although saying that is a bit like saying Walden is a book about a pond. It is, but ponds are just the beginning. It is, and yet, well never look at ponds the same way again. After Stranger Care, Ill never look at mothers the same way again. Or daughters. Or parenting. Or caregiving. This book is about loving Coco, and letting her go. Its a book about loving her birth mother, Evelyn. It’s a book about the systems that structure our care and how fallible they are; how we might care for one another in more expansive ways that reach beyond the boundaries of biology and the nuclear family, even beyond the species; how we might learn from the systems of caregiving that sustain the natural world all around us.” { read more }

Be The Change

Reach beyond the boundaries of biology to care for someone or something today. Read more by Sarah Sentilles here. { more }

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The Art of Weaving

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 11, 2021

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The Art of Weaving

In the tapestry of life, we’re all connected. Each one of us is a gift to those around us helping each other be who we are, weaving a perfect picture together.

– Sandra Day O’Connor –

The Art of Weaving

Being a home weaver is a revolutionary act. Jessica Green shares her life as a weaver, “remembering the importance and sacredness of cloth”; and as a homesteading anti-capitalist entrepreneur. “Being a weaver and a homesteader,” Green says, “is a lifestyle that’s based both in remembering and trailblazing.” Follow her as she takes wool from sheep to woven cloth and explains her choices to “live with the yoke of that responsibility and help other people joyously carry that yoke”. { read more }

Be The Change

What “yoke of remembrance” are you willing to carry forward in your own lifetime? How can you support others in theirs?

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The Art of Weaving

This week’s inspiring video: The Art of Weaving
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Video of the Week

Jun 10, 2021
The Art of Weaving

The Art of Weaving

Being a home weaver is a revolutionary act. Jessica Green shares her life as a weaver, "remembering the importance and sacredness of cloth"; and as a homesteading anti-capitalist entrepreneur. “Being a weaver and a homesteader,” Green says, “is a lifestyle that’s based both in remembering and trailblazing.” Follow her as she takes wool from sheep to woven cloth and explains her choices to "live with the yoke of that responsibility and help other people joyously carry that yoke".
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Four Stages of Groundedness

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 10, 2021

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Four Stages of Groundedness

Reality is inherently grounding. The more in touch with it we are, the more grounded we feel. This is true on every level: physical, mental, emotional, energetic, and spiritual.

– John J. Prendergast –

Four Stages of Groundedness

“The ground is both a metaphor and a felt sense. As a metaphor, it means to be in touch with reality. As a felt sense, it refers to feeling our center of gravity low in the belly and experiencing a deep silence, stability, and connection with the whole of life. Feeling grounded does not require contact with the earth; it can happen anywhere and anytime — even when we’re flat on our backs in a rowboat.” John Prendergast shares more on the four stages of groundedness. { read more }

Be The Change

Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with John Prendergast, “Archaeologist of the Heart.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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7 Principles of Meaningful Relationships for Servant Leaders

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June 9, 2021

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7 Principles of Meaningful Relationships for Servant Leaders

The servant-leader is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead. That person is sharply different from one who is leader first.

– Robert Greenleaf –

7 Principles of Meaningful Relationships for Servant Leaders

“A company is a collection of people working toward a shared goal that they couldn’t otherwise do on their own. In essence, the foundation of work is relationships.
However, often when we are stuck, especially in work, it is because we interact with others transactionally instead of engaging with them, human to human. And when we are unhappy at work, we might blame it on someone else but the root of the discontent is often within us.” In the following piece, Jeff Riddle shares seven principles for building meaningful connections. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out ‘The 10 Gifts of Servant Leaders.’ { more }

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First Passage

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June 8, 2021

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First Passage

Hope is holding a creative tension between what is and what could and should be, each day doing something to narrow the distance between the two.

– Parker Palmer –

First Passage

“What does not appear there but is equally present, somehow, is Antarctica. Antarctica of permanent daylight come summer and permanent night during the season when the sea ice grows. Antarctica, that no human being had ever seen just over two hundred years ago. Antarctica, the continent where only eleven people have been born. Antarctica of glacial uncertainty. Antarctica, humming 9,093 miles south of my home in Providence, now acutely felt. Antarctica, and, more specifically, the policies that shape it, place their icy hands around my present and tell me how to act. Wait, they say, one full year.” Elizabeth Rush writes of a journey toward motherhood in an age of glacial loss. { read more }

Be The Change

What might you do today to narrow the distance between what is, and what could and should be?

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Awakin Weekly: Die Empty

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Die Empty
by Todd Henry

[Listen to Audio!]

2367.jpgI remember a meeting in which a friend asked a strange and unexpected question: “What do you think is the most valuable land in the world?”

Several people threw out guesses, such as Manhattan, the oil fields of the Middle East, and the gold mines of South Africa, before our friend indicated that we were way off track. He paused for a moment, and said, “You’re all wrong. The most valuable land in the world is the graveyard. In the graveyard are buried all of the unwritten novels, never-launched businesses, unreconciled relationships, and all of the other things that people thought, ‘I’ll get around to that tomorrow.’ One day, however, their tomorrows ran out.”

That day I went back to my office and I wrote down two words in my notebook and on the wall of my office that have been my primary operating ethic for the last several years: Die Empty.

I want to know that if I lay my head down tonight and don’t wake up tomorrow, I have emptied myself of whatever creativity is lingering inside, with minimal regrets about how I spent my focus, time, and energy. This doesn’t happen by accident; it takes intentional and sustained effort. But I can say with confidence from my own experience and the experiences of others I’ve worked with that the effort is well worth it.

You’ve probably heard “No one ever lay on their deathbed wishing for another day of work.” I think this saying is wrong, and perhaps a little dangerous because of what it implies. First, I believe a great many people do regret not having treated their life with more purpose, and would give anything to have one more chance to approach it with the kind of intention and conviction that imminent death makes palpable. They know that they consistently ignored small twinges of intuition, inspiration, and insight. They recall how they cowered away from risk in favor of comfort. They spent their days regretting their past decisions rather than taking aggressive steps to redirect their life in a more hopeful direction.

Second, this saying presupposes that work is an inherently miserable act that people engage in against their will, or that it’s something that necessarily pulls us away from the people and activities we really care about. But work encompasses much more than just how we make a living. Any value we create that requires us to spend our time, focus, and energy—whether in the context of occupation, relationships, or parenting—is work. Humans, it seems, are wired to find satisfaction by adding value through toil. Thus, for centuries work has been a deeply ingrained part of our identity and our understanding of our place in the world. I believe that the more you apply self-knowledge to how you engage your labor, the more satisfaction you will find in the very act of work, and thus the more joy you will find in life.

I hope we all can find a focused understanding of what’s really important and make a commitment to chase after it with gusto rather than simply settling in for the ride.

About the Author: An excerpt from Die Empty.

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Die Empty
How do you relate to a much broader notion of work as any context where we create value through toil? Can you share a personal story of a time you got a focused understanding of what was really important to you and made a courageous commitment to that value? What helps you live in such a way that you may die empty?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: There are many reasons I have for working. One of the reasons is for survival and for meeting my and my family’s basic needs. There is something more than justsurviving.My core values are fulfillm…
David Doane wrote: Author Todd Henry says the graveyard is where undoneendeavors are buried and is the most valuable land in the world. To me, that’s saying the most valuable place is where you find what’s dead …
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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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The Wisdom of Forgetting What You Know

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June 7, 2021

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The Wisdom of Forgetting What You Know

I think it’s much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong.

– Richard P. Feynman –

The Wisdom of Forgetting What You Know

We are so afraid to let go, to just be, to allow the unfolding of this marvelous life without getting in the way. This fear keeps us paralyzed and stuck. And longing for the peace that is possible — if only we would put down all the efforts we make to know. There is no greater gift you can give yourself than the invitation to enter the world of not knowing. Why? If you are always going to know what you know now, things will always stay the same. How could they change? And by thinking you know what will happen, you are closing yourself off to the unimaginable — endless peace, unspeakable joy, awe and wonder.” Gail Brenner shares tips on how to “forget what you know.” { read more }

Be The Change

Dwell in your own places of not-knowing today.

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