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Archive for 2021

Joy Harjo: The Whole of Time

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 24, 2021

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Joy Harjo: The Whole of Time

Remember you are this universe and this
universe is you.

– Joy Harjo –

Joy Harjo: The Whole of Time

“Though we have instructions and a map buried in our hearts when we enter this world,” the extraordinary Joy Harjo has written, “nothing quite prepares us for the abrupt shift to the breathing realm.” She is a saxophone player and performer, a visual artist, a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation, and the 23rd Poet Laureate of the United States. She opens up with Krista Tippett about her life, dreaming as a way of relating to time and place, and the story matrix that connects us all.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this beautiful poem by Joy Harjo. { more }

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Where the Horses Sing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 23, 2021

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Where the Horses Sing

Always there is this primary place of belonging in the land and in our souls. It used to be a part of the way we lived, how we walked and breathed.

– Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee –

Where the Horses Sing

“Witnessing a growing wasteland, Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee seeks the threshold that could bring us back to the place where the land sings– to a deep ecology of consciousness that returns our awareness to a fully animate world.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out “Finding Balance in an Unstable World.” { more }

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How Trees Secretly Talk To Each Other

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 22, 2021

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How Trees Secretly Talk To Each Other

Trees do not preach learning and precepts. They preach, undeterred by particulars, the ancient law of life

– Hermann Hesse –

How Trees Secretly Talk To Each Other

Yes, scientists have discovered that plants can actually talk to each other. This short animated film, commissioned by BBC World Service, explores what has been nicknamed “The Wood Wide Web” — the intricate fungal network connecting plants across entire forests. Says ecologist Suzanne Simard.”Trees are “social creatures” that communicate with each other in cooperative ways that hold lessons for humans, too.” { read more }

Be The Change

Discover the magic of mycorrhizal networks by planting some vegetables or flowers this Spring.

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Love is the Last Word

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 21, 2021

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Love is the Last Word

All of us are knowers, all the time; it is only occasionally and in spite of ourselves that we understand the mystery of given reality.

– Aldous Huxley –

Love is the Last Word

“To understand anything — another person’s experience of reality, another fundamental law of physics — is to restructure our existing knowledge, shifting and broadening our prior frames of reference to accommodate a new awareness. And yet we have a habit of confusing our knowledge — which is always limited and incomplete: a model of the cathedral of reality, built from primary-colored blocks of fact — with the actuality of things; we have a habit of mistaking the model for the thing itself, mistaking our partial awareness for a totality of understanding. Thoreau recognized this when he contemplated our blinding preconceptions and lamented that “we hear and apprehend only what we already half know.” Generations after Thoreau and generations before neuroscience began illuminating the blind spots of consciousness, Aldous Huxley (July, 26 1894November 22, 1963) explored this eternal confusion of concepts in ‘Knowledge and Understanding’…” Maria Popova shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

What helps you illuminate the blind spots of consciousness in your own being?

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How Trees Secretly Talk to Each Other

This week’s inspiring video: How Trees Secretly Talk to Each Other
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Video of the Week

May 20, 2021
How Trees Secretly Talk to Each Other

How Trees Secretly Talk to Each Other

Yes, scientists have discovered that plants can actually talk to each other. This short animated film, commissioned by BBC World Service, explores what has been nicknamed "The Wood Wide Web" – the intricate fungal network connecting plants across entire forests. "Trees are "social creatures" that communicate with each other in cooperative ways that hold lessons for humans, too." ~ Ecologist Suzanne Simard.
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Kolam: Ritual Art that Feeds a Thousand Souls Every Day

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 20, 2021

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Kolam: Ritual Art that Feeds a Thousand Souls Every Day

All art emulates the condition of ritual. That is what it comes from and to that it must always return for nourishment.

– T.S. Eliot –

Kolam: Ritual Art that Feeds a Thousand Souls Every Day

Each dawn, millions of Tamil women create intricate, geometric, ritual-art designs called ‘kolams,’ at the thresholds of their homes, as a tribute to Mother Earth and an offering to Goddess Lakshmi. A Tamil word that means beauty, form, play, disguise or ritual design– a kolam is anchored in the Hindu belief that householders have a karmic obligation to “feed a thousand souls.” By creating the kolam with rice flour, a woman provides food for birds, rodents, ants and other tiny life forms — greeting each day with ‘a ritual of generosity’, that blesses both the household, and the greater community. Kolams are a deliberately transient form of art. They are created anew each dawn with a combination of reverence, mathematical precision, artistic skill and spontaneity. Read on for one kolam practitioner’s deeply personal exploration of this multidimensional practice. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Vijaya Nagarajan, the author of the first in-depth publication in English on the kolam. RSVP info here { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Random Acts Of Kindness

Those who value kindness try to practice it in their own special way according to their capacity, personality, and skills. I’m often inspired by those who can spontaneously go up to a stranger and do a random act of kindness to try to make their day a little brighter. I am part of the camp where I feel more comfortable doing it anonymously if I can help it or as the need naturally arises. This weeks’ stories highlight those stepping up to do a random act of kindness, which is as unique as they are. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: Those who value kindness try to practice it in their own special way according to their capacity, personality, and skills. I’m often inspired by those who can spontaneously go up to a stranger and do a random act of kindness to try to make their day a little brighter. I am part of the camp where I feel more comfortable doing it anonymously if I can help it or as the need naturally arises. This weeks’ stories highlight those stepping up to do a random act of kindness, which is as unique as they are. –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
More than 825 baby diamondback terrapin turtles were rescued by local volunteers from New Jersey storm drains. They will be cared for at a University for a year before being released into the wild.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
This KindSpring member went on a random-acts-of-kindness spree; Leaving bus tickets for travelers, putting coins in laundry machines, and paying for a friend’s train tickets.
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Indian railway worker risks life to save child
Hugs Security cameras show the moment Mayur Shelke sprang into action when a six-year-old boy fell onto the railroad tracks in India. Risking his own life, he saved the child’s life.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
The Greater Good Magazine shares a new study that further proves that doing kind things for others is an essential part of the path to happiness. The full article: If You Want to Be Happy Try to Make Someone Else Happy.
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The Art and Science of Conquering Your Fears

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 19, 2021

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The Art and Science of Conquering Your Fears

We must build dikes of courage to hold back the flood of fear.

– Martin Luther King Jr. –

The Art and Science of Conquering Your Fears

Aristotle believed courage to be the most important quality in a man. “Courage is the first of human virtues because it makes all others possible,” he wrote. Today, it’s one of the more neglected areas of positive psychology, but recent research has begun to move toward an understanding of what courage is and how we might be able to cultivate the ability to face our fear and make decisions with greater fortitude.This article shares six ways to loosen the grip of fear on your life, and become more courageous than you ever imagined. { read more }

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Write down ten things you’ve accomplished in your life, ten skills and talents that you have, and ten times when you’ve solved a problem or overcame adversity.

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Wendell Berry: The Peace of Wild Things

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May 18, 2021

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Wendell Berry: The Peace of Wild Things

Sitting quietly, doing nothing, Spring comes, and the grass grows, by itself.

– Basho –

Wendell Berry: The Peace of Wild Things

The Peace of Wild Things is a beautifully animated film of a poem written and read by Wendell Berry as part of the Poetry Films series of the On Being Project, which features animated interpretations of beloved poems. This poem is a warm invitation to return to our early memories of peace and joy, perhaps lying in the grass on a sunny hill, listening to bird and insect sounds, when suddenly, for a moment, “we are free!” { read more }

Be The Change

Writing a poem yourself is a wonderful way to explore the heart’s desires, and a poem about any aspect of nature, or even the Wild Things, can bring you to that same inner freedom Berry speaks about. Try it today.

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Awakin Weekly: A Fixed Place To Stand

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
A Fixed Place To Stand
by Richard Rohr

[Listen to Audio!]

2479.jpgArchimedes (c. 287–c. 212 BCE), a Greek philosopher and mathematician, noticed that if a lever was balanced in the correct place, on the correct fulcrum, it could move proportionally much greater weights than the force actually applied. He calculated that if the lever stretched far enough and the fulcrum point remained fixed close to Earth, even a small weight at one end would be able to move the world at the other.

The fixed point is our place to stand. It is a contemplative stance: steady, centered, poised, and rooted. To be contemplative, we have to have a slight distance from the world to allow time for withdrawal from business as usual, for contemplation, for going into what Jesus calls our “private room” (Matthew 6:6). However, in order for this not to become escapism, we have to remain quite close to the world at the same time, loving it, feeling its pain and its joy as our pain and our joy. The fulcrum, that balancing point, must be in the real world.

True contemplation, the great teachers say, is really quite down to earth and practical, and doesn’t require life in a monastery. It is, however, an utterly different way of receiving the moment, and therefore all of life. In order to have the capacity to “move the world,” we need some distancing and detachment from the diversionary nature and delusions of mass culture and the false self. Contemplation builds on the hard bottom of reality—as it is—without ideology, denial, or fantasy.

Unfortunately, many of us don’t have a fixed place to stand, a fulcrum of critical distance, and thus we cannot find our levers, or true “delivery systems,” as Bill Plotkin calls them, by which to move our world. We do not have the steadiness of spiritual practice to keep our sight keen and alive. Those who have plenty of opportunities for spiritual practice—for example, those in monasteries—often don’t have an access point beyond religion itself from which to speak or to serve much of our world. We need a delivery system in the world to provide the capacity for building bridges and connecting the dots of life.

Some degree of inner experience is necessary for true spiritual authority, but we need some form of outer validation, too. We need to be taken seriously as competent and committed individuals and not just “inner” people. Could this perhaps be what Jesus means by being both “wise as serpents and innocent as doves” (Matthew 10:16)? God offers us quiet, contemplative eyes; and God also calls us to prophetic and critical involvement in the pain and sufferings of our world—both at the same time. This is so obvious in the life and ministry of Jesus that I wonder why it has not been taught as an essential part of Christianity.

About the Author: Richard Rohr is a Franciscan friar, an internationally known speaker and author, and âfounding director of the Center for Action and Contemplation. The above passage is from his book, "A Lever and A Place to Stand: The Contemplative Stance – The Active Prayer."

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A Fixed Place To Stand
How do you relate to the metaphor of the lever, balancing slight distance from the world with our closeness to it? Can you share a personal story of a time you found your leverage by combining steady spiritual practice with a delivery system in the world? What helps you bring a quiet, contemplative vision while being critically involved in the pain and sufferings of our world?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We all need a steady, rooted, poised and balanced placeto stand otherwise the winds of pain and suffering may uproot the tree of our life. All wisdom traditions strongly emphasizethe significance of c…
David Doane wrote: I find it is important to be detached from and involved in the world, which means to be in the world but not of it. Detached doesn’t refer to distance, ‘slight’ or otherwise. Detached mean…
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565.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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