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Archive for 2021

Happiness Family Farm

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 26, 2021

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Happiness Family Farm

We have neglected the truth that a good farmer is a craftsman of the highest order, a kind of artist.

– Wendell Berry –

Happiness Family Farm

Happiness Family Farm is a Black-owned CSA farm in Portland, Oregon. Rosata, her husband, Prosper, and son, Japhety, work year-round to harvest fresh fruits and vegetables for the local community. They feature a unique assortment of vegetables from all over the world, bringing a taste of home to many in their community. { read more }

Be The Change

Read the story behind Happiness Family Farm. { more }

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Happiness Family Farm

This week’s inspiring video: Happiness Family Farm
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Video of the Week

Nov 25, 2021
Happiness Family Farm

Happiness Family Farm

Happiness Family Farm is a Black-owned CSA farm in Portland, Oregon. Rosata, her husband, Prosper, and son, Japhety, work year-round to harvest fresh fruits and vegetables for the local community. They feature a unique assortment of vegetables from all over the world, bringing a taste of home to many in their community.
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ThanksBeing with Rumi

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 25, 2021

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ThanksBeing with Rumi

There is a force within that gives you life. Seek that.

– Rumi –

ThanksBeing with Rumi

“It’s Thanksgiving time…the holiday of humility and togetherness. The holiday that asks us to look within toward that ever-present beacon of gratitude which is often obscured by the frenetic world we’ve created. It reminds us to give, to make amends, to repair ruptured friendships and family ties. It leans into sustenance and nourishment. The table becomes the altar. The family become precious guests. Around the table there is a feeling of remembrance of our true nature and purpose. We are asked to put differences aside and become one… to lean into Unity, Peace and Love.” A non-American explores the spirit of Thanksgiving and ThanksBeing in this lovely piece interspersed with quotes from Rumi. { read more }

Be The Change

Regardless of whether you celebrate Thanksgiving or not, consider taking a few moments today to express appreciation for dear ones in your life.

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The Woman Beside Wendell Berry

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 24, 2021

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The Woman Beside Wendell Berry

And I love you
as I love the dance that brings you
out of the multitude
in which you come and go.
Love changes, and in change is true.

– Wendell Berry –

The Woman Beside Wendell Berry

“Here’s my portrait of Tanya Berry: This white-haired 81-year-old is a fiercely independent thinker who embraces interdependence. Someone with a deep humility who gives others credit reflexively, and a self-confidence that makes her comfortable telling you what she believes she’s good at. A kind person who doesn’t hesitate to offer blunt advice. A woman who kept records of her prodigious canning in the kitchen while also serving as discerning first editor of every novel and short story written by her prolific husband.” This in-depth profile piece shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Watch the trailer of “Look and See,” a portrait of the changing landscapes and shifting values of rural America through the voice of Wendell Berry. { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Bless This Mess

You might’ve heard of the TV show “Bless This Mess,” where a couple moves from New York to a small farming town. Naturally, they know nothing about farming and wake up tackling different challenges each day, often in ridiculously hilarious ways. As we head into the holiday season, which usually comes with its moments of gratitude mixed with unexpected stresses, how can we cultivate a heart of gratitude and blessings? This newsletter helps us find inspiration to show up fully to whatever end of the spectrum we find ourselves this season. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: You might’ve heard of the TV show “Bless This Mess,” where a couple moves from New York to a small farming town. Naturally, they know nothing about farming and wake up tackling different challenges each day, often in ridiculously hilarious ways. As we head into the holiday season, which usually comes with its moments of gratitude mixed with unexpected stresses, how can we cultivate a heart of gratitude and blessings? This newsletter helps us find inspiration to show up fully to whatever end of the spectrum we find ourselves this season. –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Believing she was texting her own grandson, Wanda invited Jamal over for Thanksgiving. After clearing the confusion, Jamal asked if he could still join. This will be their 6th year meeting for dinner.
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Kindness is Contagious.
From Our Members
While she was delivering a Doordash meal, her car keys ended up getting locked in the trunk. With a customers’ hot food in the car, this was not an ideal scenario, but all is well that ends well.
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Inspiring Video of the Week
Serve all
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Becoming a Blessing
Hugs In this talk, Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen shares poignant stories of her upbringing in a household with a grandfather who taught her the values of generosity and caring.
In Giving, We Receive
In other news …
How does gratitude change you and your brains? New research is starting to explore ways that gratitude works to improve our mental health. From unshackling us from toxic emotions to lasting effects on the brain. Here’s the scoop.
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Let a Thousand Translations Bloom

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 23, 2021

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Let a Thousand Translations Bloom

Without translation, I would be limited to the borders of my own country. The translator is my most important ally. He introduces me to the world.

– Italo Calvino –

Let a Thousand Translations Bloom

“Translators ferry across the meaning, materiality, metaphysics and all the magic that may be unknown in the mediums and conventions of their own tongue. The pull of the strange, the foreign, and the alien are necessary for acts of translation. It is this essential element of unknowingness that animates the translator’s curiosity and challenges her intellectual mettle and ethical responsibility. Even when translators hail from — or belong to — the same culture as the original author, the art relies on the oppositional traction of difference. Through opposition and abrasion, a creative translation allows for new meaning and nuance to emerge.” More in this thought-provoking essay that explores translation as resistance, activism, and more. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to reflect on particular poems or books that you’ve read in translation and been deeply moved by. Share them with someone today.

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Kintsugi

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Kintsugi
by Stefano Carnazzi

[Listen to Audio!]

2378.jpgWhen a bowl, teapot or precious vase falls and breaks into a thousand pieces, we throw them away angrily and regretfully. Yet there is an alternative, a Japanese practice that highlights and enhances the breaks thus adding value to the broken object. It’s called kintsugi (éç¶ã), or kintsukuroi (éç¹ã), literally golden (“kin”) and repair (“tsugi”).

This traditional Japanese art uses a precious metal – liquid gold, liquid silver or lacquer dusted with powdered gold – to bring together the pieces of a broken pottery item and at the same time enhance the breaks. The technique consists in joining fragments and giving them a new, more refined aspect. Every repaired piece is unique, because of the randomness with which ceramics shatters and the irregular patterns formed that are enhanced with the use of metals.

With this technique it’s possible to create true and always different works of art, each with its own story and beauty, thanks to the unique cracks formed when the object breaks, as if they were wounds that leave different marks on each of us. …

Even today, it may take up to a month to repair the largest and most refined pieces of ceramics with the kintsugi technique, given the different steps and the drying time required.

The kintsugi technique suggests many things. We shouldn’t throw away broken objects. When an object breaks, it doesn’t mean that it is no more useful. Its breakages can become valuable. We should try to repair things because sometimes in doing so we obtain more valuable objects.

This is the essence of resilience. Each of us should look for a way to cope with traumatic events in a positive way, learn from negative experiences, take the best from them and convince ourselves that exactly these experiences make each person unique, precious.

About the Author: Originally excerpted from here.

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Kintsugi
What does kintsugi suggest to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you saw beauty in the scar from a healed negative experience? What helps you see your life’s scars, not as a disturbance of its beauty, but an integral part of it?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We all break precious items and we may feel anger, hurt, regret and despair. We create scars in us and in others. How do we deal with the broken parts of ourselves? Do we boil with anger or accept the…
David Doane wrote: Kintsugisuggests to me that damage isn’t the end, and a valuable new reintegration and new beginning is possible. I was cheated out of significant money by an employer years ago. The beauty in the…
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Some Good News

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602.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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6 Causes of Burnout at Work

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 22, 2021

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6 Causes of Burnout at Work

Sometimes the most important thing in a whole day is the rest we take between two deep breaths.

– Etty Hillesum –

6 Causes of Burnout at Work

“Job burnout is on the rise, according to several surveys. People are feeling emotionally exhausted, detached from their work and colleagues, and less productive and efficacious. This makes them more likely to suffer health consequences, need sick days, and quit their jobs. A new book “The Burnout Epidemic: The Rise of Chronic Stress and How We Can Solve It,” explains the root causes of burnout and why we won’t solve them without changing work culture.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration check out this article on “Healing Burnout with Mindful Care.” { more }

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Listen: Four Love Songs

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 21, 2021

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Listen: Four Love Songs

When we listen, we open ourselves to new, joyous relationships with species other than our own.

– Kathleen Dean Moore –

Listen: Four Love Songs

Kathleen Dean Moore is a writer, moral philosopher, and environmentalist. Her many books and awards include Holdfast: A Home in the Natural World, and Great Tide Rising: Towards Clarity and Moral Courage in a Time of Planetary Change, and, most recently, Earth’s Wild Music: Celebrating and Defending the Songs of the Natural World. In the following essay, “she considers the looming loss of wild music heard in the songs of birds — and the vital stories woven into them that are calling for us to listen.”
{ read more }

Be The Change

Take a few minutes to sit outside and simply listen to the sounds of the world around you.

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Finding the Courage for What’s Redemptive

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 20, 2021

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Finding the Courage for What's Redemptive

Each of us is more than the worst thing we’ve ever done.

– Bryan Stevenson –

Finding the Courage for What’s Redemptive

“How to embrace what’s right and corrective, redemptive and restorative — and an insistence that each of us is more than the worst thing weve done — these are gifts Bryan Stevenson offers with his life. He’s brought the language of mercy and redemption into American culture in recent years, growing out of his work as a lawyer with the Equal Justice Initiative based in Montgomery, Alabama. Now the groundbreaking museum they created in Montgomery has dramatically expanded — a new way of engaging the full and ongoing legacy of slavery in U.S. history. In this On Being interview, Krista Tippett draws out his spirit — and his moral imagination.” { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the work of the Equal Justice Initiative here. { more }

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